Open Letter to Tim Groser on Alcohol and TPPA
2 November
2011 Hon Tim Groser Dear Minister Re:
Alcohol and the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA)
Thank you for your reply to our letter seeking
reassurance the government will not trade away New
Zealand’s ability to limit the commercialisation of
alcohol as part of the TPPA. We were reassured to
read: But then you wrote:
This is concerning,
because the Alcohol Reform Bill is an Alcohol NON-Reform
Bill. The Alcohol Reform Bill doesn’t contain any changes
that will have a major effect on New Zealand’s heavy
drinking culture, and yet you are using this as an example
of appropriate regulation. This leads us to wonder if the
upcoming TPPA might only allow regulation that is consistent
with a status quo, free market approach to the supply,
marketing and sale of this inherently risky, yet fantastic
business product (alcohol). If reforms were proposed that
were based on the international evidence about effectively
reducing harm from alcohol, these would necessarily
constrain alcohol business activity. In this scenario, would
the current wording of the TPPA be interpreted differently
and restrict New Zealand’s ability to “regulate the
sale and supply of alcohol”?
Our concern is
reinforced by your ending comment: This sounds too much like economic
growth (GDP growth) at all costs, a heavy damaging drinking
culture included. We would be grateful for your reply to
these remaining concerns. Yours faithfully Prof Doug
Sellman Prof Jennie Connor ENDS
C/- The John Dobson
Memorial Foundation
PO Box 443, Christchurch
8140
www.alcoholaction.co.nz
Minister of Trade
Parliament
Buildings
Wellington 6160
“In all our existing international trade
agreements, however, the New Zealand Government has included
provisions that ensure it retains the ability to regulate
for reasons related to health, safety and the environment.
Amongst other things, this means that we preserve our right
to regulate alcohol business activity consistent with our
public health outcomes.”
“The Alcohol Reform Bill, is evidence that,
although we have signed up to a number of international
trade agreements New Zealand is still able to regulate the
sale and supply of alcohol”.
“Our goal in TPP
is not to undermine the ability of future New Zealand
governments to regulate, but rather to negotiate an
Asia-Pacific regional free trade agreement that contributes
to stronger economic performance so that we can generate
more jobs and higher incomes for New
Zealanders.”
Director, National Addiction Centre
University
of Otago, Christchurch
Head, Dept of
Preventive & Social Medicine
University of Otago,
Dunedin