Health advocates lead call for TPPA transparency
Health advocates lead call for TPPA transparency
Several University of Auckland academics
are among health advocates from New Zealand and Australia
leading an international call for public release and wide
discussion of the text of the secret Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPPA).
The call, in leading international medical journal The Lancet, (published tomorrow) is signed by 27 health leaders in Australia, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, USA, and Vietnam, including leaders of the World Medical Association and World Federation of Public Health Associations.
Leaders are pressing for the TPPA discussions to be transparent and its broad health impacts to be assessed – before it is signed.
One of the co-authors, public health physician Dr Pat Neuwelt from the University of Auckland, says the TPPA, like other ‘new generation’ trade deals, threatens governmental ability to deliver affordable health care and legislate to protect public health and reduce health inequities. “And all the while, the text is shrouded in secrecy.”
“The negotiations are not about the way most of us think of trade – you and me buying and selling things,” she says. “Instead they [the TPPA negotiators] are protecting the massive investment profits of multinational companies that are bigger than the whole New Zealand economy.”
“They want to make sure that
countries won’t be able to pass laws or change policies,
no matter how important to the local country, if that would
cut profits of an overseas investor.”
“It’s an
unprecedented expansion of intellectual property rights that
will push up the cost of affordable and lifesaving
medicines, hitting hardest the already vulnerable households
in New Zealand and other countries such as Vietnam and
Malaysia’”, says Dr Neuwelt.
The deal also threatens public health by freezing government ability to pass laws for better health.
Dr Neuwelt says that governments could be sued for protecting health – but governments can’t sue back. “This will stop important health initiatives on tobacco, alcohol, the obesity epidemic, climate change, antibiotic resistance, and other major future challenges”.
“We are asking for heath impact assessments, for each nation, and then their public release, so that parliaments and the public can discuss the issues– before political tradeoffs are made and the agreement is signed”, she says.
ENDS