INDEPENDENT NEWS

Trade in Services Agreement blocks access to public services

Published: Tue 10 Sep 2013 11:30 AM
Trade in Services Agreement risks jeopardising universal access to high quality public services
Brussels, 9 September 2013 - The Trade in Services Agreement is being negotiated by a group of World Trade Organization (WTO) members that comprises much of the membership of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) as well as eight developing countries, self-defined as “Real Good Friends of Services”. The agreement under negotiation aims at substantially liberalising all trade in services including in construction, financial services, public services as well as business and professional services. The agreement is also to impose regulatory disciplines on public and other services and decrease regulation across the board.
The unions are asking the negotiating countries to fully exclude any public services from the scope of the agreement. “The Real Good Friends of Services must ensure that achieving and maintaining universal access to high quality public services is central to the agreement,” Sharan Burrow, ITUC General Secretary, said.
Also, the statement says that a “comprehensive assessment of the agreement’s impact on environment, and on economic and social development, is a prerequisite for informed negotiations”. Moreover, in order to guarantee a democratic and inclusive agreement, the negotiations need to be transparent and accessible to the public.
Another concern raised is the intended inclusion of an investor-to-state dispute resolution that could prove to be catastrophic for policy space. The ITUC and ETUC stress that if the agreement is to include investors’ guarantees, an intergovernmental dispute settlement would be more appropriate than the investor-to-state procedure.
Further to this, “investors have responsibilities, and they need to be spelled out and enforced,” Bernadette Segol, ETUC General Secretary, added. Indeed, the trade union movement’s submission to the EC calls for enforceable labour standards so as to guarantee a minimum level of convergence, and an established and resourceful capacity building mechanism that would facilitate gradual convergence.
The ITUC and the ETUC will continue engaging with the parties with a view to informing the negotiations about these stated goals and principles.
The ITUC represents 175 million workers in 156 countries and territories and has 315 national affiliates.
Follow us on the web: http://www.ituc-csi.org and http://www.youtube.com/ITUCCSI
ENDS

Next in World

10,000 People Feared Buried Under The Rubble In Gaza
By: UN News
Heat-stricken Bangladesh Extends School Closures - Save The Children
By: Save The Children
Record Class Action Settlement Gives Hope To 50,000 Australian Junior Doctors
By: Hayden Stephens and Associates
Healing Page By Page In Earthquake-affected Türkiye
By: UN News
Gaza: Rate Of Attacks On Healthcare Higher Than In Any Other Conflict Globally Since 2018
By: Save The Children
Green Light For New Cholera Vaccine, Ukraine Attacks Condemned, Action Against Racism, Brazil Rights Defenders Alert
By: UN News
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media