ITUC: TPP Trade Talks Must Stop
ITUC: TPP Trade Talks Must Stop
Brussels,
11 November 2014 (ITUC OnLine): The ITUC has called on
governments to stop negotiations on the “Trans-Pacific
Partnership” agreement, criticising the secrecy and
corporate bias in the current negotiations.
Sharan
Burrow, ITUC General Secretary, said “This secretive trade
deal is good for some multinational corporations, but deeply
damaging to ordinary people and the very role of
governments. Corporate interests are at the negotiating
table, but national parliaments and other democratic actors
are being kept in the dark. What we do know, much of it
through leaks, is that this proposed deal is not about
ensuring better livelihoods for people, but about giving
multinational companies a big boost to profits. Governments
should shut down the negotiations, and not re-open them
unless they get genuine and transparent public mandates at
home that put people’s interest in the centre.”
The
current TPP proposals include provisions which would:
-
Make governments submit to so-called investor to state
dispute settlement (ISDS) procedures whereby investors can
sue governments on a wide range of policies, including
environmental and social policies ;
- Introduce
patent protections that would boost pharmaceutical
companies’ profits, but put vital medicines out of reach
for millions of poorer people;
- Severely restrict
governments’ ability to make national laws for public
health, safety and general welfare with a ‘regulatory
coherence’ chapter;
- Stop governments from
giving priority to public policy aims when making decisions
about public procurement;
- Impose a series of
restrictions on governments’ abilities to regulate the
financial sector, thus holding back efforts to reform
damaging financial speculation and impeding governments from
taking measures to maintain their balance of
payment.
Proposals for protection of workers’ rights have met with heavy resistance from some countries, and appear to not cover all ILO Conventions that establish Fundamental Rights at Work or subnational (state and province) labour legislation. The proposals also contain no enforcement for environmental provisions, and fail to address the need for action to mitigate climate change.
“A fair and open global trading system is essential to prosperity, but this proposed TPP is nothing of the sort. Global and regional trade needs to create jobs and prosperity for the many, not just provide welfare for corporations and transfer more power from the parliaments to the boardroom,” said Burrow.
National trade union
centers in the countries negotiating the TPP are today
formally calling on their governments to stop the
negotiations, and to seek a proper negotiation mandate if
they are to engage in the negotiations again.
The
national trade union centers that support this call are:
Australia, ACTU; Canada, CSN y CSD; Japan, JTUC-RENGO;
Mexico, UNT; New Zealand, NZCTU; Peru, CUT y CATP; United
States, AFL-CIO. Some of these trade unions, as well as the
unions of Chile (CUT-Chile) and Malaysia (MTUC) had asked
for the negotiations to stop at an earlier stage.
The ITUC represents 176 million workers in 161 countries and territories and has 324 national affiliates.
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ENDS