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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
19 March 2007
Activists Call for Alternative FTAs
Labor, environmental and humanitarian groups are urging the US Congress
to block pending FTA agreements and those now under negotiation that
promote corporate profits over human rights, exploitation of workers
and cause the destabilization of economies.
Instead they are proposing that FTAs should among others, incorporate
basic labour standards and meet basic social needs rather than merely
pushing capital across borders.
The following is an article on the call for an alternative to the present
‘neo-liberal’ trade agreements.
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Activists Seek Alternative Model to ‘Neo-Liberal’ Trade Pacts
by Michelle Chen
The NewStandard
Mar. 19 – With two controversial trade deals awaiting ratification,
Congress is taking stock of the White House's free-trade agenda, and
activists are seizing the moment to call for policies that respond to
the social needs of all countries involved.
Lawmakers are considering trade deals with Colombia
and Peru
that encapsulate some of the most contentious aspects of so-called "free
trade": rules that critics say elevate corporate privilege over
human rights, promote exploitation of workers, and destabilize economies.
At the same time, President Bush's power to broker such deals with minimal
congressional oversight comes up for renewal later this year.
Labor, environmental, and humanitarian groups are urging Congress to
block the pending agreements and similar accords now under negotiation.
And opponents outside government are also working to upend the ideology
behind modern trade policies in both parties by articulating an alternative
agenda – one that treats global trade as a resource to raise living
standards rather than as a vehicle for corporate profits.
"Trade is not any longer the province of government elites and
investors," said Gary Hubbard, a spokesperson for the United Steelworkers
union.
"Everyone should benefit from trade – not just global corporations
and governments."
Public outcry over free-trade agreements is nothing new. But with a
new Congress, following an election in which job security and trade
were hot-button issues, advocates for "fair trade" see an
opportunity to finally penetrate the political mainstream.
A first step, they say, is to reform the negotiation process that has
long been dominated by the White House and business interests.
The Bush administration's trade deals have been greased by "fast
tracking" – a special authority that enables the executive branch
to broker and sign a trade agreement without direct congressional input.
The deal then goes to a simple up-or-down vote; Congress cannot make
amendments, and debate time is limited. Last renewed in 2002, the president's
fast-track authority will expire on July 1 – unless the Democrat-controlled
Congress is persuaded to restore it.
Though the US Trade Representative's Office, the agency that leads trade
talks, does consult with outside "advisory committees," many
of these are currently dominated by representatives of corporations
like Boeing and Intel.
New Rules
Yvette Pena Lopes, with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
said that while union advocates realize that, inevitably, "trade
is going to happen," their challenge now is to "begin to lay
out what must be, and what cannot be, within trade agreements."
Earlier this month, the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, a coalition of unions
that includes the Teamsters, both issued policy statements calling for
a more-transparent negotiation process to replace the current fast-track
system. To check presidential power, they argued: Congress should design
economic and social "readiness criteria" for deciding whether
a trade deal with a country would be mutually beneficial. And lawmakers
should establish stronger, binding labor and environmental standards
that a country must meet before the president could finalize any deal.
The organizations said trade deals should incorporate basic labor standards
set by the United Nations's International Labour Organization (ILO).
These include the right to organize unions, prohibitions on child labor,
protections against discrimination in employment opportunities, and
the elimination of forced labor.
Unions and human-rights groups say the deals now awaiting congressional
approval run counter to these goals.
The Peru
agreement, for example, contains no explicit mandate to enforce ILO
standards. It simply directs the Peruvian government to uphold its "existing
labor laws" and discourages, but does not prohibit, the weakening
of protections to serve commercial interests. Meanwhile, an investigation
of Peru by the US
State Department uncovered widespread child labor. And the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions has reported frequent suppression
of union organizers by employers – especially multinational companies.
The labor coalitions also join other activist organizations in opposing
trade policies that could restrict governments from meeting basic social
needs.
Controversial patent rules in the Peru
and Colombia
deals would expand pharmaceutical companies' power to monopolize production
of essential medicines and block lower-cost generic versions. The Health
Ministry of Peru projected in 2005 that the Peru trade agreement would foreclose
access to medicine for about 700,000 to 900,000 people annually in the
first five years of implementation.
Critics of the trade deals say corporate privilege would be further
bolstered by "dispute settlement" measures, which empower
companies to sue governments over policies that supposedly impinge on
their market access.
Under similar provisions in the 1993 North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) among the United States,
Canada and Mexico, firms
have launched legal attacks on anti-toxic-dumping regulations, protections
for indigenous sacred sites, and domestic tax policies.
Touting trade liberalization as part of a regional strategy to "build
democratic institutions and promote socio-economic development,"
the US Trade Representative's Office has contended the pending trade
deals would boost jobs and investment opportunities for the United
States, while promoting long-term economic growth
and combating drug trafficking in Peru
and Colombia.
But Jessica Walker Beaumont, a trade and debt specialist with the Quaker
activist group American Friends Service Committee, said current trade
deals are based on "limiting the government's ability to make choices
for itself" in economic policy – such as establishing public ownership
of utilities, or shielding local farms from foreign competition.
In an analysis of the Peru
and Colombia
trade agreements, the humanitarian group Oxfam International predicted
the free-trade rules would displace small-scale farmers with an onslaught
of imports of cheap, subsidized US crops. The group cited government
data for nine primary crops in Colombia, including cotton and rice,
showing that without protective import restrictions, in these sectors,
the area of land farmed would shrink by one-fifth and employment would
fall by over a third.
Human-rights groups warn that economic destabilization of Colombia's rural
sector would deepen existing strife by driving farmers into lucrative
coca production or into the ranks of warring factions.
And workers' advocates argue that enacting the Colombia deal would display the administration's
indifference to the country's ongoing human-rights crisis. US and Colombian
rights groups point to scores of documented murders of trade unionists
in recent years amid a ferocious civil war.
Colombian Senator Gustavo Petro, a member of the opposition party Polo
Democrático Alternativo, told The NewStandard the trade deal must be
renegotiated to include "new clauses that protect the labor rights
of Colombian workers" as well as land-distribution policies that
protect smaller farmers.
"Undoubtedly," he said through an interpreter, under the current
deal, "the ones who will benefit, at least in the rural places
in Colombia,
are the narco-traffickers."
Recasting Globalization
Though fair-trade issues may be generating more political buzz, a concrete
alternative to the free-trade agenda has not yet materialized on Capitol
Hill.
More ambitious ideas have emerged on the grassroots level. One example
is a far-ranging blueprint for "sustainable" international
trade presented in 2002 by the Hemispheric Social Alliance, a coalition
of advocacy groups across the Americas.
That model envisioned trade pacts as mutual social contracts that would
condition economic exchange on the promotion of global ethical standards.
Rather than focusing on pushing capital across borders, governments
under these agreements would commit to policies like public investment
in alternative energy sources, equal labor rights for migrants, and
agricultural regulations based on securing an adequate regional food
supply.
Stephanie Burgos, an advisor for Oxfam on trade policy, said more-comprehensive
concepts of fair trade center on respect for the political and social
integrity of other nations – allowing economically poorer countries
to "decide their own pace and level of market opening."
For now, activists seeking dramatic changes in the global trade system
fear congressional Democrats might ultimately continue their general
support for prevailing neo-liberal trade priorities.
In a speech earlier this month, Representative Sander Levin (D–Michigan),
head of the House Ways
and Means Subcommittee on Trade, urged reforms to current trade policies,
stressing protections for US workers and labor rights.
But in recent statements, Ways and Means Committee chair Charles Rangel
(D–New York) has called for Congress and the White House to "be
partners in promoting trade" and announced he is working with the
Trade Representative's Office on a compromise over labor provisions
in the pending agreements.
Sarah Anderson, director of the Global Economy Project at the progressive
think tank Institute for Policy Studies, said activists should be wary
that Congress "might cut a deal in name of these fair-trade activists
but not actually go as far as we would like." In focusing on labor
policies in the trade deals, she said,
Democratic leaders could be trying to appease unions while glossing
over more-nuanced issues involving the environment or expansive powers
for investors.
But if broad consensus on how to restructure the global trade system
has yet to emerge in Washington, some activists perceive at least a
growing sense that the status quo is failing.
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