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cali

(114,904 posts)
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 10:15 AM Mar 2014

Give and take in the EU-US trade deal? Sure. We give, the corporations take


Nothing threatens democracy as much as corporate power. Nowhere do corporations operate with greater freedom than between nations, for here there is no competition. With the exception of the European parliament, there is no transnational democracy, anywhere. All other supranational bodies – the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the United Nations, trade organisations and the rest – work on the principle of photocopy democracy (presumed consent is transferred, copy by copy, to ever-greyer and more remote institutions) or no democracy at all.

When everything has been globalised except our consent, corporations fill the void. In a system that governments have shown no interest in reforming, global power is often scarcely distinguishable from corporate power. It is exercised through backroom deals between bureaucrats and lobbyists.

This is how negotiations over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) began. The TTIP is a proposed single market between the United States and the European Union, described as "the biggest trade deal in the world". Corporate lobbyists secretly boasted that they would "essentially co-write regulation". But, after some of their plans were leaked and people responded with outrage, democracy campaigners have begun to extract a few concessions. The talks have just resumed, and there's a sense that we cannot remain shut out.

This trade deal has little to do with removing trade taxes (tariffs). As the EU's chief negotiator says, about 80% of it involves "discussions on regulations which protect people from risks to their health, safety, environment, financial and data security". Discussions on regulations means aligning the rules in the EU with those in the US. But Karel De Gucht, the European trade commissioner, maintains that European standards "are not up for negotiation. There is no 'give and take'." An international treaty without give and take? That is a novel concept. A treaty with the US without negotiation? That's not just novel, that's nuts.

<snip>

But this is not all that democracy must give so that corporations can take. The most dangerous aspect of the talks is the insistence on both sides on a mechanism called investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS). ISDS allows corporations to sue governments at offshore arbitration panels of corporate lawyers, bypassing domestic courts. Inserted into other trade treaties, it has been used by big business to strike down laws that impinge on its profits: the plain packaging of cigarettes; tougher financial rules; stronger standards on water pollution and public health; attempts to leave fossil fuels in the ground.

<snip>

And still there remains that howling absence: a credible explanation of why ISDS is necessary. As Kenneth Clarke, the British minister promoting the TTIP, admits: "It was designed to support businesses investing in countries where the rule of law is unpredictable, to say the least." So what is it doing in a US-EU treaty? A report commissioned by the UK government found that ISDS "is highly unlikely to encourage investment" and is "likely to provide the UK with few or no benefits". But it could allow corporations on both sides of the ocean to sue the living daylights out of governments that stand in their way.

<snip>

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/10/eu-us-trade-deal-give-corporations-take
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Give and take in the EU-US trade deal? Sure. We give, the corporations take (Original Post) cali Mar 2014 OP
kick. this is a really good article. cali Mar 2014 #1
Great little article. Best summary of the TPP/TTIP in five words or less: jsr Mar 2014 #2
It is a great article and I agree about how that sums up the TTP/TTIP cali Mar 2014 #3

jsr

(7,712 posts)
2. Great little article. Best summary of the TPP/TTIP in five words or less:
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 10:49 AM
Mar 2014

"We give, the corporations take."

 

cali

(114,904 posts)
3. It is a great article and I agree about how that sums up the TTP/TTIP
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 11:23 AM
Mar 2014

President Obama has been great for corporations, the 1% and increasing corporate power and influence. Yeah, he's better than a rethug but that's what you call damning with faint praise. Nothing demonstrates his favoring corporations over people like his pushing this shit- and his vastly corporate appointments- in virtually every arena.

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