Don t let TPP jeopardise Malaysia s future

Similar documents
Trans- Paci*ic Partnership

overview FACT SHEET trans-pacific partnership TPP

WHAT DO AMERICANS THINK ABOUT FREE TRADE?

A Health Impact Assessment of the Trans- Pacific Partnership Agreement: Few Gains, Many Risks

Trade Agreements and public education: don t repeat the mistakes of the TPP

Trading Away Health: What to Watch Out for in Free Trade Agreements

Pre-Hearing Statement of Linda M. Dempsey, Vice President, International Economic Affairs, National Association of Manufacturers

Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership

POLICY BRIEF. TPP11: Unpacking the Suspended Provisions. Going from 12 to 11 Parties. No Changes in Most Chapters. NUMBER: November 2017

JAPAN BRUNEI DARUSSALAM AUSTRALIA

What is TPP? Trans-Pacific Partnership TPP

Mega-Regional Trading Arrangements: TPP and TTIP - how China and other emerging economy react to the new rules governing the trade and investment?

Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

The Power of Policy Module 3

Basic Concepts in IPE

International Trade Agreements and Emerging Markets

THE NEW USMCA WHAT IT MEANS AND HOW WE GOT HERE

The TransPacific Partnership (TPP) is a regional trade agreement being negotiated

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

CANARY COAL MINE A cautionary tale of trade: Canada s experience of Investor-State Dispute Settlement under NAFTA

Economic Impact of Canada s Participation in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership

Emeritus Professor Dr Zakariah Abdul Rashid. Executive Director Malaysian Institute of Economic Research

Navigating the Trans- Pacific Partnership

Economics Higher level Paper 2

Trade Policy Principles and the WTO. Will Martin World Bank May 8, 2006

Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement

CFRED The Trans Pacific Partnership Impact and Implications. Assessing the content from a business perspective

Regional Energy Security & Collaboration; Moving from a Free Trade Area, to a. North American Community. Remarks by the Honourable Sergio Marchi,

Globalization: Crises and Crunches. Mr Alan Duhs. The School Of Economics Schools Day July 23, 2009

PubPol 201. Module 3: International Trade Policy. Class 6 Outline. Class 6 Outline. NAFTA What is it? NAFTA What is it? NAFTA What is it?

Putting Money to Work - Investing

Capital Flow Management and the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement

China s Currency: A Summary of the Economic Issues

MINERALS COUNCIL OF AUSTRALIA SUBMISSION TO DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND TRADE ON PROPOSED PACIFIC ALLIANCE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT

Professor the Hon. Stephen Martin Chief Executive, CEDA

ENHANCING TRADE AND INVESTMENT, SUPPORTING JOBS, ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT: OUTLINES OF THE TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

Inequality & Health analysis of the US TPP Proposal for the IP chapter & pharmaceuticals 1. June 11, 2014

Economic Nationalism: Reality or Rhetoric? Ian Sheldon AED Economics Ohio State University. AAII Columbus Chapter November 8, 2017

Why We Don't Want A Trade War With China

Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Questions & Answers

Raising the minimum wage is good for the economy

Future of the Trading System. Robert Z. Lawrence

China-US Trade Disputes (II)

Life after NAFTA? The odds that NAFTA will be torn up, not simply amended, appear to be increasing

THE CONSUMER CHECKLIST FOR A POSITIVE EU- AUSTRALIA TRADE AGREEMENT

Economic Diversification and Economic Development. Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge

CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY 2017 FEDERAL PRE-BUDGET SUBMISSION. Prepared for the Standing Committee on Finance

India s Trade Policy and Global Trade Initiatives

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CURRENT AFFAIRS 2017

BRIEFING ON The TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT (TPPA)

QUARTERLY INVESTMENT INSIGHT FROM HIGHTOWER LAS VEGAS

The TPP Agreement: An Opportunity for Maryland. Trade & Investment with TPP Countries Is Good for Maryland. Jobs Exports Investment

9707/1,2 Business Studies Unit 1: Business & Environment A Levels

NUMBER: November TPP11 and RCEP Compared

SINGLE MARKET - FIFTH BARRIER DIFFERING SOCIAL, ENVIRONMENTAL & OTHER STANDARDS. environmental rules (like pollution standards) or consumer

In this chapter, you will explore business-government trade relations. You will also: Examine the political, economic, and cultural reasons why

OVERLOOKED FACTS ABOUT

TTIP: Why Ireland needs it

The Parties to this Agreement, resolving to:.

Singapore Economic Review Conference (SERC) 2007

ECON CHAPTER. McEachern Micro. International Trade. Designed by Amy McGuire, B-books, Ltd.

TPP11 Agreement in Principle: Japan s Role in Mega-regional Trade Agreements

A Transition to Sustainable and Shared Prosperity. Joseph E. Stiglitz Tokyo March 14, 2017

The Trans-Pacific Partnership:

Subsidies. A transfer payment given by a government to their exporting companies. Trade Barriers

2019 USCIB Trade and Investment Agenda

International Trade. Comparative Advantage and Gains from Trade: Tom and Hank. The Importance of International Trade

160A: International Microeconomics Final Exam: Professor Swenson March Points

Trade in New England. Export-Supported U.S. Jobs (2014) Merchandise Exports (2015)

Lessons of the Financial Crisis for the Design of the New International Financial Architecture

TRADE AND INVESTMENT. Introduction. Trade. A shift toward horizontal trade

PubPol 201. Module 3: International Trade Policy. Class 2 The Gains and Losses from Trade

Should Australia agree to investorstate dispute settlement in the Trans-Pacific Partnership?

Summary of negotiating objectives

Economic Impact of Canada s Potential Participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement

1of 23. Learning Objectives

The Renminbi and the Global Economy. Robert Mundell. Chinese University of Hong Kong June 3, 2005

EU Trade Policy and CETA

Trade & Investment with TPP Countries Is Good for North Carolina. Jobs Exports Investment

5 Biggest Mistakes Most Home Buyers Make

Associate Professor, Dr Pham Thi Hong Yen Central Economic Commission Viet Nam

Malaysia. Real Sector. Economic recovery is gaining momentum.

Trans-Pacific Partnership

WEEKLY COMMODITY REVIEW

Current Status and Future Prospects of the TPP Negotiations

On the Low Success Rate of Investor-State Disputes

The Great Depression Canadian History 1201

China / Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA) Maximising Opportunities. December 2014

H. RES. ll IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES RESOLUTION

Asymmetric Capabilities in Trade Negotiations: Suggestions for Helping the Smaller Economies in the FTAA Process. By Ira Shapiro and Robert Cassidy

1.5 The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)

DSV UK GROUP PENSION SCHEME Your Guide to Making Investment Decisions October 2015

TOOLKIT: CHALLENGING CORPORATE POWER IN TRADE DEALS.

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 20 International Policies for Economic Development: Financial

EUROPEAN BUSINESS COUNCIL (EBC) Call for Preliminary Talks on an EU-Japan Economic Integration Agreement. June 03, 2007

Fresh Start Trust. Lesson #1 Checklist Starting at the Beginning

CHAPTER 16 International Trade

Closing Developing Countries Capital Drain

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 33. Comparative Advantage and the Open Economy

Speech by. The Hon Mark Vaile MP. Deputy Prime Minister Leader of The Nationals Minister for Trade. The Institute for International Trade

Transcription:

M A L A Y S I A Don t let TPP jeopardise Malaysia s future BY JOSEPH STIGLITZ AND ADAM HERSH Published: 2 October 2015 6:46 AM The Trans-Pacific Partnership is a lopsided agreement favouring the United States. Two leading American economists have urged Putrajaya to safeguard Malaysians before signing the deal, which is set to be concluded at year-end. The Malaysian Insider file pic, October 2, 2015. Please share your Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is facing his last best chance to reverse the feedback course of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, a new international economic agreement that would lock in unequal trading relationships between advanced economy countries, such as the United States, Japan, Canada, and Australia, and developing economies like Malaysia. We are conducting a quick survey to better understand our audience TPP negotiators are now in what they hope is the final round to conclude this agreement. Political Continue Cancel leaders will boast of negotiating for the best interests of their people and country. http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dont let tpp jeopardise malaysias future 1/5

But the reality is that special corporate interests in the United States as elsewhere have been given far too much influence on the negotiations. The agreement will go far beyond just cutting tariffs and quotas to mandate fundamental changes in each country s legal, judicial, and regulatory institutions a sop to the moneyed lobbies who have had more access to the process than concerned citizens or even lawmakers. Given past experience with US led trade agreements, and what we glean from documents leaked from the confidential negotiations, it is clear that Malaysia s negotiators are giving away much to advanced country business interests. It is less clear why they would, given the economic loss Malaysia is expected to get in return for such a deal. Typically, one thinks of negotiation as one side giving something in order to get something else in return. But with the TPP, it is not clear what Malaysia would be getting. Economists at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, UNCTAD, forecast that Malaysia would actually be a net trade loser as a result of joining TPP, with difference between the value Malaysia produces for export and the value it imports, the trade balance, declining by US$17 billion (RM75 billion) per year as a result of the agreement. In other words, the TPP would make Malaysia worse off by the most straightforward of economic measures. These trade agreements are not free trade agreements, but managed trade agreements, and typically managed for the interests of corporate interests. And while the name Trans Pacific Partnership suggests a partnership, it is a special kind of partnership, where one country, the US, calls most of the shots, giving into other partners the bare minimum necessary to secure compliance from their corporate and other special interests. Not surprisingly, the big winners are corporate interests in the US, the big losers are ordinary citizens, both in the US and elsewhere. But Malaysia stands out as one of the countries where as it now stands even the country s economic interests stand to lose, with iron and steel, aluminium, mineral fuels, plastics, and rubber are among the sectors that will be hurt. The shock to this industrial employment and investment will occur at the same time that Malaysian agricultural producers face greater import competition. http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dont let tpp jeopardise malaysias future 2/5

But the harm the TPP would do to Malaysian industry is just the tip of the iceberg. Other features make it an even more dramatically bad deal. First, TPP would restrict member countries governments including Malaysia s from passing regulations to protect public health, safety, and the environment, or any other aspect of the public good. That s because the TPP would create investor state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanisms that would allow foreigners to sue the government when they think a regulation will harm their profits. The arbitration would be private and binding, even if the outcome contradicts domestic laws. And the company could be compensated for the loss of its expected profits, not just for its past investments, even if its profits are generated by selling products that kill people and if there is no discrimination involved in the regulation. International corporate interests tout ISDS mechanisms as investment protecting, but that is sheer nonsense: they are demanding similar provisions of European countries whose legal system provides every bit as good protection for property rights as the US. In reality they are a backhanded way of undermining countries ability to protect the health and safety of their citizens, the environment, or even the economy. Cigarette companies, for instance, can sue a government for requiring particular packaging for tobacco products simply by claiming it hurts their profits. These are not hypothetical threats similar investment agreements already exist and have led to such suits. Malaysia s TPP partner Peru is currently facing a US$800 million claim by US investor Renco over whether Renco can continue to operate a lead smelter ranked among the world s 10 most polluted sites and whether it can avoid paying compensation for the victims and to remediate the site. In another case, Australia is currently facing a suit over public health warning labels on cigarette packages intended to curb tobacco smoking, as is Uruguay (which is not a TPP partner). Canada, under threat of suit, backed down from similar proposed regulations. And Mexico has been forced to pay US$15 million after arbitrators found error with a state government decision shut down an unpermitted toxic waste dump found to be leaking into the groundwater. Existing ISDS mechanisms are bad enough. Their radical expansion under TPP would be disastrous. http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dont let tpp jeopardise malaysias future 3/5

Second, the TPP would effectively outlaw countries efforts to protect themselves from international financial speculators, who inject money into local economies when they re hot and take money out as soon as they cool. Such unchecked short term capital flows cause instability and promote crises, as Malaysia knows full well from the 1997 98 Asian financial crisis. Malaysia used capital controls to protect its people from the worst effects of that crisis. The result was a shorter and shallower downturn than elsewhere, with a smaller legacy of debt burdening future growth. Mainstream economists now widely recognise that capital controls are an essential tool for financial regulation even the International Monetary Fund, which once campaigned against them, has finally admitted their importance. Since the crisis, Malaysia, has discarded its capital controls (http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/no ringgit peg najib tells us fund managers), but would be well advised to reinstate them were it to face another episode of financial turbulence like the last. The TPP would effectively prevent it from even having the choice of reinstating them in the future throwing it into the hands of the IMF, with the consequence surrender of its economic sovereignty, or forcing it to face even worse choices. Malaysians need to reflect: what would have happened back then if there had been an agreement like TPP in place? Most likely, Malaysia would still be suffering the economic and political consequences. A third way TPP locks in the unequal advantages of advanced economy countries is by raising intellectual property (IP) protection in ways that raise profits for intellectual property owners at the expense of everyone else. The impact of more stringent IP can be seen most clearly when it comes to life saving medicines. Driven by Big Pharma lobbyists, American negotiators are pressing TPP countries to accept protections that will boost their profits, not from innovating new medicines but by keeping potential competitors out of the market and charging consumers higher prices. http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dont let tpp jeopardise malaysias future 4/5

It accomplishes this through a variety of seemingly arcane rule changes buried in jargon about patent linkage and biologics which collectively would allow pharmaceutical companies to extend their monopolies for many more years than they currently can. Mylan, a leading generic medicine manufacturer, has warned that TPP may in effect shut their business out of participating countries meaning not only will Malaysians pay more for medicines, but that some medicines may cease to be readily available in Malaysia. Rightly done, greater trade and investment integration with the world promises a lot for Malaysia, but the TPP is not the way to accomplish it. There is no evidence that such kinds of provisions are contained in the TPP. What they will do is ensure that more of the wages of hardworking Malaysians end up in the pockets of global corporations. If Najib truly believes in putting the Malaysian people first, he will instruct his negotiators in Atlanta to ensure (a) that Malaysia at least gains economically from the trade agreement; (b) that its citizens continue to have access to generic medicines at affordable prices; and (c) that the TPP leaves Malaysia s economic future its own hands, not those of multinational investors. The bottom line must be that TPP make space for Malaysia s development needs. His negotiators have a hard task ahead, for as it now stands, TPP is designed to set the economy back and to take away some of the critical tools that it needs to promote the health of its people and its economy. October 2, 2015. * Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is University Professor at Columbia University and chief economist at the Roosevelt Institute. Adam Hersh is senior economist at the Roosevelt Institute and visiting scholar at Columbia University s Initiative for Policy Dialogue. (https://plus.google.com/116149365819672226451) http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dont let tpp jeopardise malaysias future 5/5