[CTC] Japan expected to announce entry to TPP free-trade talks this week
Arthur Stamoulis
arthur at citizenstrade.org
Wed Mar 13 09:29:18 PDT 2013
http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Global-Action/Have-You-Heard-of-the-TPP-Yet-An-Important-Trade-Agreement-You-Need-to-Know-About
Have You Heard of the TPP Yet? An Important Trade Agreement You Need
to Know About
2COMMENTS03/11/2013Celeste Drake
The U.S. government is currently working with 10 other countries to
negotiate the biggest trade and investment agreement (also known as a
“free trade agreement” or FTA) in history. It is called the TPP, or
Trans-Pacific Partnership. Not only will it be bigger than NAFTA (the
North American Free Trade Agreement)—it’s actually NAFTA plus eight
other countries.
But the mainstream press doesn’t talk about the TPP much. Have you
read about in in your local paper? Heard it mentioned on the evening
news or on news talk radio? Perhaps on the Sunday morning talk shows?
I have a feeling that most of you are shaking your heads, shrugging
your shoulders or making faces—becausethe answer is most likely "no."
Most people simply have not heard of the TPP, nor do they know that it
might be the last trade agreement the United States ever negotiates
(unlike past agreements, this one will be open to new countries,
whenever they want to join). So it is all the more important to get
this one right.
Why isn’t the press talking about this trade agreement? It’s certainly
not because trade is boring or irrelevant, and it is definitely not
because the debate is over.
Trade is relevant. The U.S. trade deficit, which has grown from a
little more than $70 billion in 1993, the year before NAFTA went into
effect, to nearly $540 billion today, costs us jobs. Trade deficits
represent lost opportunities. The bigger the trade deficit, the more
jobs we could have created in the United States but didn’t. Moreover,
trade agreements affect our domestic laws. Once we enter into a trade
agreement, it’s not so easy to raise tariffs on trading partners that
engage in egregious human rights violations—nor is it easy to exit the
agreement once we find out it is bad for our economy and our job
creation.
Trade also is interesting. Trade rules affect your rights in the
workplace, the safety of the food you eat and how clean your water is.
Trade rules can affect whether tuna canneries are allowed to tell you
if your tuna is dolphin-safe or whether local grocery stores have to
label the hamburger you buy with its country of origin. Trade rules
can affect the price of the fancy imported cheese you like or how much
North American content must be in an automobile for it to qualify for
the tariff benefits of NAFTA. And trade rules also can make it easier
for an employer to shut down a factory, call center or legal support
office and move it overseas. Trade is anything but boring.
And the debate is certainly not over. The proposed TPP is not yet
finished—the rules are still being written. Will those rules largely
mimic the rules that have helped kill off nearly 6 million
manufacturing jobs in the United States in just over a decade? On the
other hand, will the rules help make it easier for our brothers and
sisters overseas to organize and act collectively to improve their
wages and working conditions? Will the rules require our trading
partners to protect endangered species? Or will they make it easier
for giant global corporations to attack laws banning toxic chemicals?
We don’t know the answer to these questions yet—because the deal isn’t
done. But if the loudest voices the administration and Congress hear
belong to the global corporations who have benefited from past
agreements, I can predict what the answers will be. And they won’t be
answers we like. If you have not yet spoken up to tell President Obama
that America can’t take another NAFTA, now is the time. The president
wants to finish negotiating the agreement by October 2013. Tomorrow
may be too late.
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