[CTC] Exclusive: AFL-CIO wants bigger say in U.S. digital trade deals for workers

Arthur Stamoulis arthur at citizenstrade.org
Tue Feb 7 14:10:40 PST 2023


Report online here:
https://aflcio.org/worker-centered-digital-agenda <https://aflcio.org/worker-centered-digital-agenda>


https://www.reuters.com/technology/afl-cio-wants-bigger-say-us-digital-trade-deals-workers-2023-02-07/ <https://www.reuters.com/technology/afl-cio-wants-bigger-say-us-digital-trade-deals-workers-2023-02-07/>

Exclusive: AFL-CIO wants bigger say in U.S. digital trade deals for workers

By David Lawder <https://www.reuters.com/authors/david-lawder/>

WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (Reuters) - The Biden administration has made digital trade the centerpiece of its trade negotiations, and the AFL-CIO wants a bigger say in how the U.S. Trade Representative's office sets goals in this area, arguing they are too often dictated by big technology companies.

The largest U.S. labor organization on Tuesday issued a set of principles that it says is needed to protect workers, the public's privacy and governments' ability to regulate a rapidly evolving sector as the USTR negotiates digital trade agreements.

The USTR is expected to soon propose text on the digital chapter in negotiations for the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, the Biden administration's signature economic agreement.

"To date, U.S. 'digital trade' agreements have sought to expand market access for large technology companies by granting broad digital data and intellectual property rights while narrowly constraining the ability of governments (of both the United States and our trade partners) to adopt measures to adopt measures to address the economic transformation," the AFL-CIO said in its plan.

The heart of the organization's demands involve ensuring that digital trade agreements are subject to strong and enforceable labor standards, the AFL-CIO said, discouraging the "exploitative" use of "gig" workers who often are deprived of benefits and subjected to difficult working conditions, and discouraging the offshoring of back-office or telemedicine jobs to countries with low labor standards.

But the AFL-CIO's demands also push back against a key component of recent U.S. trade deals that prohibit countries from imposing "data localization" policies to require data to be stored locally. The renegotiated North American free trade deal, which went into effect in 2020, included such provisions, and USTR has sparred in recent years with countries including India over their plans for such policies, arguing that U.S.-based data platforms should be free to operate anywhere in the world.

The AFL-CIO said that not all data is created equal and in some cases, governments should have the ability to require that individuals' sensitive personal information, such as medical or biometric data, be kept on-shore to ensure it is safe.

DIGITAL ECONOMY RULES

The principles also call for negotiating strong safeguards against misappropriations of voices, images or likenesses that could be used in digital content generated by artificial intelligence (AI) technologies.

"Corporations shouldn't dictate the rules of the global digital economy with no regard for working people," AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler said in a statement. "Their drive to monetize data frequently violates crucial privacy rights and exploits workers."

Other AFL-CIO demands for digital trade negotiations include:

- Requiring governments to enact strong policies to safeguard individuals' personal data as opposed to the current largely voluntary "self-regulation" model that has proven inadequate.

- Facilitate meaningful oversight of source codes and algorithms to ensure compliance with labor laws. The labor group says automated employee monitoring systems and other AI-enabled tools can undermine workers rights and promote discrimination.

- Address "abusive" employment practices in the technology sector, to discourage the use of contractors and require firms to eliminate labor abuses in their own operations and supply chains.

- Protect and promote economic security of creative professionals in the United States, including motion picture, television and music industry workers by aggressively addressing the stolen or unlicensed use of copyrighted content on digital platforms.

- Address the rise of cybercrime by state and private actors by requiring improved cybersecurity standards and a common enforcement agenda.




 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
AFL-CIO Unveils First-Ever Policy Agenda on Digital Economy and Trade
 
(Washington, D.C., Feb. 7, 2023)—As the Biden administration continues to remake U.S. trade policy through the lens of producing good-paying jobs and empowering working people across America, the AFL-CIO released its recommendations for creating a worker-centered digital trade agenda today. This is the first comprehensive proposal for safeguarding workers’ rights in the evolving digital economy. 
 
“The voices of working people must be at the table in shaping the direction of digital trade policy,” said AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. “Corporations shouldn’t dictate the rules of the global digital economy with no regard for working people. Their drive to monetize data frequently violates crucial privacy rights and exploits workers. The power of technology can be harnessed to build a fairer digital economy, produce economic growth that is shared by everyone and create life-sustaining opportunities for every working person far into the future.”
 
The AFL-CIO proposal comes at a time when corporations are continuing to operate with little oversight on digital trade practices, having a broad, and often negative, impact on workers’ rights. Employers are increasingly using artificial intelligence technology to restrict organizing efforts and surveil workers. Companies also are using technology to foster discrimination in the hiring process, outsource good-paying jobs, erode workers’ mental health and lower wages. The proposal, jointly released with the AFL-CIO Technology Institute <https://aflcio.org/press/releases/afl-cio-launches-technology-institute>, is in line with the Biden administration’s worker-centered trade policy and will help inform upcoming negotiations on trade and economic agreements in key regions. 
 
The proposal includes recommendations on how digital trade policy can better enable governments to enforce domestic policies to regulate new technologies, protect consumer data, compel corporate transparency about the use of artificial intelligence and allow officials to open industry-wide investigations. The paper also outlines commitments governments must make to address the challenges digital transformation poses to workers’ rights, including international data regulation and the offshoring of jobs, and calls for the reinforcement of high-road labor standards, copyright protections, and accountability from state and private actors for cybercrime. 
 
“Digital trade rules must not block the growing efforts to rein in the digital economy’s downsides that workers face on the job and at home,” said Patrick Woodall, policy and research director of the AFL-CIO Technology Institute. “A worker-centered digital trade agenda can safeguard workers’ rights and ensure that digital technologies do not undermine workplace safety, exacerbate employment discrimination, or undermine the right to form unions.” 
 
Click here  <https://aflcio.org/worker-centered-digital-agenda>to read the full paper. 
 



Arthur Stamoulis
Citizens Trade Campaign
(202) 494-8826




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