TTIP? WHATS THAT ABOUT
THEN??
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership is a series of
trade negotiations being carried out mostly in secret between the EU and US. As
a bi-lateral trade agreement, TTIP is about reducing the regulatory barriers to
trade for big business, things like food safety law, environmental legislation,
banking regulations and the sovereign powers of individual nations. It is, as
John Hilary,(War on Want), said: “An assault on European and US societies by
transnational corporations.”
Since before
TTIP negotiations began last February, the process has been secretive and
undemocratic. This secrecy is on-going, with nearly all information on
negotiations coming from leaked documents and Freedom of Information requests.
Here are
six other reasons why we should be scared of TTIP, very scared indeed:
1 The NHS
Public
services, especially the NHS, are in the firing line. One of the main aims of
TTIP is to open up Europe’s public health, education and water services to US companies.
This could essentially mean the privatisation of the NHS.
The European
Commission has claimed that public services will be kept out of TTIP. However,
the UK Trade Minister Lord Livingston has admitted that talks about the NHS
were still on the table.
2 Food and
environmental safety
TTIP’s
‘regulatory convergence’ agenda will seek to bring EU standards on food safety
and the environment closer to those of the US . But US regulations are much
less strict, with 70 per cent of all processed foods sold in US supermarkets
now containing genetically modified ingredients. By contrast, the EU allows
virtually no GM foods. The US
also has far laxer restrictions on the use of pesticides. It also uses growth
hormones in its beef which are restricted in Europe
due to links to cancer. US
farmers have tried to have these restrictions lifted repeatedly in the past
through the World Trade Organisation and it is likely that they will use TTIP
to do so again.
The same goes
for the environment, where the EU’s REACH regulations are far tougher on
potentially toxic substances. In Europe a company has to prove a substance is
safe before it can be used; in the US the opposite is true: any
substance can be used until it is proven unsafe. As an example, the EU
currently bans 1,200 substances from use in cosmetics; the US just 12.
TTIP cuts
both ways. The UK , under the
influence of the all-powerful City of London ,
is thought to be seeking a loosening of US banking regulations. America ’s
financial rules are tougher than ours. They were put into place after the
financial crisis to directly curb the powers of bankers and avoid a similar
crisis happening again. TTIP, it is feared, will remove those restrictions,
effectively handing all those powers back to the bankers.
4 Privacy
it’s feared
that TTIP could be bringing back ACTA’s central elements, proving that if the
democratic approach doesn’t work, there’s always the back door. An easing of
data privacy laws and a restriction of public access to pharmaceutical
companies’ clinical trials are also thought to be on the cards.
5 Jobs
The EU has
admitted that TTIP will probably cause unemployment as jobs switch to the US , where
labour standards and trade union rights are lower. It has even advised EU
members to draw on European support funds to compensate for the expected
unemployment.
6 Democracy
TTIP’s
biggest threat to society is its inherent assault on democracy. One of the main
aims of TTIP is the introduction of Investor-State Dispute Settlements (ISDS),
which allow companies to sue governments if those governments’ policies cause a
loss of profits. In effect it means unelected transnational corporations can
dictate the policies of democratically elected governments.
ISDSs are
already in place in other bi-lateral trade agreements around the world and have
led to such injustices as in Germany where Swedish energy company Vattenfall is
suing the German government for billions of dollars over its decision to phase
out nuclear power plants in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in Japan. Here
we see a public health policy put into place by a democratically elected
government being threatened by an energy giant because of a potential loss of
profit. Nothing could be more cynically anti-democratic.
There are
around 500 similar cases of businesses versus nations going on around the world
at the moment and they are all taking place before ‘arbitration tribunals’ made
up of corporate lawyers appointed on an ad hoc basis, which according to War on
Want’s John Hilary, are “little more than kangaroo courts” with “a vested
interest in ruling in favour of business.”
The scariest
thing is we have no vote on it. What we can do is tell as many people about it as
possible, . We may be forced to accept an attack on
democracy but we can at least fight against the conspiracy of silence.