By : NILE BOWIE
TO COMMEMORATE Malaysia’s
55th Independence Day, Prime Minister Najib Razak published an article
highlighting the nation’s various accomplishments, principally that while much
of world’s economies are “either flat or falling,” Malaysia is steadily
delivering high figures of economic growth.
The ruling Barisan Nasional
coalition, although perceived by the middle class to be unpopular, has overseen
consistent economic development and has worked to raise incomes and provide
consumer affordability.
Despite these achievements,
the upper echelons of Malaysia's ruling coalition have seemingly endorsed a
controversial international trade agreement that will have enormous impacts on
domestic consumers and will even undermine the government's own ability to
issue legislation.
The Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) is a free-trade agreement led by the United States in
partnership with Asia-Pacific nations like Brunei, Australia, New Zealand,
Singapore, and others. If the agreement is accepted by all participatory
nations and successfully passed, signatory countries must conform to a rigid
set of legal regulations, including strict intellectual property protections,
authored by representatives of big foreign corporations.
While critics of the agreement
call it “a stealth attack on democratic governance,” leading members of the US
Senate and Congress have expressed outrage over the TPP primarily due to the
climate of secrecy surrounding the negotiations. Six hundred US corporate
advisors have negotiated the TPP, and the proposed draft text has not been made
available to the public, the press or policymakers.
US Senator Ron Wyden, the
Chair of the Congressional Committee with jurisdiction over TPP, was even
denied access to the negotiation texts. [2] In Malaysia, members of parliament
such as Charles Santiago have voiced frustrations over Putrajaya’s
unwillingness to release any information regarding the agreement.
Based on information
contained in two leaked chapters of the TPP agreement, the partnership aims to
abolish the accountability of foreign corporations to the governments of
countries with which they trade by introducing a myriad of new corporate rights
and privileges.
The proposed agreement would
make signatory governments accountable to foreign corporations for costs
imposed by national laws and regulations, including health, safety and
environmental regulations, mandating that corporations receive compensation
taken directly from domestic taxpayers and public funds.
Advocacy website Public
Citizen has confirmed the authenticity of a leaked chapter of the TPP titled,
“Investment,” and issued a detailed analysis of the text. In addition to the
leaked “Intellectual Property Rights” chapter, it can be concluded that the agreement
illustrates the major goal of US multinational corporations to impose extreme
foreign investor privileges and rights on developing countries by giving
individual corporations and investors equal standing with each TPP signatory
country's government.
NGOs such as the Malaysian
AIDS Council and the Breast Cancer Welfare Association Malaysia have voiced
their concern over the TPP’s restrictive intellectual property laws, which
allow American drug companies to secure long-term monopolies on pharmaceutical
products by preventing the production of generic drugs, thus increasing the
price of medicine.
The United States is
demanding aggressive intellectual property provisions that extend existing
patents on medicines for up to 10 years in addition to the current requirement
of 20 years. Malaysian Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai has spoken out
against the TPP, arguing that such an agreement would make healthcare less
affordable to the public:
"We are against the
patent extension. According to the agreement, if a medicine is launched in the
US, and then three years later it is launched in Malaysia, the patent would
start from when it is launched here and not when it was launched earlier in the
US, this is not fair."
The proposed legislation on
Intellectual Property will have enormous ramifications for TPP signatories,
including Internet termination for households, businesses, and organizations as
an accepted penalty for copyright infringement. In addition to allowing
copyright holders to ban parallel imports of copywritten material and
prioritizing national police to enforce copyright laws, a drastic expansion of
copyright duration for sound recordings and film is imposed.
Signatory nations would
essentially submit themselves to oppressive copyright restrictions in line with
American law, severely limiting their ability to digitally exchange information
on sites like YouTube, where streaming videos can be considered copyrightable.
Patricia Ranald, convener of the Australian Fair Trade and Investment Network
offers:
"Broader copyright and
intellectual property rights demands by the US would lock up the Internet,
stifle research and increase education costs, by extending existing generous
copyright from 70 years to 120 years, and even making it a criminal offense to
temporarily store files on a computer without authorization. The US, as a net
exporter of digital information, would be the only party to benefit from this.”
Proposed measures would restrict
signatory nations from exercising capital controls to prevent and mitigate
financial crises and promote financial stability. Malaysia was able to recover
from the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis more quickly than its neighbors by
introducing a series of capital control measures on the Malaysian Ringgit to
prevent external speculation.
Under the TPP, nations would
not have the ability to independently pursue monetary policy and issue capital
controls, and must permit the free flow of derivatives, currency speculation
and other predatory financial instruments. [8] Signatories to the TPP could
have their domestic policies (health policy, land use policy, government
procurement decisions, regulatory permits, intellectual property rights,
monetary regulation) legally overwritten before foreign tribunals, giving
external investors the right to pursue claims against a nation outside the
regulations of that nation’s own judicial system.
In the private
“investor-state” that the TPP is attempting to establish, national governments
can be sued by foreign corporations, submitting signatory countries to the
jurisdiction of investor arbitral tribunals, staffed by private sector
attorneys. Foreign tribunals could order governments to pay unlimited cash
compensation out of national treasuries to foreign corporations and investors
if new or existing government policy hinders investors’ “expected future
profits”.
Any compensation paid to
private investors and foreign corporations, in addition to large hourly fees
for tribunals and legal costs would be shouldered by the domestic taxpayer in
each signatory country. Under this regime, foreign investors and multinational
corporations can undermine the sovereignty of participatory nations by skirting
domestic regulations and limiting the abilities of national governments to
issue policy.
The Trans-Pacific
Partnership would oblige nations to alter their domestic policy to comply with
twenty-six proposed chapters of legislation, including financial, health-care,
telecommunications, food and product standards, land use and natural resources,
government procurement, and more.
Undoubtedly, the
Trans-Pacific Partnership is a document is constructed to serve private, not
public interests, by exempting private corporations from any form of public
accountability.
The analysis provided in
this article is based on two leaked chapters of the proposed agreement (which
may or may not be subject to amendments prior to the conclusion of
negotiations); the other twenty-four chapters have not been released for public
scrutiny, or even to policymakers in those participating countries.
Other than the national
delegation for each participating country, the only people who have been
allowed to see the actual text of the proposed agreement are members of various
Trade Advisory Committees and top corporate executives, with no representatives
from academia or civil society.
The blanketing secrecy over
the entire negotiation process is nothing short of alarming, with legislation
in place to keep text proposals from being publically released until four years
after the close of negotiations. [9] The next round of TPP negotiations is set
to take place in Leesburg, Virginia in early September. Prime Minister Najib
Razak has said Malaysia is committed to being a member of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership:
"I hope sometimes in
the near future we will be able to conclude TPP. It is important for the US to
have free trade with ASEAN. ASEAN is a US$2 trillion (RM6.30 trillion) market
of 600 million people and there is not another trade bloc with momentum like it
in the world."
Ostensibly, the TPP can be
seen as an attempt by the United States to build a coalition in which its
corporate interests dominate the ASEAN region to counter China's increasing
economic prowess.
Leaders and citizens alike
must reexamine their stance on this issue and consider the enormous negative
ramifications it would hold for consumers and domestic industry. Previous
attempts to negotiate a US-Malaysia bilateral free trade agreement in 2006 –
2010 have failed; one would hope that attempts to implement a Trans-Pacific
Partnership suffer a similar fate.
(NOTE : Nile Bowie is a
Kuala Lumpur-based American writer and photographer for the Centre for Research
on Globalization based in Montreal, Canada. He explores issues of terrorism,
economics and geopolitics.)
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