12) COLLAPSE OF WTO
TALKS GOOD NEWS
(The
following
article is from the September 1-15, 2008, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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By Larry
Brown, Secretary-Treasurer, National Union of Public and General
Employees, from the NUPGE website, www.nupge.ca
This summer, while sensible Canadians were camping or canoeing, or
complaining about the weather, there was a great flurry of activity in
Geneva as World Trade Organization ((WTO) negotiators tried, one more
time, to reach agreement about new and extended trade deals covering
agriculture, manufacturing and services. Those talks, like several
before them, ended in failure. No new deal was reached.
That is unqualified good news. There was
nothing on the table in Geneva that would have helped ordinary
Canadians, and much that would have harmed us.
Let's start with the obvious disconnect
between the problems the world is facing and the Geneva talks on more
and better free trade.
We've had the WTO, and the General Agreement
on Trade in Services, (GATS), and all of the sub-agreements and
associated limitations on the rights of governments, for 20 years now.
The result has been more inequality between countries and within
countries. How could anyone argue that more of the same would have
reversed that trend? One definition of insanity is to keep doing the
same things over and over and expect a different result.
Race to the bottom
A major part of the whole free trade agenda is
that it allows companies to move their production to wherever is
cheapest for them. But you can never win the race to the bottom - there
never is an end to that race. Mexico set up the low wage, non-union,
low-tax Maquiladora zones, and for a while factories were set up there
in great numbers. Then those factories moved on to cheaper wage areas
in Africa and China, and just recently Adidas announced it was moving
much of its production out of China because the wages there have become
"too high."
Meanwhile the catastrophic loss of
manufacturing jobs in Canada would have been worsened if the new WTO
deal had gone through.
One of the most serious of the recent spate of
crises has been the international jump in food prices. A new WTO
agreement would have made that crisis worse.
For years we've had WTO rules on the freer
trade of agricultural products, otherwise known as food. The result has
been the commodification of food, the loss of agricultural capacity in
many poorer countries, which has meant the loss of ability of many of
the world's poor to feed themselves, and a devastating spike in food
prices, especially in those same poor countries losing much of their
domestic agriculture to the forces of international trade. More and
freer trade in agriculture would have simply made the problem worse.
Canadian farmers
For Canadian farmers, the result of the talks
in Geneva would have been the end to, or at the very least, the serious
weakening of systems for protecting the often precarious incomes of
farmers. The Wheat Board would have been threatened, the egg and dairy
and poultry marketing boards would have been threatened. Our government
can claim that they are disappointed by the collapse of the WTO talks,
but one suspects that they have their fingers crossed behind their
backs as they say this. As a result of the failure to reach agreement,
the government doesn't have to explain to the farmers of Canada why
they got sold out.
As Evo Morales, president of Bolivia, put it:
"In the poorest part of the planet, millions of human beings die from
hunger each year. In the richest part of the planet, millions of
dollars are spent to combat obesity. We consume in excess, waste
natural resources, and we produce the waste that pollutes Mother Earth."
Would a new WTO agreement have helped the
world deal with the environmental crisis? Exactly the opposite. Under
the WTO, trade trumps the environment every time. Governments cannot
take environmental actions which would "unduly" limit the rights of
international commerce. In fact under the WTO, the emphasis is on
moving products around the world, which means that the ships and planes
and trucks will have to keep up their frenzied pace, whatever the
consequences for the environment.
We've been facing an international crisis from
rising energy prices, especially oil and gas. Can anyone think of a
single way that a new WTO agreement on more free trade would have
helped to resolve this? The result would have been more movement of
goods and foods and services around the world, all requiring more
energy, more gas and oil. What would make much more sense with respect
to the energy crisis is for more local goods to be produced and
consumed, more local foods to be produced so we don't have to import so
much food from far flung corners of the world.
International financial crisis
We have an international financial crisis,
still unfolding, one that started with the greed of the sub-prime
mortgage fiasco in the U.S., a fiasco that was allowed to take place
because economic activity was essentially deregulated. The new WTO
agreement on services would have entrenched deregulation as a permanent
feature of the new world order, made the regulation of financial
services subject to the overwhelming dictates of the free market in
services. Canada is paying heavily for the U.S. collapse. Our
government should be focused on more regulation to govern our financial
sector, not on giving up more of our right to regulate, in perpetuity,
via a new trade deal.
The new deal being negotiated would have cost
us our ability to protect our public education systems from being
undermined by international private sector competition. Our public
postal system would have been under threat. Our right to have our
environment protection, or our garbage collection, or our waste
management, delivered by public systems would have been weakened.
The new agreements that were on the table
would have cemented in the worst aspects of our temporary foreign
worker programs, where workers from other countries can come to Canada
to work, so long as they leave behind their families for months or even
years, so long as they are willing to work for lower wages, are willing
to work in total subservience to an employer who can get them deported
by firing them, and are willing to put up with dangerous working
conditions. The "just in time, disposable workforce" would have been a
permanent feature of international trade.
Poor countries spared
Many governments around the world cannot
provide the basic services that we take for granted because their
countries are so poor. The new WTO deal would have cost these countries
an estimated $63 billion in lost tariff revenue - $63 billion that
would not go to education or health care or social service for the
world's poorest, all of this while innumerable manufacturing jobs in
emerging economies would have gone down the drain as well.
Our corporate heads, our agribusiness
companies, can whine and gripe all they want. For the rest of us, the
failure to reach a new agreement at the WTO made this a good summer in
at least one respect.