"Free trade". The term
itself is a trap - a brilliant framing device that neatly neutralises
opposition. If you take a stand against free trade you appear to be
taking a stand against freedom itself, which is clearly not a tenable
position. In fact, in recent decades the term "free trade" has become
very closely associated with "democracy", owing in no small part to the
efforts of right-wing think tanks like the Heritage Foundation, the
Business Roundtable, and the Cato Institute, which have built up a
powerful PR campaign to establish this spurious connection in the minds
of the public.
But what does freedom really mean in this context?
It turns out that it has very little to do with meaningful human
freedom, and rather a lot to do with corporate freedom - the freedom of
corporations to extract and exploit without hindrance. "Free trade" is
an obvious propaganda term, a form of Orwellian doublethink that means
exactly the opposite of what it claims.
If we take a look at existing free trade
agreements, such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), we
see that they focus primarily on battering down import barriers, curbing
labour unions, reducing restrictions on pollution, legalising capital
flight, cutting corporate taxes, eliminating state subsidies for local
industries, privatising public assets, and extending foreign patent
protections. None of these measures have to do with enhancing human
freedom. Rather, they are designed in the interests of multinational
corporations, who through them gain access to new export markets and
investment opportunities, and cheaper labour and raw materials.
The disturbing thing about the rhetorical strategy of "free trade" is that the very things that do promote
real human freedoms - such as the right of workers to organise, equal
access to decent public services, and safeguards for a healthy
environment - are cast as somehow anti-democratic, or even totalitarian.
These freedoms are reframed as "red tape", as "market interventions",
or as "barriers to investment", even when, as is almost always the case,
they have been won by popular grassroots movements exercising
democratic franchise.
A new global order
In this paradigm, democracy itself begins to
appear as anti-democratic, inasmuch as it grants voters control over the
economic policies that affect their lives. As this absurd logic moves
steadily toward its ultimate conclusion, democracy becomes an obstacle
that needs to be circumvented in the interests of "free" trade and
investment.
"If these deals come into effect, multinational corporations will be
empowered to regulate democratic states, rather than the other way
around." |
This may sound extreme, but it is exactly what is
happening today. We can see it very clearly in two new "free trade"
deals that are about to come into effect: the Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP), which will govern trade between the US
and the European Union, and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which
will govern trade between the US and a number of Pacific nations. We
hear very little about these deals because they are shrouded in secrecy,
and because six of the corporations leading the negotiations happen to control 90 percent of our media. Yet we need to pay attention, because these deals are set to form the blueprint for a new global order.
The TTIP and the TPP go far beyond earlier trade
deals like NAFTA, which seem almost quaint by comparison. In addition to
battering down import tariffs and privatising public services, they
grant corporations the power to strike down the laws of sovereign nations.
You read that right. If these deals come into effect, multinational
corporations will be empowered to regulate democratic states, rather
than the other way around. This is the most far-reaching assault on the
ideas of sovereignty and democracy that has ever been attempted in
history. And it is being conducted under the banner of "freedom".
We only know about this because of a few intrepid whistleblowers who have leaked draft chapters of
the TPP to the public. The leaked chapters show that corporations will
seize the power to sue governments for implementing policies that
threaten to reduce their potential profits. The mechanism that
facilitates this is known as "investor-state dispute settlement", which
sets up private tribunals to adjudicate between corporations and states.
The hearings of these tribunals will be held in secret, the judges will
be corporate lawyers, and there will be no right of appeal.
An assault on democracy
"In other words, elected politicians around the world will find
themselves stripped of power to defend the interests of their people and
the planet against disasters such as economic crisis and climate
change." |
Let's imagine that Malaysian voters elect
politicians who promise to roll out new worker safety standards for
garment sweatshops, or new limits on the toxic chemical dyes that
sweatshops dump into local rivers. Let's imagine that these new rules
are ratified by the national parliament with unanimous support. If the
multinational corporations that run those sweatshops - say, Nike or
Primark - believe that their profits will be negatively affected, they
will have the power to sue the government to stop the implementation of
the new rules, subverting the will of the people and overriding the
power of their elected representatives.
Investor-state dispute settlement tribunals are
already in use, so we know how they work. In El Salvador, citizens
recently voted to ban a gold mine planned by Pacific Rim, a Canadian
corporation, because it threatened to destroy part of the national river
system. Pacific Rim is now suing El Salvador
for $315m worth of lost potential profits. In Canada, Dow Agrosciences, a
US corporation, is suing the government for banning the use of its
pesticides on the basis that they may cause cancer in humans. In
Britain, presuming the TTIP goes ahead, US healthcare corporations are
set to sue the government if it tries to prevent them from buying up the
NHS, something British voters are overwhelmingly against.
In addition to allowing corporations to sue
states, these new trade deals will pre-emptively prevent states from
making certain laws. For example, they will make it illegal for
governments to stop commercial banks from engaging in securities
trading, which was one of the main causes of the global financial
crisis. The deals will also prevent governments from limiting the size
of too-big-to-fail banks, and will prohibit the proposed Robin Hood Tax
on financial transactions. And, perhaps most worryingly of all, they
will restrict governments from limiting the extraction and consumption
of fossil fuels.
In other words, elected politicians around the
world will find themselves stripped of power to defend the interests of
their people and the planet against disasters such as economic crisis
and climate change.
This unprecedented corporate power-grab amounts to
something like an international coup d'etat. It dispenses with the idea
of national sovereignty, and pours scorn on the notion of elected
government. The ideology of "free trade" has now overplayed its hand; it
has exposed itself as a farce. With democracy about to be sacrificed on
the altar of free trade, it has become abundantly clear that free trade
was never meant to be about freedom in the first place.
_______________
Dr Jason Hickel lectures at the London
School of Economics and serves as an adviser to /The Rules. He has
contributed political critique and analysis to various magazines. He is
currently working on a new book titled The Development Delusion: Why Aid Misses the Point about Poverty.
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Source: Al Jazeera
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