The TPP: A Quiet Coup for the Investor Class
The Obama administration's trade negotiators are quietly selling out workers and the environment in a massive Bush-style trade agreement.
It would be a relief to report with any certainty that the
negotiations over the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)—a massive proposed
free-trade zone spanning the Pacific Ocean and all four hemispheres—are
definitely empowering corporations to the detriment of workers, the
environment, and sovereignty throughout the region. Unfortunately, the
secretive and opaque character of the negotiations has made it difficult
to report much of anything about them.
What can be confidently reported about the TPP is that, in terms of
trade flows, it would be the largest free-trade agreement yet entered
into by the United States—and, according to a report by the
Congressional Research Service, that the ministers negotiating the
agreement “have expressed an intent
to comprehensively reduce barriers in goods, services, and agricultural
trade as well as rules and disciplines on a wide range of topics” to
unprecedented levels. Yet despite these grandiose ambitions, details of
the negotiations and drafts of the text have been purposefully withheld
from Congress and American citizens.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
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