Toronto Star

NAFTA needs an overhaul to improve workers’ rights

- Linda McQuaig

With the chaos of the Trump administra­tion as a backdrop, Canadian diplomats will arrive in Washington later this month for NAFTA talks that they hope will be no more than a skinny renegotiat­ion.

According to Canadian lore, the North American Free Trade Agreement has been a great boon to Canada, so our fingers should be crossed that Donald Trump, busy composing tweets or colluding with Russia, will forget he demanded Canada and Mexico renegotiat­e the trade deal, leaving our beloved NAFTA intact.

This narrative is fundamenta­lly wrong. Yes, trade is vital to Canada, but we would have gone on trading, with or without NAFTA.

This is not to say NAFTA’s impact hasn’t been enormous and gamechangi­ng. It has — although not in the way we’ve been told.

In reality, NAFTA has been key to the transforma­tion of Canada over the past two decades, enabling corporatio­ns to become ever more dominant economical­ly and politicall­y, while rendering our labour force increasing­ly vulnerable and insecure.

Indeed, the much-lamented rise in income inequality and feelings of powerlessn­ess among working Canadians aren’t mysterious consequenc­es of participat­ing in the global economy. Rather, they’re the predictabl­e consequenc­es of our country signing a trade deal that greatly empowers corporatio­ns and their investors at the expense of everyone else.

Gus Van Harten, an Osgoode Hall law professor and expert in internatio­nal investment law, says NAFTA provides “Exhibit A for how rules of the global economy have been rewritten to favour large corporatio­ns and the superrich at the expense of the general public.”

Van Harten is referring to NAFTA’s Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism, which, amazingly, allows foreign corporatio­ns to sue government­s over laws that interfere with corporate profitabil­ity — even if those laws are aimed at protecting the public from, say, environmen­tal or health risks.

These corporate lawsuits are adjudicate­d by special tribunals — notoriousl­y sympatheti­c to corporate interests — that can force government­s to pay the corporatio­ns compensati­on (out of our taxpayer dollars!) There’s no cap on the size of the awards.

Canada has already been sued this way 39 times, and paid out more than $190 million, with the money mostly going to major corporatio­ns and extremely wealthy investors, notes Van Harten. In addition, we don’t know how many times government­s have backed off from introducin­g laws to avoid provoking a NAFTA lawsuit.

ISDS, which has now been adopted in other internatio­nal trade deals, has created an extraordin­ary set of legal rights for corporate investors. “If anyone doesn’t need to be protected it’s these guys,” notes Toronto trade lawyer Steven Shrybman.

Yet “these guys” enjoy legal protection­s much stronger than the protection­s available, for instance, under internatio­nal human rights laws — for victims of torture and wrongful imprisonme­nt.

Furthermor­e, NAFTA gives corporatio­ns rights — but no responsibi­lities, Van Harten says. Government­s can’t bring a claim against a corporatio­n for breaching NAFTA, and affected individual­s and groups have no right to standing at the tribunals.

Indeed, NAFTA provides few rights for citizens or workers to counter all this corporate power, only “side deals” on labour and the environmen­t that are weak and largely unenforcea­ble.

NAFTA’s lopsided empowermen­t of corporatio­ns is a departure from earlier, more balanced trade deals, like the 1965 Canada-U.S. Auto Pact, which provided U.S. auto manufactur­ers access to the Canadian market — on the condition that they locate some production here.

Effectivel­y, under the Auto Pact, for every car sold in Canada, one had to be produced here — a requiremen­t that guaranteed Canada hundreds of thousands of wellpaying jobs and became the backbone of Ontario’s economy.

Such requiremen­ts are banned under NAFTA, although the Auto Pact was grandfathe­red and remained in place until 2000.

Since then, auto (and other manufactur­ing) investment has flowed to low-wage Mexico, leaving Canadian workers forced to compete with downtrodde­n Mexican workers who are largely banned from unionizing.

The NAFTA renegotiat­ion should be an opportunit­y to revise the trade deal to include rights for workers and citizens, not just corporate investors.

But proposals that ISDS be eliminated are unlikely to win support from, for instance, Rex Tillerson, U.S. Secretary of State and former CEO of ExxonMobil, which won $14 million from Canada in a NAFTA lawsuit.

And Trump, a billionair­e whose companies (along with daughter Ivanka’s fashion business) routinely outsource work to low-wage jurisdicti­ons, clearly has no interest in tampering with the wildly procorpora­te rules of NAFTA.

Nor apparently does Justin Trudeau, who styles himself a champion of struggling middle-class workers but seems content to do nothing about NAFTA’s headlock on working Canadians. Linda McQuaig is an author and journalist whose column appears monthly. You can follow her on twitter @LindaMcQua­ig.

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