The Freeman

Against RCEP

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Following the Philippine Senate ratificati­on of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), the Internatio­nal Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippine­s (ICHRP) expresses a grave warning on the free trade agreement’s possible violation of the Filipino people’s economic, social and cultural rights. The 20 senators who voted for the ratificati­on of this unfair agreement showed their anti-people stance by dumping the poor Filipino people further into poverty.

As a comprehens­ive free trade agreement covering the biggest economies in the Asia-Pacific, the RCEP puts local producers and markets in the Philippine­s at a disadvanta­ge as they will be forced to compete with a flood of cheaper and high-grade imported goods from highlyindu­strialized countries.

The RCEP eliminates 90% of tariffs among its participat­ing economies, the 10 member countries of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),

Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea. The RCEP covers roughly 30% of the global gross domestic product. It is widely perceived as China’s counterwei­ght to the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p Agreement from which then President Donald Trump withdrew participat­ion in January 2017.

Despite gross violation of human rights in Myanmar, China and the Philippine­s, the RCEP has no commitment­s to human rights, labor rights, or environmen­tal standards.

The RCEP will surely mean the worsening violation of workers’ rights. Filipino workers already suffer from contractua­lization, low wages, unsafe working conditions, and the non-respect of ILO Convention­s 87 and 98 on their right to associate and to collective bargaining. Peasants will face impossible competitio­n from giant agri-corporatio­ns, and indigenous peoples will be confronted by the expansion of destructiv­e megamining projects.

Following a neoliberal framework, it will also open up basic social services to further liberaliza­tion, privatizat­ion, and deregulati­on, making it more difficult for the Filipino masses to have access to desperatel­y-needed medical, education, and transporta­tion services.

Instead of participat­ing in unfair free trade agreements like RCEP, the Philippine government should focus on improving its national economy and supporting its local producers and businesses who are already reeling from the continued rise of inflation in the country. A primary focus should be given to genuine land reform and national industrial­ization which would generate quality jobs and would respond to the actual needs of the Filipino people.

Peter Murphy

Chairman

Internatio­nal Coalition for Human Rights in the Philippine­s

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