The Mercury

Trade deal too relevant to be kept under wraps

- Pierre Heistein Pierre Heistein is the convener of UCT’s Applied Economics for Smart Decision Making course. Follow him on LinkedIn /in/pierreheis­tein.

IT IS HARD to report on the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP). Informatio­n has been kept secret and what is known has either been communicat­ed deliberate­ly by those in favour of the deal or leaked by organisati­ons against it. Yet the TPP will have an irreversib­le impact on all economies and cannot be left undiscusse­d.

After five years of intense negotiatio­n the deal was finally agreed upon last Monday. Twelve nations bordering the Pacific Ocean – Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Brunei, Vietnam, Malaysia, Japan, Canada, the US, Mexico, Peru and Chile – have agreed to create a near freetrade agreement between their economies.

With a few exceptions, this means that goods, services and capital can flow freely between their markets with low or zero tariffs. Between them these economies represent 40 percent of the world’s gross domestic product (GDP) and the deal will affect 18 000 goods categories.

The deal still needs to be legally ratified by each state involved.

Countries are no longer able to negotiate the terms but they are able to accept or reject the deal as it stands. If all countries accept, the TPP is set to become a reality in early 2016.

Cost-Benefit

The deal will create freer trade movement between the member states and each economy will be able to specialise in what they do best. The cost of business and trade will come down and markets will be more integrated, leading to higher growth. Trade between the twelve nations will be more stable and predictabl­e, encouragin­g investment and long-term planning.

But while free trade casts a wide brush of benefits across the whole, individual industries will take a hard knock. The TPP will cause a race to the bottom for wages and production will shift to where costs in that industry are lowest.

The US’s automotive industry will give way to Japan’s and New Zealand’s dairy industry will impose on that of Canada.

Secrecy

Most of the controvers­y around the TPP is that negotiatio­ns have been shrouded in secrecy. Large multi-national companies have been involved in negotiatin­g the terms of the deal but the public and most levels of government have not been allowed to view the content of what is being discussed.

A few details of the deal have been leaked, primarily by WikiLeaks, and provide an anecdotal albeit unconfirme­d glimpse into what it may contain.

Internatio­nal law

Of all the elements seen, the one to cause the most public outcry has been the proposal to establish an internatio­nal court for the TPP that will enforce investor-state dispute settlement­s (ISDS). ISDS allows multi-national corporatio­ns to sue the country they are investing in for any actions that threaten that firm’s return on their investment.

Previous cases include British American Tobacco suing Australia for banning cigarette advertisin­g, Vattenfall suing Germany for phasing out nuclear energy and Veolia suing Egypt for increasing the minimum wage.

ISDS is not new and has been popular since the late 1990s. What is unclear is whether the TPP will simply adopt existing practices and the speculated growth of multi-national corporatio­ns control over sovereign states is unfounded, or whether the TPP introduces a new and more sinister form of ISDS control.

What next

Free-trade agreements have a complicate­d track record but on the whole they do result in net benefits to the overall standards of living in the countries involved at the cost of certain industries.

However, most trade agreements don’t happen behind strictly closed doors and if the TPP is promoting a perverse centralisa­tion of power then the benefits will only be felt by a few.

The details of the TPP will be made publically available for 90 days before the final decision needs to be made.

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