THE
TPPA: TRADING AWAY NEW ZEALAND’S INDEPENDENCE
Robert
Amsterdam
15
September, 2014
As
this paper goes to press, New Zealand is a handful of days away from
perhaps the most significant election in the country’s history. One
key issue for consideration is the status of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPPA), a comprehensive free trade agreement
involving a dozen countries including New Zealand, still in the
negotiation phase. The TPPA would give the world’s most aggressive
economy – the United States (U.S.) – access to New Zealand’s
markets and to the mechanism of investor/state arbitration against
New Zealand, while stripping the New Zealand Parliament of its
authority over much of the country’s trade and business.
This
paper addresses five systemic aspects of the TPPA: (1) the asymmetry
of the trade relationship between New Zealand and the U.S.; (2) the
secrecy and lack of transparency that permits unequal bargaining
positions between producers and consumers throughout the free trade
area; (3) the capture of the entire trading relationship by U.S.
special interest groups which instrumentalise the office of the
United States Trade Representative (USTR) to sanction and coerce
countries into adopting U.S. corporate interests; (4) the tendency by
the U.S. to legislate extra-territorially for other sovereign
countries; and (5) the disparity between the trade negotiation
process and New Zealand’s ability to maintain its rule-of-law
standard.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.