Brexit
better for Britain than toxic TTIP, says Joseph Stiglitz
RT,
3
March, 2016
Britain
would be better off leaving the European Union (EU) if the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is implemented,
Nobel-prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has said.
Stiglitz
made the remark at an event hosted by Labour Shadow Chancellor John
McDonnell on Wednesday in central London. The evening was part of the
Labour Party’s series of seminars on progressive economics.
Addressing
the crowd, Stiglitz said the restrictive nature of TTIP offers
grounds for a Brexit.
“I
think that the strictures imposed by TTIP would be sufficiently
averse to the functioning of government that it would make me think
over again about whether membership of the EU was a good idea,” he
said.
The
US economist said TTIP represents a wholesale “rewriting of the
rules with no public discussion.”
“The
dangers to our society are very significant,” he added.
Eroded
sovereignty
TTIP
will create the world’s biggest free-trade zone, scrapping tariffs
and other obstacles to the trade of goods and services. While its
proponents argue the trade deal will encourage investment and create
employment, its critics warn it will empower corporations to sue
foreign governments that threaten their profits.
Central
to the US-EU trade deal, is an Investor State Dispute Settlement
(ISDS) clause that would give corporations the power to sue
governments when policy-makers introduce regulations that could curb
their profits. Details of such cases are often shrouded in secrecy,
conducted in clandestine court settings.
Critics
argue TTIP lacks transparency, impinges on sovereign governments’
right to rule in the public interest, and could result in regulators
becoming captured.
United
Nations (UN) figures reveal that US firms have raked in billions of
dollars by suing domestic governments to date. Since 2000 alone,
American firms have sued states on 130 separate occasions under
free-trade agreements.
One
such firm, Phillip Morris, sued Australia and Uruguay in recent years
for placing health warnings on cigarette packets.
“Every
time you passed a regulation against asbestos or anything else, you
would be sued,” Stiglitz said.
“There’s
nothing in TTIP to stop you writing the regulation. You can write the
regulation. You would just have to keep writing a check to Philip
Morris to make up for the profits that they would have had if they
were able to kill people like they were able to in the past.”
Stiglitz
was largely supportive of Britain’s EU membership, highlighting EU
states such as Sweden that are part of the bloc but have agreed on
separate rules. He argued EU leaders should scrap the euro but keep
the union.
‘Ruthless
deal’
Speaking
to RT, director of UK think tank Global Justice Now (GJN) Nick
Dearden said Stiglitz’s position is “largely hypothetical.”
“There’s
no doubt that this toxic trade deal being cooked up in Brussels is
driving a lot of people to feel that the UK would be better off
outside of the EU, but there’s nothing to suggest that a Brexit
wouldn’t prevent something worse taking its place,” he said.
“Cameron
has been one of the biggest cheerleaders of TTIP and the UK has
signed a host of ruthlessly free-market bilateral trade deals with
many other countries that contain ISDS – so it’s entirely
possible that there would be a push in the UK to create an even worse
UK-USA equivalent of TTIP.”
Dearden
said Europe’s anti-TTIP movement is inspiring.
“Millions
of people have mobilized across borders to challenge the corporate
power grab of TTIP,” he said.
“That’s
an inspiring vision of how staying in Europe can mean people working
together for progressive social change.”
‘TTIP
counters public interest’
A
leading aim of TTIP is to open up Europe’s public health, education
and water services. Although the European Commission (EC) has said
public services will be excluded from TTIP, UK Trade Minister Lord
Livingston admitted that talks concerning the NHS were still on the
agenda last October.
Campaigners
are concerned about TTIP’s “regulatory convergence” agenda,
which will seek to bring EU standards on food safety closer to those
seen in the US.
Because
US regulations are generally less rigid than their European
counterparts, campaigners are worried about a decline in food
standards across Europe. They argue European food markets could be
flooded with genetically modified products and foods doused in
hormones and pesticides after TTIP is implemented.
As
TTIP negotiations continue to play out behind closed doors, the City
of London is thought to be lobbying for US banking regulations to be
softened. America’s financial regulations are more robust than
those seen in Britain, and were put in place in the wake of the
2007/08 global financial crisis. Ethical finance campaigners fear
TTIP will scrap these measures and restrictions, handing power back
to bankers in the process.
Campaigners
are also worried about rising levels of unemployment. Last year,
Brussels admitted that TTIP could cause considerable levels of
joblessness. It has advised EU members on how to deal with increased
levels of unemployment after TTIP comes into force.
Meanwhile the following is making headlines in Britain
Meanwhile the following is making headlines in Britain
The
Queen refuses to come to London to meet President Barack Obama next
month.
Instead,
accompanied by his security circus, he’ll trundle to Windsor in his
bomb-proof, seven-ton limo for lunch.
He’s
due to stand alongside the PM and urge Britain to stay in the EU.
‘But
he’d be well advised not to give a pro-EU sermon over lunch after
the row about the Queen supporting Brexit,’ says my source.
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