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posted by janrinok on Sunday March 01 2015, @09:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the why-else-would-they-hide-it? dept.

WaPo signals one - of the many - provisions which should cause concern in the Transpacific Partnership treaty.

The United States is in the final stages of negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a massive free-trade agreement with Mexico, Canada, Japan, Singapore and seven other countries. Who will benefit from the TPP? American workers? Consumers? Small businesses? Taxpayers? Or the biggest multinational corporations in the world?

...

One strong hint is buried in the fine print of the closely guarded draft. The provision, an increasingly common feature of trade agreements, is called “Investor-State Dispute Settlement,” or ISDS. The name may sound mild, but don’t be fooled. ISDS would allow foreign companies to challenge U.S. laws — and potentially to pick up huge payouts from taxpayers — without ever stepping foot in a U.S. court.

--- more after the break ---

Here’s how it would work. Imagine that the United States bans a toxic chemical that is often added to gasoline because of its health and environmental consequences. If a foreign company that makes the toxic chemical opposes the law, it would normally have to challenge it in a U.S. court. But with ISDS, the company could skip the U.S. courts and go before an international panel of arbitrators. If the company won, the ruling couldn’t be challenged in U.S. courts, and the arbitration panel could require American taxpayers to cough up millions — and even billions — of dollars in damages.

If that seems shocking, buckle your seat belt. ISDS could lead to gigantic fines, but it wouldn’t employ independent judges. Instead, highly paid corporate lawyers would go back and forth between representing corporations one day and sitting in judgment the next. Maybe that makes sense in an arbitration between two corporations, but not in cases between corporations and governments. If you’re a lawyer looking to maintain or attract high-paying corporate clients, how likely are you to rule against those corporations when it’s your turn in the judge’s seat?

If the tilt toward giant corporations wasn’t clear enough, consider who would get to use this special court: only international investors, which are, by and large, big corporations. So if a Vietnamese company with U.S. operations wanted to challenge an increase in the U.S. minimum wage, it could use ISDS. But if an American labor union believed Vietnam was allowing Vietnamese companies to pay slave wages in violation of trade commitments, the union would have to make its case in the Vietnamese courts.

 
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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 01 2015, @11:56AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 01 2015, @11:56AM (#151493)

    Is the average American really more (or less) stupid than the average Vietnamese, French or Mexican? I doubt it, and people there can and do understand the problems of ISDS, if properly explained.

    The larger the population the more difficult it becomes to get any significant portion to agree on anything. Since TTP, TTIP, etc are not put up to a vote - and in fact are being done in secret - then there is very, very little chance most people in the U.S. will ever hear about it.

    The more regulations a government has the better chance a TTP "partner" country will have a company that runs into a law that hands them a payday. All these things point to the U.S. as a cash machine.

    I'm going to open a one-person office in Mexico and qualify as an international corporation. Then I'll find some obscure law in one of these countries and start suing more often than a patent troll. Capitalism: where greed is the seed of success.

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