People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No.
32 August 07, 2011 |
Free
Trade Agreements:
The
Dangerous New Frontier
Amit
Sengupta
WHILE
considerable attention has been focused on the World Trade Organisation
(WTO),
and the binding trade rules that it imposes on member countries, there
is a
shift towards much of trade negotiations being conducted bilaterally
and with
regional blocks. These regional and bilateral trade agreements are an
increasingly
important part of the governance of global trade, and consequently have
large
impacts on the health sector across the world. From 1990 to 2007, the
number of
such agreements notified to the GATT or the WTO increased from 20 to
159. At
present, over 250 regional and bilateral trade agreements govern more
than 30
per cent of world trade.
A major driver of the
proliferations
of regional and bilateral trade agreements has been the perceived
failure of
the WTO to govern global trade. This, in large measure, has been a
consequence
of the intransigence of the powerful trading blocs (the
HOW THE
THE EU VIEW
FTAs
The history of the
negotiations in
GATT (General Agreement on Trade and Tariff – the precursor to the
WTO), which
led to the formation of the WTO, shows how the
In
the US, the Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002 directs the USTR (US
trade
representative) to seek to ensure “that the provisions of any multilateral or bilateral trade agreement
governing intellectual property rights
that is entered into by the United
States reflect[s] a standard of protection
similar to that found in United States law”. Clearly, thus, what
is
demanded of by the
The
EU has been no less explicit regarding its intentions. In October 2006
the EU
commission launched its new trade policy called “Global
Europe – competing in the world”. The policy is designed to
increase competitiveness of
European corporations, with an evocative slogan coined by then EU trade
commissioner,
Peter Mandelson: ‘Big in
As
part of this strategy the EU’s trade policy plans to aggressively
advance
issues which they have not been able to pursue adequately in the
multilateral
forum of the WTO. The new policy foregrounds five major areas :
·
Market
access for European business through elimination of tariff and
non-tariff
barriers;
·
the
so-called Singapore issues (investment,
government procurement, competition and trade facilitation) which were
rejected
in the Cancun WTO ministerial meeting of the WTO in 2003 by a combined
front
put up by governments of developing countries;
·
intellectual
property rights (IPR),
·
the
service sector which is a stronghold of the EU economy;
·
reference
to sustainable development including rhetoric about social and
environmental
standards, core labour rights and decent work (which are euphemisms
used to put
at a disadvantage enterprises located in developing countries).
CO-EXISTENCE
OF FTA
& WTO
There is a curious story
which
explains how FTAs and the WTO exist side by side. The cornerstone of
the WTO is
the most-favoured-nation (MFN) treatment among the member-countries.
This
clause means that member countries of the WTO cannot discriminate in
their
treatment of other member countries, ie, in any WTO member country, all
WTO
member countries (operating through corporations, etc located within
their
territories) would be provided with the same facilities and be subject
to the
same rules. Logically, this should bar all FTAs, because these
agreements can
have provisions that are different from the WTO and thus do
discriminate
between countries who are part of an FTA and those who are not (even if
both
sets are members of the WTO). The catch lies in the fact that when the WTO agreement was signed in 1994, many
countries
were already bound by bilateral agreements that eliminated customs
related
regulations between contracting parties. Thus the WTO agreement issued
a waiver
on “custom unions’, taking recourse to Article 24
(8b) of GATT), which says: “A
free-trade area
shall be understood to mean a group of two or more customs territories
in which
the duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce (…) are
eliminated on substantially all
the trade between the constituent territories in products
originating in
such territories.”
While
FTAs today use the cover of this waiver, substantive parts of almost
all FTAs
have very little to do with customs regulations, but deal with other
aspects of
global trade (for example Intellectual Property Rights are not part of
customs
related issues).
IMPACT ON
HEALTH
The
TRIPS agreement, under the WTO, sets minimum standards for IP
protection that
all member states are required to adhere to. There were however partial
waivers
for developing and least developed countries. Developing countries
(such as
The
TRIPS agreement requires that a 20 year term be provided for a patent
that is
granted on any product (viz, a new medicine). Many FTAs contain
provisions that
provide for extension of the patent term beyond the 20 years mandated
by TRIPS,
in cases of what are called “delays” in granting a patent.
Operationally, such
provisions extend patent terms (even when TRIPS does not require this)
beyond
20 years and delay the introduction of cheaper generic medicines.
LIMITATIONS
ON
COMPULSORY
LICENSING:
The
compulsory licensing provision is a key safeguard in the TRIPS
agreement. It
allows countries to draft laws that allow generic manufacturers to
manufacture
and sell medicines, even if the medicines are under patent protection.
Countries have the freedom to choose the grounds for such licenses (for
generic
manufacture of patented drugs) to be issued. This freedom available to
countries was specifically reiterated in the Doha Declaration in 2001,
after
the WTO ministerial meeting. Many countries have now started using this
provision to make available cheaper generic versions of patented
medicines. However,
provisions in many FTAs restrict the grounds and the situations in
which a
compulsory license can be issued.
Many FTAs
include data exclusivity, though it is not a TRIPS requirement. Data
exclusivity refers to a practice whereby, for a fixed period of time
(usually 5-10
years), drug regulatory authorities do not allow the data that the
originator
company files to get marketing approval, to be used to register a
generic
version of the same medicine. It means that if a patent holder gets
marketing approval
for a drug based on data of clinical trials, the same data cannot be
used to
register a drug by an Indian company. In practice this provides a
patent like
monopoly, as the alternative available to generic companies is to
duplicate
expensive clinical trials in order to get marketing approval. Data
exclusivity
allows monopoly powers to companies even in situations where a country
is not
required to provide patent protection.
OTHER AREAS
OF
CONCERN
Government
procurement: The EU has been prominent in pushing for an
agreement on ‘government procurement’ in FTAs. This was one of the
‘Singapore
issues’ that were rejected by developing countries in the Cancun
ministerial
meeting of the WTO in 2003. In a Government Procurement Agreement (GPA)
whatever the
government of a member
country of a FTA procures, all other members have equal right to bid
for
tenders. So, for example, in a FTA with the EU and a developing country
where a
GPA is signed, the latter will have to allow companies to bid for
contracts for
all government procurements. This could mean that when tenders are
floated to
procure medicines for public health facilities, companies based in the
EU would
have the right to bid for such contracts. Such a situation can also
affect the
ability of governments to determine how food for public distribution
systems
(PDS) would be procured.
Appropriation
Clause in Investment Chapters: The devil, as they say,
lies in the
detail. Health activists often miss out on a key area of concern in
FTAs that
are buried in the ‘investment chapter’ (FTAs have different chapters
dealing
with different areas, such as IP, manufacturing, services, investment,
agriculture, etc.) A major area of concern related to investment
chapters in most FTAs is that they allow private companies to file
cases
against governments. So they subject countries to the risk of
litigation
by corporations from or based in another country. This might be based
on a
company’s objections to the host government’s environmental, health,
social or economic
policies, if these are seen to interfere with the company’s ‘right’ to
profit. The biggest
issues relate to the provisions for compensation for “expropriation”,
which can
be direct (as in cases of nationalisation) or indirect (policies or
actions
that impinge on the profitability of the company concerned).
These are not imagined consequences. For
example, in November 2000 the multinational water infrastructure
company
AdT filed
for arbitration and sought $25
million from the Bolivian government as compensation for its
lost
investment including expected profits, after the government was forced to reverse a
disastrous water privatisation attempt in Cochabamba. Similarly, in 2010 Philip
Morris International -- the
world’s second largest cigarette company and manufacturer of brands
such as
Marlboro and Red & White sued the Uruguayan government for its
regulation
that requires tobacco companies to cover 80 per cent of their cigarette
packs
with pictorial tobacco-warning labels.
Liberalisation
of Health Services:
The General Agreement on Trade in Services GATS) under the WTO
is negotiated through a system where countries have the option to open
areas of
their service sector (water services, education, health, banking,
insurance,
tourism, etc) based on their own requirements. So, countries can choose
not to
open up certain areas as well. In this, the GATS agreement is different
from
other agreements in the WTO that require similar degrees of compliance
from all
member countries. However, FTAs can try to get around this by providing
for
opening up the service sector.
For
developing countries with failing health systems, foreign investment
may seem
an attractive source of capital and medical technology. Yet involvement
of the
foreign private sector in health care has the potential to marginalise
the poor
even further. Companies seek markets in which they can be assured
sufficient
returns, and this typically concentrates investment in more affluent
areas.
This practice of ‘cream skimming’ by the private sector is already
familiar in
the case of private health insurance, where insurance companies
typically
favour the healthy and wealthy over high-risk customers, excluding the
latter
by means of prohibitive premiums.
What we have discussed
above is the
proverbial tip of the iceberg. Many other sectors, including
agriculture,
manufacturing and financial sectors are affected by onerous clauses in
various
FTAs. The FTAs, like the WTO, unjustly impact important public interest
laws,
regulations, policies and our import duty structure in ways that
virtually
touch all aspects of our lives. However,
FTAs are worse than the WTO because they demand much more. They create
legally
binding obligations that impact on peoples’ livelihoods. They impact
our
ability to access affordable healthcare, medicines, education, and
municipal
services such as water and sanitation, etc.
Clearly, FTAs today
constitute
perhaps an even larger threat than the WTO agreement of 1994.
Unfortunately all
FTAs are negotiated in absolute secrecy. Opponents of FTAs have scant
opportunity to examine negotiating texts before FTAs are signed. The
situation
is, thus, worse than when the WTO agreement was being signed – when the
gaze of
the entire world was on what was being negotiated. Now, brick by brick,
developing
countries are being forced to sign away even the limited safeguards
that they
could secure through the WTO agreement. Recollect the way the
India-ASEAN FTA
was signed without even state governments being consulted (the FTA will
have
special impact on Kerala’s economy, but the Kerala government was kept
totally
in the dark, till the end). We see the unfolding of a similar situation
in case
of the negotiations leading up to the Indo-EU FTA. While the
negotiations, it
is understood, are to be concluded this year, the nation and the
country’s parliament
have little information about what exactly the government of the day
proposes
to negotiate away. Further, the government is in the process of either
negotiating, expanding or developing at least 24 different FTAs,
including one
with Japan, negotiations for which are at an advanced stage.