-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


Toward Freedom
http://www.towardfreedom.com/sep99/wto.htm

Sept/Oct 1999

THE WTO'S RIGGED GAME

Mobilizing against globalization could bring revolution to Seattle

MARK WEISBROT AND NEIL WATKINS

Should countries have the right to set health and safety standards for the
food their citizens eat? Should they be allowed to exclude
foreign-produced foods that don't meet national standards? Or should these
questions be decided by the World Trade Organization (WTO)? Like it or
not, these issues are being decided right now. In the latest trade dispute
between the world's two largest trading partners, the US placed sanctions
worth about $117 million on European goods in late July. The goal is to
force the Europeans to import US beef that is raised with growth hormones.

Ordinarily, the decision to place 100 percent tariffs on French truffles,
foie gras, and other delicacies that most of us have never tasted would
violate our international trade agreements. But, in this case, the US has
the backing of the WTO, a 134-nation body that was created four years ago
to negotiate and govern world trade. Ruling that Europe's ban on
hormone-treated beef is illegal, it authorized the US to impose
retaliatory trade sanctions against the European Union. Consider the
arguments: The Europeans don't allow beef that is treated with growth
hormones to be sold in their markets, regardless of where it's produced.
They just don't think it's all that safe to eat. But most US beef is, in
fact, treated with these hormones. So the government, at the request of
the US beef industry, filed a complaint at the WTO, arguing that the ban
was an unfair restriction on trade. The WTO's rules say that any health or
environmental standard that affects trade must be supported by scientific
evidence. Thus, it appointed a three-judge panel, which decided in March
1997 that there wasn't enough scientific evidence to justify Europe's ban
on hormone-treated beef.

An independent panel of scientists, assigned by the European Commission to
consider these questions, reached a different conclusion. They found that
one of the six hormones commonly found in beef is a "complete carcinogen."
For the other five, they concluded that further study would be needed -
although anyone reading the 142-page report would undoubtedly wonder why
the US allows these drugs to be pumped into its livestock.

Well, if most people actually knew what they were eating, they probably
wouldn't - especially those most susceptible to the effects of the
hormones, such as children and pregnant women. But there are no labeling
requirements for these extra ingredients in US hamburgers. Regardless of
how one assesses the scientific evidence, shouldn't the Europeans be
allowed to err on the side of caution if they so choose? Most people would
say yes. This case is particularly outrageous because everyone agrees that
the law against hormone-treated beef was designed to protect Europe's
consumers, not its domestic cattle industry. And the law applies without
discrimination to both domestic and foreign producers. Yet, the WTO
insists that an unaccountable, three-judge panel, meeting in secret, can
overturn a European law - simply because it has an adverse impact on
trade.

Clearly the tail (trade) is wagging the dog here. And this is exactly what
environmental, consumer, and labor groups warned would happen when the WTO
was created four years ago. Its track record has validated these warnings.
In 1997, for instance, the US Environmental Protection Agency weakened its
regulations on contaminants in imported gasoline, in order to comply with
a WTO ruling that found these rules to be an unfair trade barrier. The
enforcement of the US Endangered Species Act - specifically, the
protection of sea turtles - has also been compromised by recent WTO
rulings.

>From the point of view of big business, and especially large multinational
corporations, these aren't disturbing developments. For them, it's only
natural to see human beings and the environment as mere instruments for
expanding global trade and commerce. They are quite comfortable with
having these decisions made by a tribunal of an international organization
where they can have the predominant influence - unencumbered by any
congress, parliament, or other elected officials that might have to care
what ordinary citizens think. The WTO is their creature, and so it has
been pretty consistent in taking the side of business against the rights
of citizens and the global community. As more people are beginning to see,
this is the crux of the problem. Institutions like the WTO, the
International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank - as well as commercial
agreements embodying the same principles, like NAFTA or the recently
derailed Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) - are deliberately
designed to transfer power over economic decision-making from governments,
which are at least somewhat (and potentially more) accountable to their
citizens, to unaccountable decision-makers.

These institutions aren't likely to change their basic mission in the
foreseeable future. But they can be stopped from pursuing it. In the case
of the WTO, the next and possibly pivotal battle will take place in late
November, when ministers from nearly 150 countries gather in Seattle to
launch a new round of trade negotiations. Preparations are underway for a
massive "mobilization against globalization" at this meeting. Tens of
thousands of steelworkers and longshoremen will join environmental
activists from Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, and Friends of the Earth, AIDS
activists, students, and international activists from Canada, India,
Malaysia, Germany, and Mexico to protest corporate globalization. The Wall
Street Journal recently quoted a trade lobbyist who compared the planned
Seattle protests to the convergence of anti-war activists on Chicago in
1968. The protesters descending upon Seattle will convey a strong message
against corporate globalization to the world leaders there, as well as the
international media covering the launch of a new round of trade
negotiations. And when citizen activists aren't in the streets (or forming
a human chain around the convention center where the official meeting is
taking place), they will be attending events at a parallel "citizens'
summit," where participants can learn more about the WTO's record and the
impacts of globalization. Among the events being planned for Seattle are:
a Globalization Teach-In at the Seattle Symphony Hall, hosted by the
International Forum on Globalization; a rally and march organized by the
AFL-CIO and fair trade networks in the Seattle area; and an international
interfaith church service put on by the Washington Association of
Churches. At the citizens' summit, activists and scholars from NGOs and
social movements around the world will address the impacts of the WTO and
globalization on the environment, health, livelihoods, human rights,
women, democracy, and more. There also will be plenty of opportunity for
direct action: The Ruckus Society and the Seattle-based Network Opposed to
the WTO are planning creative actions to draw attention to the WTO's
abuses. Mark Weisbrot is research director and Neil Watkins is a research
associate at the Preamble Center.

For further information on this and related subjects, see the Preamble
Center's website at www.preamble.org, e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED], or
call (202) 265-3263, ext. 274. For more information on events planned for
Seattle and how to get involved, contact Margrete Strand at Public
Citizen, [EMAIL PROTECTED], (202) 546-4996. [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) 1999
Toward Freedom

=================================

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to