http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/facing-the-facts.pdf

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 28, 2002

WTO services treaty expanding into public services and domestic
regulation---Report

OTTAWA--Senior government officials have just returned from a
negotiating session in Geneva to expand the reach of the World Trade
Organization's services agreement into areas usually considered the
exclusive prerogative of domestic policy-making. On the table are
public services such as education and health care, and public interest
regulations such as tobacco control and environmental protection laws,
say the authors of a new report released today by the Canadian Centre
for Policy Alternatives.

"It is disturbing that the Canadian and other governments are doggedly
negotiating to expand the GATS -- even though its existing policy
impacts have neither been widely debated nor understood," said Scott
Sinclair, co-author of Facing the Facts: A Guide to the GATS Debate.

According to Sinclair, despite denials by its supporters, including the
OECD and the WTO, the GATS seriously threatens public service systems
and public interest regulation.

The authors' previous works have been the target of official rebuttals
by both the WTO and the OECD. "That these organizations would go to
such lengths to attack our work is an indication of how nervous they
are about outside criticism," said co-author Jim Grieshaber-Otto. "Our
report is a response to these attacks."

According to the CCPA report, the key GATS provision that purportedly
excludes public services is largely ineffective. For example, it does
not protect against the extraordinary decision made during the last
round of negotiations to cover Canadian health insurance under the
GATS. "Because of this reckless act, if Canadians now choose to expand
Medicare to insure home care or drugs, then Canada is on the hook to
make additional GATS commitments to compensate foreign governments
whose private insurers lose market access," said Sinclair.

The WTO and OECD documents also play down the significance of the
current negotiations on domestic regulations. "The proposed GATS
restrictions are excessive and a recipe for regulatory chill," added
Grieshaber-Otto.


-30-
Scott Sinclair is a Canadian trade policy specialist and a senior
research associate with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
Jim Grieshaber-Otto, Ph. D. is an independent trade policy consultant
based near Vancouver. Facing the Facts: A Guide to the GATS Debate is
published by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
(www.policyalternatives.ca).

For more information please contact Erika Shaker at 613-563-1341 x.
310.

Click here to download the full report (Adobe Acrobat PDF file)

http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/facing-the-facts.pdf



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