Open Letter to WTO by Paul Hellyer, CAP
This is an open letter to the leaders of the world from the Honourable Paul
Hellyer, Leader of the Canadian Action Party. The views expressed reflect 50
years of experience in business, politics and economic affairs.
November 23, 1999
The World Trade Organization Year 2000 Round of Negotiations
If you want a fairer, more just and prosperous world, you must reject
outright any extension of the World Trade Organization (WTO) mandate to
include services as proposed by the major powers. Instead, you should
review the existing scope of WTO jurisdiction and remove all references to
"national treatment" as a fundamental tenet of international trade and
investment. If you don't, you will never be able to develop the kind of
diversified economy necessary to provide interesting and challenging jobs
to your brightest young people and you will not have the tax base required
to finance essential public services.
The "national treatment" clause
The "national treatment" clause is the lever by which the transnational
corporations and international banks of the five big powers are colonizing
the world to an extent previously considered impossible. As soon as your
country has a company with good prospects to expand globally, it will be
bought by one of the transnationals which will shut the company down, make
it part of the transnational's empire or move production to another
country. In the event that the choice is either to shut down the company or
move production elsewhere, trade agreements require countries to allow
products previously made within their borders to be imported from abroad
without penalty. My country, Canada, has already suffered in this way when
foreign investors bought our companies and curtailed or ended production
with the inevitable loss of jobs.
Even if the facility purchased remains in your country, the most
challenging jobs will be moved to a foreign head office. Consequently, your
most creative people will be denied the opportunities they want or be
forced to emigrate to the country where the head office is located. Again,
Canada has experienced this tragic result.
In addition, your national tax base will be eroded. Transnational
corporations are ingenious at finding ways to minimize the taxes they pay
in host countries. They use many devices, including the amount they charge
for administration and royalty payments on patents, in order to transfer
profits to a location of their choice. Meanwhile, they expect the host
country to carry the major burden for the construction of infrastructure
and the provision of social services.
The WTO and Democracy
In effect, globalization is a combination of colonization and
corporatization. Corporations are usurping the power of nation states and
robbing them of their ability to legislate positively on behalf of their
own people. Power is shifting to the World Trade Organization which is
little more than a surrogate for transnational corporations and the banks
that finance corporations' global acquisitions.
This development is a travesty of democracy. The World Trade Organization
is now exercising de facto executive, legislative and judicial powers in
much of the world. It does this in the absence of any democratic foundation
and without checks and balances. It has all the characteristics of a
bureaucratic dictatorship, unaccountable to any electorate.
That the second millennium should end with democracy being totally
undermined at the hands of countries that claim to be democratic is an
unspeakable tragedy. It is a measure of the extent to which real democracy
no longer exists in these countries, including Canada and the United
States. Only candidates and parties with substantial financial backing from
large corporations have any hope of getting elected. Once in office, they
are obliged to favour corporate interests over those of rank and file electors.
To accomplish this, politicians favourable to the big corporations have
been selling the idea that globalization is both inevitable and good for
ordinary people. They speak of "the unquestionable benefits" of
globalization without providing any evidence or data to support this myth.
In fact, the "benefits" accrue largely to the officers, directors and
principal shareholders of transnational corporations and the people they
hire to do their bidding. Nearly everyone else in the world is worse off.
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Economic "success"
This new economic system (under which we have all been living since central
banks adopted the ideas of Milton Friedman and his colleagues at the
University of Chicago in 1974), is really a reversion to the boom-bust
system in effect prior to the Great Depression of the 1930s. It can only be
judged by its "success". A look at the data shows that neo-classical,
monetarist (globalized) economics has been a monumental flop.
In Canada, for example, our performance has been humiliating. From 1949 to
1973, real domestic output increased by an average of 4.9% a year; for the
25 Friedman years, growth has averaged 2.8%, a reduction of 43 percent.
At the same time, both inflation and unemployment have been far higher.
From 1949 to 1973, the Consumer Price Index, our inflation indicator, rose
y an average of 2.86%, whereas from 1974 to 1998, it rose by 5.62% a year,
on average, an increase of 97 percent. Unemployment for the earlier 25
years averaged 4.74% and for the last 25 years, 9%, almost 90% more men and
women unemployed and looking for work since the monetarist
counter-revolution began in 1974.
Even in the great United States the comparison is dismal. The average
increase in GDP was down by 38% and unemployment has been 42% higher in the
monetarist era. Their federal debt soared by more than 1000 percent.
It is the global statistics, however, that make one shudder. For the years
1950 to 1973, the average annual compound growth rate of per capita GDP was
2.90 percent. From 1973 to 1995, it was down to a disastrous 1.11%, more
than a 50% reduction. Neo-classical monetarist economics, which is the
cornerstone of a globalized system, has been a disaster for the world and
especially for its poorest people.
Individual and national rights
And now the big powers want to extend WTO jurisdiction to health care and
education because big corporations want to take over these areas. Just say
no! Health care and education are too important to be put in the hands of
foreign corporations for whom profits are more important than a healthy,
well-educated populace looking for equality of opportunity.
Agriculture is another area for concern. A few large companies want to
control world food supplies. Unfortunately, they have the support of the
United States and some other governments. It is profoundly important, both
strategically and from a humanitarian standpoint, that this trend be
stopped and some semblance of self-sufficiency in food be maintained in
nation states.
Y2K marks a turning point for the world and for the WTO. While the time
clock moves inexorably ahead, the globalization clock must be turned back.
The WTO should be stripped of its dictatorial powers. The ability of large
corporations to subvert democracy should be curbed. "National treatment"
should be scrapped so that each sovereign country will have the power to
decide the terms and conditions on which foreign investment is welcome and
the extent to which it is welcome. And each country should have the right
to protect its own industries - if it is willing to accept the consequences
from other countries. After all, that is how the major powers became major
powers. In a just world, they should not deny the same right to their
smaller and weaker neighbours.
Yours sincerely,
Paul Hellyer
Is the WTO the second attempt to pass the MAI?
The Canadian Action Party,
parti action canadienne (CAP / PAC)
Suite 302-99 Atlantic Avenue., Toronto Ont, M6K3J8
Telephone: 416 535 4144
E-mail: cap-pac@istar.ca
www.canadianactionparty.ca
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