By Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
In the intense global economic struggle the major capitalist nations have over cheap labor, raw materials, trade and profits, the Trans Pacific Partnership stands out.
In the intense global economic struggle the major capitalist nations have over cheap labor, raw materials, trade and profits, the Trans Pacific Partnership stands out.
The TPP is a free trade agreement that has caused global
protests and is sowing deep divisions between the Obama Administration and
members of Obama’s own party. Obama himself applauds the TPP and visited Nike
headquarters May 8th 2015 to push for the deal. If passed, the TPP will reduce tariffs on
imported shoes which he hopes will win Nike’s support. About 56% of Nike’s
revenue came from outside the US in 2014 according
to the Wall Street Journal.
We hear a lot from Democrats who are at war with Obama over
the TPP but it’s not that they are against such a deal---- a sort of free trade
pact. What they are opposed to is Obama
getting fast track rights on it, in other words, Congress will only be allowed
an up or down vote, no amendments or changes.
Issues such as China and currency manipulation are a concern to some
elements in the US as well.
But there is no such thing as free trade really. Does anyone actually believe that the mighty
US economic and military machine will be on par with Vietnam or Chile when it
comes to negotiating about money and trade?
NAFTA, which cost many American jobs, also threw millions of Mexican
farmers off the land, unable to compete with US agribusiness. These farmers may have been relatively poor
by US standards but they eked out an existence as subsistence farmers. Even that has gone.
Both this idea of “free
trade” and its opposite, protectionism, are capitalist solutions, (that
solve nothing as far as workers are concerned) to the inherent crises of the
market and the struggle for market share and profits. The heads of organized labor in the US are
also concerned as they should be, US capitalism does not enter such agreements
or invest in Vietnam or Cambodia in order to increase living standards of
workers there, just the opposite. It is the low wages and poor human rights
record that attracts capital to these low waged economies. And wages and
conditions have to sink even further in the US before we can have what the
owners of capital refer to as a “Competitive
edge”, which means workers in different nations competing with each other
for who is the cheapest, most pliant, less restricted by union and safety
regulations, in short, the most lucrative environment for profit and capital
accumulation. This will not enamor union members to their organization as wages and conditions continue to worsen.
German protests |
Another concern as Wikileaks pointed out in March is that “The accord would grant the power to global
corporations to sue governments in tribunals organized by the World Bank or the
United Nations to obtain taxpayer compensation for loss of expected future
profits due to government actions.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Pacific_Partnership
. That’s a nasty thought for the day.
Bernie Sanders, the liberal politician who is fond of
reminding us of the inequality and wealth differentials in US society but
offers no serious solution to the problem, is another voice of concern. In a letter
to the US trade representative, Michael Froman Sanders’ writes: “It
is incomprehensible to me that the leaders of major corporate interests who
stand to gain enormous financial benefits from this agreement are actively
involved in the writing of the TPP while, at the same time, the elected
officials of this country, representing the American people, have little or no
knowledge as to what is in it”
It should also be noted that the chief U S trade representative Michael Froman left Citibank to join the Obama Administration. He got a nice $4 million “exit payment” from Citi and a further $2 million for some investments he made. Stefan Selig, an investment banker with Bank of America who also joined the Obama Administration as Secretary for International Trade at the Department of Commerce received a handy $14 million in bonus and incentive pay on leaving BofA according to reports.
These are the people representing the US ruling elite and
corporations in the trade talks. They
are not representing the American workers or middle class, and nor is Sanders
as a member of one of the two Wall Street parties.
Along with Sanders, Elizabeth warren, another Democratic
Party politician sent
a letter to Froman, "With millions of
families still struggling to recover from the last financial crisis and the
Great Recession that followed, we cannot afford a trade deal that undermines
the government's ability to protect the American economy.", she wrote, stressing that
one of her major concerns is the right of corporations to sue governments or
take governments to court as Exxon and other oil companies have done in order
to stop legislation harmful to their interests.
As far as Hilary Clinton goes, she is being very wary as she
will not want to hurt her chances of becoming the first female president of the
US. She has said that that whatever agreement is reached needs to protect
American workers and have appropriate safeguards which is the usual vague
nonsense. Like Obama and all of them,
she will feel more comfortable telling the truth after she gets elected.
While Sander’s and others are correct in pointing out that
corporate interests are involved in structuring the accord this writer for one
would have to disagree with his implication that elected officials “representing the American people have
little or no knowledge as to what is in it,"
European protests against TPP in April 2015 |
What we have here is a dispute between different wings of
the ruling class and their respective political representatives in this
country. Sanders and his colleagues in
the Democratic Party, particularly the populist Elizabeth Warren are concerned
that unfettered corporate control, giving the more aggressive wing of the 1%
too free a hand will exacerbate an already untenable wealth inequality in the
country. These representatives of the 1%
are well aware of the anger beneath the surface of US society and the potential
for social unrest that will arise as a consequence of aggressive policies that
add fuel to the fire.
The US imported $1.71 billion in footwear from Vietnam alone
last year according
to the WSJ, “…generating income for
shareholders of Nike and other firms, along with their designers, retailers,
distributors and back-office employees. “ the paper concludes.
These massive profits that allow individuals like Nike’s
Phil Knight accumulate more than $23 billion in personal
wealth impose extreme hardship and misery on those whose labor power is
the source of that wealth. And all the
talk of such agreements between the representatives of corporate power ensuring
safe conditions, better wages and what one commentator call“American labor standards” is all
phony. For one thing, American labor
standards are not so hot anymore as our living standards have been driven
downward.
But, as I point out, owners of capital like Phil Knight
don’t invest capital in order to improve people’s living standards. They are not attracted to Vietnam or Cambodia
for egalitarian reasons. These people, although Forbes describes the likes of
Knight as “self made” are absolutely
ruthless characters.
In an earlier post I commented on the situation in
Cambodia where workers were shot for striking for higher pay. Cambodia has lots of cheap labor, cheaper
than China’s and Chinese capitalists are shifting production to places like
Cambodia and Vietnam for a more lucrative profit-making environment. Wages did rise a little after the Cambodian
government murdered striking garment workers on behalf of the local manufacturers and
global retailers like WalMart. That was not welcomed by the Cambodian capitalists
or their powerful global allies in the west who, for all their talk about “labor standards” held up production in
the event Cambodian workers’ efforts to improve their lot went too far and they'd have to shut up shop.
Ken Loo,
the head of the Cambodian Garment Manufacturers Association defended the low
wages they pay making it clear when he says that the garment industry, “migrates from one country to another, it
moves around seeking out the country with the lowest labor cost.” They speak the truth sometimes you see. Investors will always will take this road until capital, and its allocation is taken out of private hands.
The
TPP and so-called free trade is not good for US workers whether Bernie Sanders
or other members of Congress get to vote on it or not. The difference between the antagonists in this
issue is one of degrees, not whether or not capitalist globalization is a bad
thing. On the need for free trade and US dominance of
world markets and the super exploitation of workers in the weaker economies,
they speak with one voice.
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