Saturday, May 09, 2015

Still wary, but a reasonable defense of Trans Pacific Partnership is here

UPDATE:  a slightly (just barely) contrary opinion on TPP from my go-to guy Paul Krugman. More like he doesn't think it's worth the bother.

From Brad DeLong's blog, with him quoting Gary Hufbauer. I'm a big fan of Elizabeth Warren, but she is still a national-level politician.
As one of the people who did the NAFTA economic impact estimates for the Clinton Administration. I definitely have some explaining to do.

Our models showed NAFTA as:

a small plus for the American manufacturing sector, including manufacturing workers; a larger but still small plus for American consumers; a substantial plus for Mexico; and a minus for other developing countries that were potential competitors with Mexico for the American market. In reality, it turned out to be:

a substantial short-run minus for Mexico (the 1994–95 financial crisis; a long-run plus for Mexico that I still hope Will be larger than the short-run minus (guaranteed tariff- and quota-free access to the US market is worth a good deal); a bigger plus then I expected for Wall Street; a plus for American consumers; a small minus for American manufacturing; and a minus for other developing countries that were potential competitors with Mexico for the American market. It turned out that the most important aspect of NAFTA was not the increase in balanced trade from lower trade barriers, and was not the increase in factory construction in Mexico because of increased confidence in Mexico’s government and in US willingness to except Mexican exports and in US manufactured equipment exports to enable that construction.

It turned out that the most important aspect of NAFTA was the Mexican financial liberalization that allowed Mexico’s rich to cheaply purchased political risk insurance from Wall Street by getting their money into New York.

That experience--my personal analytical nadir as an economist, I might add--convinced me that analyzing modern trade agreements as if they were primarily Ricardian deals is likely to lead one substantially astray. One has to think, and think deeply, creatively, and subtly, about all the potential general equilibrium effects. One has to work hard to bound their magnitude.
....
Gary Hufbauer: Senator Warren Distorts the Record on Investor-State Dispute Settlements: "ISDS provisions enable a foreign investor to seek compensation in an amount determined by an impartial panel of arbitrators... ...if a host government expropriates its property, or regulates its business in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner. Such protections have been deemed necessary in agreements going back at least to a Germany-Pakistan accord in 1959.... Starting with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, the United States has also included ISDS in the investment chapters in nearly all its free trade agreements (FTAs), now numbering 20. Given this rich history, Senator Warren should be able to cite actual examples of the multiple abuses that she claims have occurred. She has not done so, because she cannot. Senator Warren makes a big deal about the hypothetical outcome of the old Methanex case against California’s regulations on gasoline additives, but the case was decided against the Canadian corporation....

Over the decades, only 13 ISDS cases have been brought to judgment against the United States. The United States has not lost a single case. Why? Because the United States does not expropriate private property without compensation, and the United States does not enact arbitrary or discriminatory laws against foreign firms. Contrary to what the Senator implies, American taxpayers have not had to cough up millions and even billions of dollars in damages. They have not had to cough up anything. To be blunt, Senator Warren has no facts.... Her op-ed... resorted to hypothetical scenarios that had no basis in 50 years of ISDS history....

Senator Warren...warns that plaintiffs may succeed in suing such countries as Egypt, Germany, and the Czech Republic to overturn their laws. But these are hypothetical scenarios. The cases have not been decided and the countries in question may well prevail. Her descriptions of these lawsuits overlook something that Senator Warren should know as a former law professor: Lawyers often bring cases seeking huge damages precisely when the facts are against their claims. Just look at the 13 ISDS cases brought against the United States and dismissed, or the 175 cases dismissed worldwide. Sounding like a Tea Party politician railing against the United Nations, Senator Warren contends that international courts might replace the US legal system. Again she has the story backwards. The United States has been the chief architect of ISDS and other forms of international dispute settlement precisely because the United States has been able to export its legal principles to other countries....

Since NAFTA was ratified two decades ago, ISDS provisions have been amended to ward off frivolous claims involving environmental, health, and safety regulation of corporate practices. We do not yet know the precise terms of the ISDS provisions in TPP. A good guess is that they will follow the template found in the Korea-US FTA. That template might be further improved by requiring briefs to be published at a suitable time and establishing an appeals mechanism. But just because the existing ISDS template falls short of perfection is no reason to jettison the concept. It is even less of a reason to reject the entire TPP, though that seems to be Senator Warren’s objective.

12 comments:

David B. Benson said...

So post the text of TPP already.

Kevin O'Neill said...

I would be more concerned over the patent and copyright provisions.

John said...

It isn't hard to figure out who benefits and who gets hurt by these "free trade" agreements.

Big business is in favor of these deals, while labor unions (one of the very few institutions representing workers) are opposed.

And that's really all that anybody needs to know.

Fernando Leanme said...

John, consumers benefit. Our money wouldn't last to the end of the month if we couldn't buy those cheap products being produced by Chinese slave labor.

anthrosciguy said...

I've got a great deal for you. I'll tell you what is after you pay me.

If you fall for that, are you not an idiot? If the deal is good, we can see it first.

John said...

" 'TPP Will Be Great,' Say People Who Crashed Global Economy in 2008"

http://tinyurl.com/lc3mkze

------
John Puma

Victor Venema said...

United States has been able to export its legal principles to other countries....

I did not know that Europe was in need of US legal principles. Neither do I see the US as needing European legal principles. Personally, I prefer to see the law upheld by real courts and not be private ones. Is there a lack of rule of law in Europe or the US? Personally, I prefer democratic parliaments to be able to make laws to the benefit of their populations.

Eli, didn't you previously post about Philip Morris suing Australia and developing countries into submission for have the audacity of wanting to protect their populations against the dangers of smoking? Court cases which are always risky and are very expensive for small countries.

Hank Roberts said...

> the United States does not
> expropriate private property
> without compensation

Yeah, right.

You can be sure there's ground work being done now to provide for compensating the coal companies for giving up their "private" "property" -- land and mineral rights the United States gave them, after taking those from the people who lived there.

Seriously, the early legal framework for big money deals is often prepared years in advance and assembled as little bits and pieces of decisions ahead of time.

And when it becomes obvious how the money flowed, oh, it's too late, it was inevitable it would go that way. Too much precedent, can't allow overturning the past.

--------------------
My Country ‘Tis of thy People You’re Dying
-- Buffy Sainte-Marie

JohnMashey said...

Philip Morris moved Ahustralian HQ to Honk Kong and then sued Australia under some trade provision akin ot ISDS t reverse Australain "plain packaging" laws. They lost, but it cost.

They are Suing Uruguay.

See also
Big Tobacco puts countries on trial as concerns over TTIP deals mount
.
"The tobacco behemoth is taking its legal action under the terms of a bilateral trade agreement between Switzerland – where it relatively recently moved from the US – and Uruguay. The trade deal has at its heart a provision allowing Swiss multinationals the right to sue the Uruguayan people if they bring in legislation that will damage their profits."



For cigarette companies to prosper, they *must* stop developing countries for goign the route of the more developed ones in tobacco control.

Brian said...

anthrosciguy: that's not the process.

John Mashey: per Hufbauer above, I'd be more worried about the precedent of a case where tobacco wins, rather than loses or has an ongoing/undecided case.

JohnMashey said...

I'd be worried about that ... but the problem is in the developing countries, and the small ones don't have the money to fight PMI.
In some cases, even if they fight, it can delay things.

My friends in tobacco control worry about this .. .but I was glad to see Bloomberg give $ to Uruguay.

coby said...

"Over the decades, only 13 ISDS cases have been brought to judgment against the United States. The United States has not lost a single case."

This is reassuring if you are viewing the US as "us" and foreign multinational corporations as "them". I think my personal view is a bit more natural environment and the general population as "us" and all multi-national corporations as "them". So, I don't care if the US wins its cases, especially as in my view its environmental and worker protections are far too lax, I care if the environment and/or citizens of any country are losing.