Date: Thu, 10 Dec 1998 17:24:32 -0500
From: Margrete Strand-Rangnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Multiple recipients of list MAI-NOT <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: (mai) Katz: Activists use Internet to slow trade liberalization

Katz: Activists use Internet to slow trade liberalization

US business leader sees free-trade threat

BY JACK LUCENTINI
JOURNAL OF COMMERCE STAFF
12/10/98

NEW YORK -- Increasingly mobilized by the Internet, labor and environmental 
activists are a growing threat to free trade
and an open global economy, a business leader said Tuesday.

Abraham Katz, outgoing president of the U.S. Council for International 
Business, gave the keynote speech at the organization's
annual dinner on Tuesday.

He will retire from the post in February, to be replaced by Thomas M.T. 
Niles, a former ambassador to Greece who has been
serving as vice president of the National Defense University.

Mr. Katz laid out several accomplishments achieved during his 14-year 
tenure, as well as a number of continuing problems.

"The enemies of an open market system have marshalled a serious 
counterattack on further liberalization of trade and
investment and on multinational companies as the main agents of 
globalization," said Mr. Katz, who joined the council after a
long career with the State Department.

Officials of the business group have been alarmed about what they see as 
growing threats to business, often spurred by the
Internet. For instance, recent charges that Nike Inc. mistreats its workers 
in southeast Asia were largely spread across the
electronic medium.

Organized labor and environmental groups are pushing for unilateral 
sanctions against offending countries and companies, Mr.
Katz said.

"The more worldly and knowledgeable among them (activists) are aware that 
the U.S. neither singly, nor in any combination of
countries, can introduce a unilateral sanction-based approach into the 
multilateral rule-based system without tearing it apart,"
Mr. Katz said.

"Frankly," he charged, many of them "would just as soon see this happen."

One of the chief accomplishments that Mr. Katz cited is the International 
Labor Organization's Declaration of Principles and
Rights at Work, which was ratified in June at the ILO, a 174-member group 
affiliated with the United Nations.

Mr. Katz's organization saw the declaration as a way to use the UN to pursue 
better labor rights principles in countries that
violate them egregiously, without letting those concerns get in the way of 
trade.

Labor groups that oppose the business group's agenda favor extending the 
declaration of principles so that it can be used to
punish or sanction countries or individual companies.

"The objective of these groups, supported by certain governments, is to be 
able to judge the behavior of companies in what
would amount to kangaroo courts in which non-governmental organizations and 
trade unions would have a major voice," he
said.

Another initiative of the business group that Internet-mobilized activists 
have derailed is the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment. That would standardize rules so that each country would have to 
treat outside investors the same way. It would
protect investors from government interference such as arbitrary seizure of 
property.

Opponents say it would give multinational corporations unprecedented power 
to challenge governments' consumer, labor and
environmental laws.

Mr. Katz also complained that labor groups have defeated fast-track trade 
negotiating authority for President Clinton. In
September, the House of Representatives defeated a Republican-drafted 
fast-track bill. The president has pledged to bring a
new, comprehensive fast-track bill to Congress in January.


*********
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included information for research and educational purposes.


Margrete Strand Rangnes
MAI Project Coordinator
Public Citizen Global Trade Watch
215 Pennsylvania Ave, SE
Washington DC, 20003
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
202-546 4996, ext. 306
202-547 7392 (fax)

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