http://www.policyalternatives.ca/mai.html 
 
The Corporate Rule Treaty 
 
MAI-DAY! 
 
The Corporate Rule Treaty 
 
The Multilateral Agreement on Investments (MAI) 
seeks to consolidate global corporate rule 
 
        By Tony Clarke 
 
Canadians are gradually becoming aware of the increasingly  
powerful role that transnational corporations (TNCs)  
are playing in their daily lives. But few are aware  
that the power of these global giants is being consolidated  
through a series of negotiations that are now taking  
place in Paris. Led by the United States, the 29 countries  
that comprise the Organization for Economic Cooperation  
and Development (OECD) are secretly negotiating what  
is designed to be a global investment treaty. 
 
The Canadian free trade experience reminds us of how  
crucial such international agreements can be. After  
all, the cornerstones of NAFTA (the North American  
Free Trade Agreement of 1994) and the FTA (the U.S.-Canada  
Free trade Agreement of 1989) are its investment codes.  
In turn, these investment codes constitute a bill of  
rights and freedoms for transnational corporations. 
Through national treatment clauses and provisions for  
the elimination of job content requirements, export  
quotas and foreign investment measures, these codes  
have enormously increased the power of transnational  
corporations over our economic, social and environmental  
future. 
 
Now Ottawa is actively supporting Washington's bid to  
constitutionalize transnational corporate power on  
a world-wide scale through the negotiation of a Multilateral  
Agreement on Investment (MAI). Initially, the European  
Commission (EC) had proposed that a global investment  
treaty be developed as the centrepiece of the new World  
Trade Organization (WTO). But the U.S. feared that  
opposition from developing countries in the WTO would  
"water down" any consensus that might be  
reached on an investment treaty. 
 
The U.S. therefore decided that the best way to achieve  
a "high standard" investment treaty was to  
negotiate it through the rich nations' club of the  
OECD. As U.S. officials have stated, their prime objective  
is "to obtain a high-standard multilateral investment  
agreement that will protect U.S. investors abroad."  
To that end, the MAI is designed to establish a whole  
new set of global rules for investment that will grant  
transnational corporations the unrestricted "right"  
and "freedom" to buy, sell, and move their  
operations whenever and wherever they want around the  
world, unfettered by government intervention or regulation. 
 
In short, the MAI seeks to empower transnational corporations  
through a set of global investment rules designed to  
impose tight restrictions on what national governments  
can and cannot do in regulating their economies. The  
ability of governments, for example, to use investment  
policy as a tool to promote social, economic and environmental  
objectives will be forbidden under the MAI. While corporations  
are to be granted new rights and powers under the MAI,  
they are to have no corresponding obligations and responsibilities  
related to jobs, workers, consumers, or the environment. 
 
 
This spring, a confidential draft text titled Multilateral  
Agreement on Investment: Consolidated Texts and Commentary  
is being circulated among government and corporate  
officials in the OECD countries. Behind closed doors,  
secret consultations and negotiations have been taking  
place at the OECD headquarters in Paris. The original  
plan was to have the draft text ready for approval  
at the OECD ministers' meeting scheduled for early  
May, 1997, but OECD officials have since decided that  
another four to five months will be needed to complete  
the negotiations. 
 
If this draft MAI is adopted by the OECD countries,  
the cornerstones of a new global economic constitution  
will be cemented in place. Even though the MAI will  
initially apply only to OECD signatory countries, an  
accession clause built into the proposed treaty allows  
non-OECD countries to sign into the pact, provided  
that certain conditions are met. This gives the U.S.  
the tools it needs to ensure that a "high standard"  
investment treaty is established on a global basis  
without risking a watered-down version through prolonged  
negotiations under the WTO. 
 
Indeed, it can be argued that this MAI was originally  
pioneered by NAFTA. Many of the terms and conditions  
originally laid down in the investment code of NAFTA  
have been transplanted into the draft MAI. Even some  
provisions that were rejected in the final negotiations  
of NAFTA reappear in the OECD investment treaty. Now  
a NAFTA-plus investment code is about to be adopted  
by the 29 countries of the OECD, thereby setting the  
stage for a world-wide investment treaty in the 21st  
century. 
 
This new global constitution, however, is certainly  
not designed to ensure that the rights and freedoms  
of the world's people are upheld by democratically  
elected governments. On the contrary, it is a charter  
of rights and freedoms for corporations only-a charter  
to be guaranteed by national governments in the interests  
of profitable transnational investment and competition.  
It is meant to protect and benefit corporations, not  
citizens. Indeed, through this new global constitution,  
the rights of citizens and the powers of governments  
themselves will be largely superseded by those of the  
transnational corporations. 
 
In effect, the MAI amounts to a declaration of global  
corporate rule. As such, it is designed to enhance  
the political  rights, the political power, and the  
political security of the TNCs on a world-wide scale.  
 
 
It is a mistake that the OECD was chosen as the venue  
for establishing a "high standard" global  
investment treaty for transnational corporations.   
After all, a total of 477 out of the Global Fortune  
500 corporations have their home base in OECD countries.  
In other words, 95.4% of the largest transnational  
corporations in the world today are headquartered in  
member countries of the OECD. 
 
The following is an analysis of the MAI in terms of  
these three dimensions of corporate rule, based on  
the draft text (dated January 13, 1997, for distribution).  
This is only a preliminary analysis. A more detailed  
study of the text by trade experts is required to get  
an in-depth understanding of the MAI and its implications  
for different sectors. Nevertheless, what follows provides  
a glimpse of the big picture. (Note: italics and bold  
face added for emphasis only). 
 
 
Political Rights 
 
There is nothing new about corporations having political  
rights. Throughout the 20th century, corporations have  
acquired a wide range of political rights under international  
law, as well as corporate law within countries. Indeed,  
corporations were given legal rights to "personhood"  
and "citizenship" in most countries before  
women and Aboriginal peoples were. Today, a vast body  
of corporate law and legal doctrine is now in place  
which serves to recognize and protect the property  
rights and operations of  corporations. 
 
This legal apparatus, in turn, has been reinforced by  
the new free trade regimes (e.g., the FTA, NAFTA, WTO)  
which provide constitutional protection for the rights  
and freedoms of the TNCs. If enacted, the proposed  
MAI will further consolidate and enhance the political  
rights of corporations in the following ways: 
 
1. The MAI seeks to codify a special set of rights for  
corporations as investors. Throughout the official  
draft text, corporations are seen as investors having  
a legal status equal to that of the contracting parties  
which are the nation states of the OECD. The implication  
here is that TNCs shall be treated as having a legal  
status with political rights equal to those of nation  
states. Some delegations go so far as to propose that  
investors (i.e., corporations) and the "contracting  
 parties" (i.e., governments) be given the same  
definition in the MAI (p. 90, II, 5). Moreover, the  
provisions calling for "temporary entry and stay  
of investors and key personnel" investing "a  
substantial amount of capital" serves to establish  
corporations as having a superior class of citizenship  
rights (p. 12 - A). 
 
2. The MAI attempts to expand the scope of investor  
rights of corporations by advancing a much broader  
definition of investment. By investment, the MAI means  
"every kind of asset owned or controlled ... by  
an investor ..." (p. 7). It extends to "an  
enterprise ... whether or not for profit," to  
"rights under contracts" and to "intellectual  
property rights," and to "rights conferred  
pursuant to law or contract" (e.g., concessions,  
licences, authorizations, and permits). (p. 8). It  
even covers "real estate or other property, tangible  
or intangible ... acquired in the expectation or used  
for the purpose of economic benefit or other business  
purposes." (p. 9). In other words, the investor  
rights of speculators are also to be enshrined in this  
treaty. Moreover, it includes "portfolio investment"  
(i.e., equity and debt shares and bonds of, and loans  
to, enterprises) which is precisely the type of investment  
that contributed to the Mexican peso crisis. 
 
3. Under the "national treatment" and "most  
favoured nation" clauses of the MAI, foreign-based  
corporations or investors are to be accorded special  
rights and privileges. Not only will governments be  
required to provide corporations from other countries  
treatment that is "no less favourable" than  
that given to companies within their own countries,  
but that treatment must include "equality of competitive  
opportunity." (p. 139). Since the standard of  
"no less favourably" is being applied, countries  
may treat foreign-based corporations better than they  
do domestic companies. What's more, national governments  
will be forbidden from imposing performance requirements  
on the investments of foreign-based corporations (e.g.,  
job content, export quotas, import quotas, technology  
transfers, local purchasing, etc.). Even if a national  
government imposes these performance requirements on  
domestic companies, it cannot apply them to foreign-based  
corporations. 
 
4. In addition to codifying property rights ranging  
from the rights of petroleum corporations to hydro-carbon  
resources (p. 95, sec. 35), to all forms of intellectual  
property rights (e.g., patents, copyrights, industrial  
design, trade secrets, etc.), the MAI emphasizes the  
right to the free flow of capital. "All delegations  
agreed," the text says, "that the free transfers  
of returns was a critical element of the protection  
of the investors." (p. 117).  No government, therefore,  
would be allowed to impose restrictions on the return  
of profits made on production in the host country to  
the parent corporation. It is also agreed that the  
MAI "should provide an absolute guarantee that  
an investor will be compensated for an expropriated  
investment." (p. 122). This could include investments  
that consist of intellectual property rights (p. 114).  
Even non-conforming tax measures on corporations may  
be designated as "creeping expropriation"  
for which they could demand compensation. 
 
5. These investor rights of corporations would be applied  
in all political jurisdictions by all levels of government  
in those countries that are party to the MAI. While  
the precise details of how the MAI is to apply to sub-national  
levels of government are not spelled out, it is clear  
throughout the text that important aspects of the investment  
rules are to be followed by all levels of government  
(i.e., provincial and municipal, as well as federal  
governments). Moreover, the MAI grants to corporations  
the right to sue governments or states and provides  
a binding investor-state dispute settlement mechanism 
(pp. 53-64) for these purposes (see below). While governments  
can also challenge other governments under the state-to-state  
dispute settlement procedure (pp. 44-52), governments  
are not granted reciprocal rights to sue corporations  
for damages on behalf of their people. Hence, the political  
rights of corporations are greatly enhanced by the  
inclusion of this investor-state dispute mechanism. 
 
In effect, the draft MAI points to a massive transfer  
of "rights" from citizens to investors in  
the new global economy. At a time when peoples all  
over the world feel that their fundamental democratic  
rights as citizens (e.g., the Universal Declaration  
of Human Rights) and the ecological rights of the planet  
(e.g., the Earth Charter from the Rio Summit on the  
Environment) are not protected by governments, the  
rights and freedoms of transnational corporations are  
being guaranteed through trade and investment treaties  
(like the MAI) that have become the new global economic  
constitutions. This transfer of rights, in turn, is  
reinforced by radical shifts in the balance of power  
between governments and corporations. 
 
 
Political Power 
 
Once again, there is nothing new about the fact that  
transnational corporations wield tremendous political  
power when it comes to determining the economic, social  
and environmental policies of nation states. Armed  
with their own corporate think tanks and machinery  
for political lobbying and advertising, corporations  
can virtually call the shots when it comes to key policy  
issues. The formation of big business coalitions (e.g.,  
the Business Round Table in the U.S. and the Business  
Council on National Issues here in Canada) has resulted  
in a much more systemic and coordinated approach to  
influencing political decisions in the capitals of  
nation states around the world. 
 
Through these and related measures, such as privatization  
and deregulation, the balance of power between the  
public and private sectors has been drastically altered,  
with corporations increasingly gaining the upper hand  
over governments. The MAI includes a number of measures  
which serve to strengthen the political power of corporations: 
 
1. Although the MAI does not require governments to  
privatize state-owned enterprises, it will certainly  
lay down new constraints on the conditions imposed  
when the ownership and control of public assets are  
privatized. The agreement will require, for example,  
that the "national treatment" and "most  
favoured nation" clauses apply to the initial  
stages of privatization, as well as to subsequent stages.  
This means in effect that, when a government decides  
to privatize a public enterprise, it must allow foreign-owned  
corporations as well as domestic companies to bid on  
the assets. While the commentary to the text indicates  
that there is still some dispute, the MAI could prevent  
governments from utilizing "special share arrangements"  
to encourage local workers and communities to buy the  
company or to distribute shares to the general public.  
It is also understood that these new obligations will  
apply to provincial and municipal governments, as well  
as the federal government. 
 
2. At the same time, the MAI will impose constraints  
on governments in the operation of their state enterprises  
and monopolies. In the future, these public enterprises  
and monopolies will have to adhere to "national  
treatment" provisions in their regulatory functions  
and market activities. All purchases and sales of goods  
and services will have to be "non-discriminatory."  
Cross-subsidization and "anti-competitive"  
practices will be prohibited (p. 27). As in the case  
of NAFTA, state enterprises and monopolies will also  
be required to act "solely in accordance with  
commercial considerations. " (p. 27). Hydro power  
and water utilities, for example, that provide discounted  
services to rural communities could be prevented from  
doing so under these provisions. The draft MAI even  
includes a proposal that even state monopolies based  
on "national standards" be prohibited. (p.  
26, notes). Once again, these constraints and obligations  
are expected to be applied to state enterprises and  
monopolies in provincial and municipal jurisdictions,  
as well as those of national governments. 
 
3. Under the MAI, all foreign-based corporations are  
to be assured of "fair and equitable treatment  
and full and constant security." "In no case"  
shall foreign investors be treated "less favourably  
than required by international law." Obviously,  
the rules on expropriation identified above apply here.  
No government will be allowed, by its regulatory measures,  
to "impair ... the operation, management, maintenance,  
use, enjoyment or disposal of investments in its territory"  
by corporations based in another country. (p. 40).  
The role of governments, in other words, is not only  
to ensure that the properties of foreign-based corporations  
are protected, but also to provide a safe haven for  
profitable transnational investment and competition.  
All of this serves to entrench not only the economic  
but the political power base of foreign-owned corporations,  
in terms of the pressure they can exert on their host  
governments. 
 
4. Governments would also be obligated to follow certain  
rules with respect to "investment incentives." 
This involves direct financial contributions such as  
grants, loans, equity infusions, and loan guarantees,  
as well as tax credits and foregone revenue. (p. 33).  
While there are differing views on how explicit this  
should be in the text, it has been agreed that the  
"national treatment" and "most favoured  
nation" requirements would be applied to all these  
"investment incentives." A more rigorous  
set of rules regarding the application of government  
investment incentives may be developed after further  
negotiations under the MAI.(p. 132). The most dramatic  
development here is the indication that tax measures  
may be included. (p. 132-3), including even payroll  
taxes such as social security provisions. This means  
that governments would be obligated under the MAI to  
follow the national treatment rules in applying tax  
measures and tax credits to all foreign-based corporations.  
 
 
5. Perhaps the most powerful new weapon which the MAI  
gives the TNCs is the mechanism for investor-state  
dispute settlements. Unlike NAFTA, which grants corporations  
a much more limited scope for litigation, this mechanism  
provides corporations with the power to directly sue  
governments over any breach of MAI provisions "which  
causes [or is likely to cause] loss of damage to the  
investor or his investment." (p. 53). It is also  
understood that even "a lost opportunity to profit  
from a planned investment would be a type of loss sufficient  
to give an investor standing to bring an establishment  
dispute" under this section. (p. 53 footnote).  
 If challenged by a corporation, governments are obligated  
 ("unconditional consent") to go before the  
tribunal. The tribunal members are to make their judgments  
based not on the laws of the host country, but on the  
rules of the investment treaty itself (i.e., the MAI).  
(p. 60). All awards (which may provide for "compensatory  
monetary damages," restitution, or "any other  
form of relief") are "binding" and shall  
be enforced "as if it were a final judgment of  
its courts." (p. 63). According to a footnote,  
this is designed to ensure that no government denies  
enforcement of an award based on the claim that it  
would be "contrary to its public policy." 
 
In these clauses, the MAI further expands the power  
of transnational corporations over that of nation states  
and national governments. This does not mean that national  
governments are to be rendered powerless, but rather  
that, in the new global economy, their power is to  
be used mainly to provide a favourable climate for  
profitable investment and competition. Political power  
is to be harnessed to serve the "rights"  
of investors, not the rights of citizens. As a treaty,  
the MAI will reinforce and constitutionalize this selective  
use of government power. 
 
 
 
Political Security 
 
One of the essential conditions for transnational corporations  
in developing their investment strategies is the assurance  
of political stability and security. Measures must  
be taken to provide favourable conditions and a safe  
haven for profitable transnational investment and competition.  
>From the standpoint of the TNCs, it is the responsibility  
of the state to provide this kind of political security  
if corporations are going to be free to exercise their  
political rights and power in the new system of corporate  
rule. 
 
For these reasons, it is important for a global investment  
treaty like the MAI to include built-in measures designed  
to provide political security for the investments of  
transnational corporations. While some of the components  
identified above (e.g., the Political Power section,  
item 3) serve this function, the MAI contains other  
features which perform this task as well. The following  
are some examples: 
 
1. The MAI includes a set of " rollback clauses" 
designed to ensure that transnational corporations  
will have ongoing favourable conditions for investment.  
Any regulatory measures of nation states which do not  
conform with the principles and conditions of the MAI  
are to be reduced and eventually eliminated. The rollback  
provisions are designed to facilitate this process  
of liberalization. The contracting governments would  
agree to liberalize certain areas of their regulatory  
regimes when the MAI comes into force. Although each  
participating country has the right to exempt certain  
laws, policies and programs from the Agreement, the  
MAI will include restricted use of these exemptions  
to ensure that they do not apply to all the obligations  
under the MAI (p. 122), or that they are not used to  
avoid the main obligations of the MAI (p. 65).  Unlike  
other international agreements, failure by a contracting  
government to list any reservations in the annex of  
the Agreement would result in all of that country's  
laws being subject to the MAI (p. 126). It is likely  
that only certain types of reservations will be acceptable  
and that contracting governments may be expected to  
set "sunset" dates for the termination of  
"non-conforming" laws, policies or programs.  
 
 
2. These "rollback" provisions, in turn, are  
reinforced by what is known as the "standstill" 
measures in the Agreement. Under the "standstill"  
clauses, contracting governments would agree not to  
introduce any new non-conforming laws, policies or  
programs in the future. What this means, in effect,  
is that, if any future government wanted to take public  
ownership and control over a sector of the economy  
that had been previously privatized or reintroduce  
regulations that had been scrapped in the past, it  
would be forbidden to do so under the MAI. And when  
the "standstill" clauses are combined with  
the "rollback" clauses in the Agreement,  
they produce a "ratchet effect." (p. 127).  
"Any new liberalization measures," the draft  
Agreement states, "would be 'locked in' so they  
could not be rescinded or nullified over time."  
(p. 127). Through these measures, the MAI is designed  
to facilitate the continuous expansion of investor  
rights for corporations. 
 
3. In addition to the obligations of governments to  
protect the future investments of corporations (see  
Political Power section above, item 3), the MAI could  
include provisions designed to protect existing investments.  
It is proposed that investments made before the MAI  
is signed will be protected under the Agreement. Disputes  
arising before the Agreement comes into force, however,  
may not be allowed access to the MAI's dispute settlement  
mechanism. Nevertheless, transnational corporations  
can use the MAI to enforce investor rights that derive  
from other investment agreements, including "a  
contract granting rights with respect to natural resources  
or other assets or economic activities controlled by  
the national authority." In effect, the MAI could  
be used to enforce contracts that have no binding arbitration  
channels in the first place. What's more, the MAI secures  
the rights and powers of absentee landlords by allowing,  
for example, a British corporation to lay a claim in  
Canada on behalf of its Canadian subsidiary. (p. 86). 
 
4. The draft of the MAI also contains clauses protecting  
corporations from being targeted by governments for  
operations in other countries where they are seen to  
be violating labour, environmental and human rights  
standards. Application of the "most favoured nation"  
clauses would prevent any government from distinguishing  
between TNCs based on these standards. Similarly, existing  
bans, sanctions or embargoes that restrict investment  
in certain countries because of repressive human rights  
or labour practices could be challenged as a violation  
of the MAI rules and therefore revoked. For example,  
the U.S. and Canadian restrictions on investment in  
South Africa, which were instrumental in helping to  
dismantle apartheid, would be prohibited under the  
MAI rules if these countries were signatories to the  
Agreement. The sections dealing with "secondary  
investment boycotts" and "conflicting requirements"  
are designed to secure the rights and freedoms of corporations  
to operate in other countries, regardless of their  
labour, environmental and human rights records, unless  
there is a direct violation of international law. 
 
5. Perhaps the most extraordinary measure proposed in  
the MAI draft to ensure political security for investors  
is the clause dealing with "withdrawal."  
Contracting governments will not be able to withdraw  
from the MAI until five years after it has come into  
force. On top of that, it is proposed that the MAI  
rules continue to cover existing investments in that  
country for an additional 15 years. (p. 71). In other  
words, once a country has ratified the Agreement, it  
is virtually locked-in for a 20-year period. Under  
this provision, all corporations based in the contracting  
countries will have an ironclad guarantee that the  
MAI's investment rules will remain in force for at  
least 20 years. Moreover, the accession clause will  
outline the terms and conditions for expanding the  
MAI to include non-OECD countries. One of the key terms,  
of course, will be unconditional acceptance of the  
investment rules ratified by the original OECD contracting  
governments. Any amendments to the MAI would have to  
be ratified by all the parties. 
 
Viewed in terms of these three basic dimensions-political  
rights, political power, and political security-the  
MAI would consolidate and entrench the system of corporate  
rule that is emerging in the new global economy. If  
the MAI is ratified by the OECD countries, it will  
greatly strengthen the power of the transnational corporations,  
while correspondingly weakening the power of nation  
states. Increasingly, the role of democratically elected  
governments will be confined to developing and implementing  
economic, social and environmental policies that serve  
the interests of transnational corporations, rather  
than the broader interests of their own citizens. 
 
So what does this mean for Canada? It is true that we  
have already been burdened with the equivalent of many  
of the MAI provisions under the FTA and NAFTA. But  
the MAI will include several additional measures that  
will tighten the stranglehold corporations already  
have gained over public policy-making in this country.  
What's more, the new MAI regime will establish investment  
rules favouring corporations not only in the U.S. and  
Mexico, but in 26 other OECD countries as well. And  
this is only the beginning. The MAI is meant to set  
the stage for the establishment of a world-wide investment  
treaty under the WTO. 
 
There has been talk recently in Washington circles that  
the U.S. might be contemplating the addition of side-bar  
agreements to the MAI on labour and the environment.  
But the main big business lobby coalition behind the  
MAI, the U.S. Council for International Business, has  
issued a stern warning to the Clinton Administration  
against such a move. 
 
"The MAI is an agreement by governments to protect  
international investors and their investments and to  
liberalize investment regimes," said the USCIB  
President in a letter to senior U.S. officials on March  
21, 1997. "We will oppose any and all measures  
to create or even imply binding obligations for governments  
or business related to environment or labor." 
 
What is perhaps most disturbing in the forging of the  
MAI is the complete lack of any public discussion and  
debate. If there is even a sliver of truth in our claim  
that the MAI is an instrument for making global corporate  
rule absolute, then this should be a major topic for  
debate both inside and outside the legislatures of  
the OECD countries. Instead, the MAI has drawn virtually  
no attention. Most politicians, let alone citizens  
in general, have never even heard of it. 
 
For Canadians, the real danger is that the MAI, like  
the WTO, will be swept under the rug and ratified without  
anyone being aware of its harmful implications and  
consequences. If any semblance of democracy is to be  
salvaged in Canada, concerted steps must be taken to  
forestall this surrender to corporate tyranny. The  
forthcoming federal election offers an opportunity  
to focus the public spotlight on the MAI and demand  
a full-scale public debate about Canada's future in  
the global economy. 
 
What follows is a set of Canadian flashpoints in the  
MAI  related to policy issues that are bound to surface  
during the federal election. 
 
 
Canadian Flash-Points 
 
There are nearly a dozen major sets of public policy  
issues that will be directly affected by the MAI in  
Canada. With a federal election looming, however, five  
policy flash-points stand out above the others.*  The  
fact that the MAI is being negotiated by high-level  
senior bureaucrats under top-secret conditions raises  
the question of who in Ottawa is really aware of what  
is going on in Paris around the MAI. Presumably Paul  
Martin (Finance) and Art Eggleton (Trade) are well  
aware of the MAI negotiations and are staying close  
to them. Beyond them, however, it is at least questionable  
whether any other cabinet minister is being kept abreast  
of the negotiations and the implications for their  
portfolios. 
 
If this is a reasonably accurate reading of what is  
going on in Ottawa on the MAI front, then it may be  
possible to pry open some strategic opportunities around  
the following five policy flashpoints in this election  
climate. 
 
1. JOB CREATION 
 
The failure of the Chretien government to live  
up to its 1993 election promise of "jobs! jobs!  
jobs!" continues to be a sensitive issue leading  
up to the 1997 federal election. The MAI will further  
tie the hands of existing and future governments in  
Ottawa and the provinces when it comes to developing  
a comprehensive job creation strategy: 
 
* Forbidden to apply performance requirements on the  
operations of foreign-based corporations, governments  
are prohibited from levering employment and other economic  
benefits from investors. 

* The commentary states that "the MAI should prevent  
the application of national employment quotas or labour  
market (economic needs) tests." (p. 105) 

* Even if the Bank Act were to be amended to ensure  
that the big five national banks invest more in loans  
for local economic development, this could be struck  
down under the MAI. 

* What remains of Ottawa's policy tools for redirecting  
investment to impoverished regions will likely be eliminated  
(p. 34). 

* The technology transfer restrictions in the MAI place  
severe limitations on Ottawa's ability to ensure adequate  
R&D is done to advance Canada's economic development. 
While we have seen some of these restrictions before  
through NAFTA, the expansion of these investment rules  
to include all the other industrialized countries will  
multiply the constraints on Ottawa's future options. 
 
2. CULTURAL PROTECTION 
 
The flap provoked by the WTO ruling on the split-run  
Sports Illustrated issue in Ottawa could be reactivated  
again in terms of the MAI implications for culture.  
Given the performance by Heritage Minister Sheila Copps  
in response to the WTO decision, it is unlikely that  
the minister has been kept adequately informed about  
the implications of the MAI. Yet the MAI could have  
more serious consequences for cultural protection in  
Canada. 
 
* The intellectual property rights provisions (e.g.,  
copyright laws) are bound to have implications for  
the cultural sector (even though we have this restriction  
with NAFTA, we are talking here about all the industrialized  
countries) (p. 94-5). 

* Under MAI, Ottawa would not be able to use tax credits  
to promote Canadian cultural industries (p. 33, 1.1). 

* France (perhaps supported by Canada) has proposed  
that "literary and artistic works" be exempted  
from the MAI obligations (which is not likely to be  
acceptable to the U.S.) 

* If there is no cultural exemption, then Canadian "educational  
products" cannot be protected. (p. 16). 

* Under the "rollback" provisions, Canada  
may attempt to reserve laws that restrict foreign investment  
in Canadian magazines but may be required to lay out  
a time table for allowing more foreign ownership, if  
not removing its restrictions altogether. (re. ratchet  
effect). 
 
3. PUBLIC HEALTH CARE 
 
It is clear that the future of Canada's public health  
care system remains a highly sensitive issue leading  
up to the federal election. Given Health Minister David  
Dingwall's recent response to Commons committee questions  
over the implications of NAFTA and GATT for drug patent  
legislation (C-91), it is unlikely that the minister  
is aware of the consequences of the MAI. Yet Canada's  
$72 billion public health care industry is bound to  
be more threatened under the MAI investment rules than  
it has been under NAFTA. 
 
* The MAI could circumvent any of the very limited ("fig-leaf")  
reservations or exemptions for public health care that  
were written into the NAFTA and the GATT (the only  
really allowable exemption under the MAI is for "national  
security" purposes). 

* The MAI clauses dealing with restrictions imposed  
on governments regarding "privatization rights"  
and "monopoly/ state enterprises" could have  
major implications in setting the stage for a two-tiered  
health care system in this country 

* The fact that payroll taxes and social security contributions  
are to be included in the definition of taxation under  
the MAI (p. 77), in terms of investment rules in the  
future, could also have serious implications for health  
care. 
 
4. ENVIRONMENTAL SAFEGUARDS 
 
The current process of environmental deregulation and  
the weakening of environmental standards and protection  
that is taking place in this country will very likely  
accelerate under the MAI investment rules. Once again,  
it is unlikely that Environment Minister Sergio Marchi  
has any real idea of what constraints the MAI will  
put on him and future ministers of the environment.  
 
 
* The NAFTA provisions insisting that governments not  
apply environmental measures in an arbitrary or unjustifiable  
manner and not constitute a disguised restriction on  
trade and investment, will be expanded to include all  
the OECD countries under the MAI. 

* Under the investment products provisions, corporate  
challenges to the environmental regulation of production  
will likely accelerate, as witnessed by the case brought  
by the Ethyl Corp. Canada against Ottawa over the banning  
of MMT (manganese fuel additive). 

* The intellectual property rights provisions giving  
patents full protection are likely to conflict with  
the provisions of the bio-diversity convention. 

* Under the MAI, acquiring land for preservation and  
conservation is not protected, whereas a logging corporation  
that buys up a rain-forest for commercial purposes  
is protected. 

* Sections dealing with rights from concessions, licences,  
and permits have serious implications for governments  
which attempt to regulate corporations developing natural  
resources in their jurisdictions. 
 
5. CONSTITUTIONAL POLITICS 
 
While this may not emerge as a real issue during the  
federal election campaign, the fact remains that the  
investment rules being laid down under the MAI do have  
serious implications for both the sovereignist and  
federalist positions in the current constitutional  
debate, as well as First Nations and the provinces  
themselves. There is no indication, however, that either  
Quebec Premier Lucien Bouchard or federal Constitutional  
Affairs Minister Stephane Dion is aware of the  
MAI and its implications. So, too, for First Nations  
leaders and the provincial premiers. 
 
* Sovereignists should be wary of the ways in which  
the MAI (which, by the way, they have no role to play  
in negotiating) will tie the hands of any future national  
government in developing policy for the transition  
towards an independent Quebec. 

* Federalists should be equally wary that virtually all  
the provisions being negotiated under the MAI will  
be applicable to sub-national governments (which, in  
turn, have not been party to the negotiations that  
have been taking place). 

* First Nations should also beware that their rights  
to self-government and control of their lands and resources  
could be threatened by corporations more than by governments  
under the MAI. 
 
About the Author 
 
Tony Clarke is the director of the Polaris Institute,  
which is designed to provide citizens' movements with  
new tools for democratic change in an age of economic  
globalization. In the past, he has served as the national  
chair of the Action Canada Network, and was social  
policy director for the Canadian Conference of Catholic  
Bishops from 1975 to 1994. He is the author of "Behind  
The Mitre: The Moral Leadership Crisis in the Canadian  
Catholic Church" (Harper-Collins 1995) and the  
forthcoming "Silent Coup: The Business Takeover  
of Canada," to be co-published later this year  
by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and  
James Lorimer & Co., Ltd. 
 
This analysis of the MAI was prepared in consultation  
with Maude Barlow, Jim Grieshaber-Otto, Ed Finn, and  
several U.S. colleagues. It was initially prepared  
for the Common Front on the World Trade Organization  
in Ottawa, coordinated by the Sierra Club of Canada,  
April 1997. 


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