Lori's statement:

------------

Also check out this CNN story about the conflict:
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/bestoftv/2009/04/03/ldt.trade.agreements.cnn?iref=videosearch


     NEWS RELEASE

 April 2, 2009    Contact: Bill Holland (202) 454-5190

G-20's Bizarre Contradiction: We All Pledge to Re-Regulate Financial Services

... and Further De-Regulate Financial Services



G-20 Nations Fail to Remove Existing WTO Limits on Financial Service
Regulation, Call for Completion of  WTO Doha Round that Furthers
Finance Deregulation and Cede  Existing Policy Space Necessary for
Recovery





      WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today's G-20 commitments to enhance financial
service regulation clash with deregulation requirements in the World
Trade Organization's (WTO) 1999 Financial Services Agreement. Instead
of G-20 leaders calling for completion of WTO "Doha Round"
negotiations that include further finance deregulation, they needed to
agree to fix the existing WTO rules that facilitated the current
crisis, Public Citizen said today.



      "It is crazy that the G-20 leaders vowed to re-regulate the
financial system while simultaneously undermining their ability to
actually do so," said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's
Global Trade Watch division. "Instead of agreeing to change WTO rules
that now obligate 105 nations to continue the extreme finance
deregulation policies that got us into this economic mess, the G-20
leaders called for completion of a WTO expansion that includes
additional financial deregulation."



      The London summit communiqué also includes a commitment "to
refrain from raising new barriers to investment or to trade in goods
and services" and to "rectify promptly any such measures."



      "Instead of targeting only actual protectionism, this
overreaching pledge commits countries to eliminate non-trade measures
that many have employed to stop certain risky financial activities and
stimulate economic activity," said Wallach. "What is supposed to be an
anti-protectionism pledge is so broadly cast that it snares policies
totally unrelated to trade, such as tough new financial service
regulations that will incidentally limit trade and investment in risky
financial services."



      The WTO and various corporate lobbies have launched a global
campaign to gin up fears about a supposed new wave of protectionism. A
WTO report issued last week described "significant slippage" in the
global commitment to free trade and included a long list of recent
"trade measures" as evidence. Yet the list included unilateral tariff
cuts, domestic food and product safety protections, WTO-legal
procurement policies and anti-dumping actions. Indeed, the report
stated that "There is no indication of an imminent descent into high
intensity protectionism involving widespread resort to trade
restriction and retaliation." The G-20 declaration identifies falling
demand as the lead reason trade flows have declined, while also noting
growing protectionist "pressures."



      "The manufactured hysteria about creeping protectionism has
caused a bit of G-20 communiqué schizophrenia," said Wallach. "One
page of the communiqué identifies 'major failures ... in financial
regulation and supervision' as 'fundamental causes of the crisis' and
commits to 'action to build a stronger, more globally consistent
supervisory and regulatory framework for the future' while the next
page reaffirms the leaders' commitment to concluding the WTO Doha
Round negotiations that require further deregulation of finance."



      The G-20 communiqué also suggests that completion of the Doha
Round could "boost the global economy by at least $150 billion"
annually. That the G-20 communiqué would include such a figure is
worrisome, given that the WTO, which is the source of this claim,
provides no basis for its calculation and in 2005 declared that the
Doha Round could account for up to $90 billion in boosted global
economic activity, a figure it published in response to widespread
criticism of it 2003 claims that the Round would generate $539 billion
in new activity.



 "Implementing the G-20's ambitious goals will require changes to
existing WTO rules that lock in domestically and export worldwide the
extreme financial services deregulatory agenda that fostered the
global economic crisis," Wallach said. "It also will require the
replacement of the WTO Doha Round agenda with new negotiations that
liberate from the WTO's constraints the domestic policy space that is
needed to re-regulate the runaway financial services industry and
stimulate the economy."



      WTO Financial Services Agreement rules:

·       Forbid governments from limiting the size of banking,
insurance and other financial service firms. As Simon Johnson, former
chief economist of the International Monetary Fund has said, "too big
to fail is too big to exist." Yet WTO rules explicitly forbid
signatory governments from limiting the size of foreign financial
service firms, even if such limits are equally applied to domestic
firms;

·       Forbid governments from establishing "firewalls" that, for
instance, prevent firms involved in commercial banking or in providing
insurance from gambling peoples' savings on risky investment
businesses;

·       Forbid establishment of new regulation or reinstatement of
regulations removed to comply with the WTO. The WTO FSA "standstill
rule" agreed to by the United States and other Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) member countries
explicitly forbids countries from establishing any new regulatory
policies that might roll back their deregulatory commitments These
commitments were made by previous governments with respect to a vast
array of insurance, banking and other financial services; and

·       Limit the degree of government oversight. Under current rules,
domestic regulations are subject to review by WTO tribunals to make
the subjective determination of whether "they are not more burdensome
than necessary." Also forbidden are moves by member countries to
"apply licensing and qualification requirements and technical
standards that ... could not reasonably have been expected of that
Member at the time the specific commitments in those sectors were
made." This requirement conflicts with the widely accepted imperative
of adopting new regulation of financial services.

###



Public Citizen is a national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization
based in Washington, D.C. For more information, please visit
www.citizen.org

Lori Wallach
Director, Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch
+1 (202)546-4996  /  fax +1 (202)547-7369
http://www.tradewatch.org
Visit our blog http://www.eyesontrade.org


-- 
Robert Naiman
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]


On Sun, Apr 5, 2009 at 4:59 PM, michael perelman
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Lori Wallach said on an interview on KPFA that the reason that the bailout
> is feeding foreign bankers is that they invoked WTO & that the WTO, which
> was promoted at the G20, prohibits the kind of financial regulation that the
> leaders pretended to recommend.
> --
> Michael Perelman
> Economics Department
> California State University
> Chico, CA
> 95929
>
> 530 898 5321
> fax 530 898 5901
> http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> pen-l mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
>



-- 
Robert Naiman
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]

"It's 11 AM in Washington. Do you know where your foreign policy is?"
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