http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/aug/27/pacific-free-trade-deal


 [image: The Guardian home] <http://www.guardiannews.com/>

 The Pacific free trade deal that's anything but free

The draft TPP deal may grant new patent privileges and restrict net
freedom, but it's secret – unless you're a multinational CEO

   - [image: dean] <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/deanbaker>
   -
      - Dean Baker <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/deanbaker>
      - guardian.co.uk <http://www.guardian.co.uk/>, Monday 27 August 2012
      11.11 EDT

[image: Pharmaceutical drugs in a chemists.]
Patent protection increases what patients pay for drugs in the United
States by close to $270bn a year (1.8% of GDP). Photograph: Graham Turner
for the Guardian

"Free trade" is a sacred mantra in Washington. If anything is labeled as
being "free trade", then everyone in the Washington establishment is
required to bow down and support it. Otherwise, they are excommunicated
from the list of respectable people and exiled to the land of protectionist
Neanderthals.

This is essential background to understanding what is going on with the
Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), a pact that the United
States<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/usa> is
negotiating with Australia, Canada, Japan and eight other countries in the
Pacific region. The agreement is packaged as a "free trade" agreement. This
label will force all of the respectable types in Washington to support it.

In reality, the deal has almost nothing to do with trade: actual trade
barriers between these countries are already very low. The TPP is an effort
to use the holy grail of free trade to impose conditions and override
domestic laws in a way that would be almost impossible if the proposed
measures had to go through the normal legislative process. The expectation
is that by lining up powerful corporate interests, the governments will be
able to ram this new "free trade" pact through legislatures on a
take-it-or-leave-it basis.

As with all these multilateral agreements, the intention is to spread its
reach through time. That means that anything the original parties to the
TPP accept is likely to be imposed later on other countries in the region,
and quite likely, on the rest of the world.

At this point, it's not really possible to discuss the merits of the TPP
since the governments are keeping the proposed text a secret from the
public. Only the negotiators themselves and a select group of corporate
partners have access to the actual document. The top executives at General
Electric, Goldman Sachs, and Pfizer probably all have drafts of the
relevant sections of the TPP. However, the members of the relevant
congressional committees have not yet been told what is being negotiated.

A few items that have been leaked give us some insight as to the direction
of this pact. One major focus is will be stronger protection for intellectual
property <http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/intellectual-property>. In the case
of recorded music and movies, we might see provisions similar to those that
were in the Stop Online Privacy Act
(Sopa<http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/sopa>).
This would make internet intermediaries like Google, Facebook and, indeed,
anyone with a website into a copyright cop.

Since these measures were hugely unpopular, Sopa could probably never pass
as a standalone piece of legislation. But tied into a larger pact and
blessed with "free trade" holy water, the entertainment industry may be
able to get what it wants.

The pharmaceutical industry is also likely to be a big gainer from this
pact. It has decided that the stronger patent rules that it inserted in the
1995 WTO agreement don't go far enough. It wants stronger and longer patent
protection and also increased use of "data exclusivity". This is a
government-granted monopoly, often as long as 14 years, that prohibits
generic competitors from entering a market based on another company's test
results that show a drug to be safe and effective.

Note that stronger copyright and patent protection, along with data
exclusivity, is *the opposite* of free trade. They involve increased
government intervention in the market; they restrict competition and lead
to higher prices for consumers.

In fact, the costs associated with copyright and patent protection dwarf
the costs associated with the tariffs or quotas that usually concern free
traders. While the latter rarely raise the price of a product by more than
20-30%, patent protection for prescription drugs can allow drugs to sell
for hundreds, or even thousands, of dollars per prescription when they
would sell for $5-10 as a generic in a free market. Patent protection
increases what patients pay for drugs in the United States by close to
$270bn a year (1.8% of GDP). In addition to making drugs unaffordable to
people who need them, the economic costs implied by this market distortion
are enormous.

There are many other provisions in this pact that are likely to be
similarly controversial. The rules it creates would override domestic laws
on the environment, workplace safety, and investment. Of course, it's not
really possible to talk about the details because there are no publicly
available drafts.

In principle, the TPP is exactly the sort of issue that should feature
prominently in the fall elections. Voters should have a chance to decide if
they want to vote for candidates who support raising the price of drugs for
people in the United States and the rest of the world, or making us all
into unpaid copyright cops. But there is no text and no discussion in the
campaigns – and that is exactly how the corporations who stand to gain want
it.

There is one way to spoil their fun. Just Foreign Policy is offering a
reward <http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1439/content_item/freetpp>,
now up to $21,100, to WikiLeaks <http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/wikileaks> if
it publishes a draft copy of the pact. People could add to the reward fund,
or if in a position to do so, make a copy of the draft agreement available
to the world.

Our political leaders will say that they are worried about the TPP text
getting in the hands of terrorists, but we know the truth: they are afraid
of a public debate. So if the free market works, we will get to see the
draft of the agreement.







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