TPP and TTIP: Partners in Crime.
Fighting the Corporate "Trade" Agenda in the United States
By Mike Dolan. January 2015

With the rise of the so-called BRICS countries—Brazil, Russia, India, China, and
South Africa—global capitalism has entered a new stage. For centuries Europe and
the United States have dominated the world, but now the economic center of
gravity may slowly be shifting from the West and the North to the East and the
South. While it is too soon to say with any certainty what this means for global
power relations, we are indeed witnessing a substantial change. In particular
the economic rise of China, already leading the world in exports, is a harbinger
of what is likely to come: the relative decline of the West and greater
assertiveness from (some of) the BRICS and certain other countries in the global
South.

The Western powers are not about to let such a tectonic shift in global power
relations go unchallenged. They are trying to slow, if not stop, the trend in
order to keep a firm grip on the world economy and protect their own interests.
Most notably, Western (and in particular U.S.) policies toward China are
dominated by a contemporary form of containment strategy.

In this context, the current negotiations around two large “trade agreements”
have become a major instrument of the Western approach: along the Pacific Rim,
the United States is negotiating a “Trans-Pacific Partnership” (TPP) with
Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru,
Singapore, and Vietnam. Across the Atlantic, the “Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership” (TTIP) between the U.S. and the European Union is taking
shape.

To be sure, these proposals are a response to the failure to create a common
market in the Americas and to advance further the economic agenda of the West
via the World Trade Organization—failures that themselves resulted from the
global power shifts that these agreements seek to halt. However—and this is key
to understanding these proposals—they do not really focus on questions of trade;
not even their proponents claim that they would have a significant impact on
trade or boost economic growth. Rather, they are about preserving the West’s
ability to set the standards for the world economy of the 21st century—designed
to contain the rise of the BRICS, in particular China.

The United States Trade Representative is currently pushing hard for a quick
passage of TPP and TTIP. And with the new, Republican-led Congress it seems
feasible that the government will succeed in enlisting the support of a majority
in both houses.

This outcome, however, is not set in stone, argues Mike Dolan, Vice-President of
the Citizens’ Trade Campaign, a national coalition of environmental, labor,
consumer, family farm, religious, and other civil society groups based in
Washington, D.C. In this study, he takes stock of the resistance against both
TPP and TTIP in the United States and outlines the strategy we need if we want
to prevent the passage of “trade” agreements that threaten to kill jobs,
undermine labor standards and environmental regulations, limit access to generic
drugs, and even aim to exempt corporations from the judicial process. If we can
stop “fast track” in Congress and create a debate about the details in the
proposals, Dolan argues, neither TPP nor TTIP will pass. Let’s go for it!

abstract: http://www.rosalux-nyc.org/tpp-and-ttip-partners-in-crime/
full text:
http://www.rosalux-nyc.org/wp-content/files_mf/dolan_tpp_ttipengweb5061.pdf
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