The World Trade Organisation
by Roedy Green ©1996-2008 Canadian Mind Products
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Introduction
When you think of the world government, you probably think of the toothless
United Nations, but the real power is in the WTO, the World Trade Organisation.
It was born as GATT (General Agreement or Tariffs and Trade)
in Bretton Woods in New Hampshire when world leaders met in 1944
to plan a course of action to deal with the world’s economic problems. The
USA did not get around to formally agreeing to the Bretton woods treaty until 1994.
Then GATT renamed itself the WTO.
You elect no representative to the WTO. It is run mainly by international
corporations for the benefit of international corporations. Unlike the UN, it
has no mandate for world peace, only maximal profit for the international
corporations.
It is the force behind the McDonaldisation of the planet, destroying unions,
pushing people into low paying jobs, squashing local culture, and trashing the
environment for profit. It is something like NAFTA in
its destructive power, but on a global scale.
Actions
In the name of harmonisation, the WTO forces countries
to the lowest common denominator of environmental and labour protection. In the
name of fair trade, they block any attempts to foster local culture. Here is a
partial list taken from Thom Hartmann’s book Unequal Protection,
of some of the ways they have bullied governments:
- The stats of Massachusetts and 30 other local governments in the United States
had passed laws that banned imports of products that were manufactured with
child or slave labour from the repressive dictatorships of Myanmar, formerly
known as Burma. The national Foreign Trade Council, a lobbying and trade
industry association representing more than 500 US corporations, successfully
challenged these laws, making now illegal the kind of boycott that led to the
freedom of Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid in South Africa.
- Laws in England and France restricting the use of asbestos in construction were
successfully challenged by Canada which exports asbestos.
- Asian laws that banned the marketing of tobacco products were overturned.
- The Venezuelan government successfully challenged the U.S. Clean Air Act’s
provisions banning the import of dirty gasoline reformulated in refineries in
Venezuela.
- Laws in several European countries restricting the import of lumber cut from old
growth forests nor by environmentally destructive clearcutting were successfully
challenged by Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs and International
Trade.
- Japanese laws to reduce automobile emissions by cars sold in that country were
successfully challenged by the United States.
- U.S. laws banning the import of shrimp taken from regions where the shrimp
industry is destroying the habitat of endangered sea turtles were successfully
challenged by several nations and corporations.
- European laws banning the importation of genetically modified organisms, or GMOs,
were successfully challenged by the United States.
- A Canadian ban on the gasoline additive MMT (methycylcopentodieny manganese
tricarbonyl), which can cause disabling neurological impairments in movement and
speech, was struck down and the Canadian government paid millions to MMT’s
American manufacturer for the economic harm to that corporation caused by Canada’s
law to protect its citizens.
- A California ban on the gasoline additive MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl ether)
that the EPA had found to be "a known animal carcinogen and a probably
human carcinogen" was challenged. MTBE is manufactured by a Canadian
corporation, which sued the United States for three quarters of a billion
dollars to make up for their loss of profits in California because they cannot
now sell their product in that state.
- European laws, passed by elected legislatures, that banned beef laced with
hormones, regulated cosmetic testing on animals, and banned the import of furs
caught in steel-jaw leg hold were all thrown out.
- The WTO made it legal to label tuna dolphin friendly whether it was
caught in a manner that kills dolphins or not.
- The agreements make it illegal to discriminate against goods that were produced
by unethical or destructive processes, e.g. slave labour, child labour, or
killing endangered species.
- The agreements make it illegal to restrict the export of hazardous wastes to
countries ill-equipped to deal with them.
- The agreements make it illegal to ban the import of ozone-depleting substances.
- The agreements along with NAFTA prevent the Canadian government from giving any
incentives to its local magazine industry, film industry or entertainment
industry to encourage the expression of Canadian values. Instead Canadians are
swamped by American imports which espouse American materialistic values.
- The agreements even prohibit giving poorer nations a break in trade as a form of
financial aid.
The Result
Legislators, fearing lawsuits, are reluctant to even propose environmental or
labour legislations.
These agreements were drafted behind closed doors by businessmen for the
interests of the multinational corporations. They don’t serve the needs of
ordinary people in the least. They have further failed to even bring the
promised material benefits.
The very notion of preferring global trade to local production is ecologically
foolish. It wastes enormous amounts of energy to transport goods and food all
over the planet. It makes more sense to produce goods and fresh food locally
where possible.
You have probably seen people rioting at WTO meetings. However, you never heard
a word about why. Funny thing about that.
What To Do
“There can be no effective control of corporations while their political
activity remains.”
~ Theodore Roosevelt
What are the solutions:
- Put more political power into the WTO to counterbalance the power of the
multinationals.
- Withdraw from the WTO. This is not likely to happen as long as politicians get
their primary source of campaign contributions from multinational corporations.
- Campaign finance reform to reduce the power of the corporations.
The alternative is a world that cares nothing about people or life, just the
bottom line of faceless corporations willing to take any measure to squeeze
another penny without concern for the consequences to human life or the
environment.
Learning More
 |
recommend book⇒Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights |
| | paperback | hardcover |
|---|
| ISBN13: | 978-1-57954-955-8 | 978-1-57954-627-4 |
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| ISBN10: | 1-57954-955-1 | 1-57954-627-7 |
|---|
| publisher: | Rodale Books |
| published: | 2002-10-04 |
| by: | Thom Hartmann |
| How corporations have taken control the government and have used terrorism as an excuse to abrogate human rights. How they have used NAFTA and the WTO to squash labour and environmental protection. |
|
 |
recommend book⇒A Citizen’s Guide To The World Trade Organization |
| | paperback |
|---|
| ISBN13: | 978-1-55028-687-8 |
|---|
| ISBN10: | 1-55028-687-0 |
|---|
| publisher: | Lorimer |
| published: | 1999-01-01 |
| by: | Steven Shrybman |
| Shrybman is an environmental lawyer who takes you by the hand explaining the WTO from scratch. You don’t need an degree in economics to understand his book. |
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