The proponents of the Trans Pacific
Partnership argue that the TPP would bring huge benefits to Malaysia “with as
much as US $ 40 billion (RM 128.4 billion) in annual export gains and US $ 25
billion in annual income gains by 2025.” Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in
particular will reap a bonanza. The TPP, it is said, will also “give Malaysia
preferential access to a US $ 15 trillion economy, which means access to the US
$ 500 billion in US government tenders.”
As against these projections, there
are issues of tremendous significance pertaining to the TPP that have been
raised by a variety of citizen groups in almost all the 12 countries
(Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru,
Singapore, United States and Vietnam) that are currently part of the
negotiation process. These issues have emerged as a result of leaks since no
officially sanctioned draft has been placed before the public. The negotiations
— the 18th round of which will commence in Kota Kinabalu(
Malaysia) on the 15th of July 2013 — are shrouded in secrecy
though representatives of major corporations such as Monsanto, Walmart, Bank of
America, JP Morgan, Cargill, Exxon-Mobil, and Chevron, among others, it is
alleged, have had full access to the draft and have been “suggesting
amendments.”
One of the issues that has caused
grave concern is a set of rules in the TPP which apparently would empower
foreign corporations to bypass domestic laws and courts and challenge
government policies and regulations aimed at protecting the public interest via
tribunals linked to the World Bank and the UN. If this is true, it would be an
affront to national sovereignty.
The TPP also prohibits governments
and central banks from imposing capital controls or banning risky financial
products. Central banks would have diminished capacity to regulate the entry
and exit of speculative capital. Countries that are part of the TPP would be
compelled to create an even more conducive environment for casino capitalism.
Given Malaysia’s relative success in developing regulatory mechanisms during
and after the 1998 Asian financial crisis, this aspect of the TPP would be
particularly galling.
The adverse impact of this trade
pact upon national sovereignty and the economic well-being of countries such as
Malaysia is underscored by yet another provision which questions our
procurement policies. Apart from seeking to rectify economic imbalances,
government procurement policies have also attempted to expedite technology
transfers to local industries, enhance export capabilities and curb foreign
exchange outflows. These are goals that do not conform to TPP objectives.
The TPP also allows pharmaceutical
corporations to increase the price of medicines and to limit consumer access to
cheaper generic drugs. Monopoly patents would be better protected and the
purchase of generic drugs would be made more difficult. At the same time, by
designating a whole spectrum of policies, regulations and practices as “trade
barriers” the proposed agreement undermines some of the people oriented measures
associated with different TPP countries. For instance, the TPP, it is alleged,
upbraids the Malaysian government for “requiring that slaughter plants maintain
dedicated halal facilities and ensure segregated transportation for halal and
non-halal products.”
While some of the provisions of the
TPP may be set aside at the behest of individual countries, it is obvious that
the US which is the driving force behind the pact is determined to use it as
its vehicle to strengthen its economic position in the Pacific region in the
face of the rise of China. It explains why China itself — economically the most
dynamic nation in the region — has not been invited to join the TPP. This is
why it would be naïve to view the TPP as a mere economic and trade arrangement.
Its underlying motive is clearly political. It is a critical weapon in the US
arsenal for curbing and containing the emergence of a power which has the
potential of shaping the future of the entire Pacific in the decades to come.
The US will not allow this to
happen. It knows that in order to remain as the world’s sole superpower it has
to ensure that it is at the helm of that one region with the greatest economic
viability and vitality. The US already has 320,000 troops in the Pacific
region. That is the military arm of Pacific Power. The TPP is designed to
secure the economic dimension of Pacific Power.
As a nation committed to harmonious
relations among states, Malaysia should be extra cautious about participating
in any venture by any power, be it the United States or China, to enhance its
hegemony over the Pacific — a region whose very name signifies peace.
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