Date: Wed, 20 Oct 1999 18:35:25 -0400 To: •••@••.••• From: Bob Olsen <•••@••.•••> Subject: WTO Book, Oct 1999 From: "David I. Hay" <•••@••.•••> From: •••@••.••• [mailto:•••@••.•••]On Behalf Of Margrete Strand-Rangnes Sent: October 19, 1999 2:22 PM To: Multiple recipients of list MAI-NOT Subject: (wto) NEW BOOK ON WTO - NOW AVAILABLE!! NEW BOOK ON WTO - NOW AVAILABLE!! NEW BOOK ON WTO - NOW AVAILABLE!! THE 5 YEAR TRACK OF THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION IN LANGUAGE ACCESSIBLE TO EVERYONE, NOT GATTese! PUBLIC CITIZEN'S GLOBAL TRADE WATCH LAUNCHES NEW BOOK ON WHAT HAS BEEN CALLED THE "MOST POWERFUL INSTITUTION OF THE 20TH CENTURY" ANNOUNCING: "Whose Trade Organization? Corporate Globalization and the Erosion of Democracy" Foreword by Ralph Nader By Lori Wallach and Michelle Sforza, Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch Imagine a Central American country being forced to choose between maintaining the UNICEF baby formula policy that has saved thousands of children's lives or facing an expensive defense in a Swiss trade tribunal and then possible trade sanctions for not protecting the trademark rights of a corporation whose label violates the UNICEF code. Imagine a powerful corporation "renting" a WTO Member nation to pursue its special interests - and kill a trade- based development policy - behind closed doors in Geneva to the detriment of tens of thousands of peoples' livelihoods and the rented country's own economic and security interests. Imagine, ten years of environmental activism reversed with the sweep of a pen in Geneva, Switzerland, where a World Trade Organization (WTO) panel has ruled that a law protecting endangered sea turtles poses an illegal barrier to trade and several countries are now threatening new challenges against a country's enforcement of international environmental treaties - this time the Kyoto Treaty on climate change. Imagine, a clean air regulation designed to reduce gasoline emissions is weakened because the WTO claims it could inadvertently hurt foreign gas producers. Imagine, consumers forced by the WTO to choose between rescinding a popular food safety law or facing economic sanctions. No need to imagine. These are but a handful of examples of the WTO's real-life impacts on food safety, environmental conservation and protection and economic development documented in WHOSE TRADE ORGANIZATION?. After a year of intensive research, Harvard educated trade lawyer and Global Trade Watch Director Lori Wallach and Global Trade Watch Research Director and trade policy analyst Michelle Sforza document the WTO's actual impact on democratic governance, wages, jobs, economic growth, food security, access to healthcare, food safety, labor rights and environmental protection. With WHOSE TRADE ORGANIZATION, citizens, policymakers and public interest advocates can learn the following: o How the WTO is used to pressure poor countries to abandon their efforts to make desperately needed medications more affordable through generic drugs and other policies. See page 119. o How the WTO is being used to attack a European proposal to cut electronics pollution. See page 30. o How WTO rules may threaten U.S. school lunch and food stamp programs. See page 164 o How WTO rules threaten millions with starvation by allowing agribusiness companies to patent seeds created over generations in villages around the world and then charge annual fees for the subsistence farmers who developed the seeds to have the right to plant them again. o How an individual with a monetary interest in a WTO case was appointed to judge the case. See page 201. o How Daimler-Chrysler and Ford Motor Company are using WTO threats to undermine a Japanese clean air law adopted under the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change. See page 31. o Why beleaguered U.S. steel workers may face a WTO challenge to loan guarantees for the ailing U.S. steel industry. See page 157. o How WTO rules allow corporations to secure exclusive marketing rights over medicinal remedies that have been used by indigenous groups for centuries. See page 108. o How the threat of WTO action was used to pressure Guatemala to drop its infant health law enacting the WHO/UNICEF Code on Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes. See page 115. o How a major campaign contributor effectively rented the U.S. government to mount a successful WTO challenge to Europe's preferences for Caribbean bananas, even though the U.S. doesn't export a single banana. See page 141 WHOSE TRADE ORGANIZATION translates the WTO's jargony trade rules into understandable prose for the layperson, policymaker and academic alike. It is designed with the knowledge that WTO rules and rulings affect everyone -- not just importers and trade lawyers -- and therefore must be accessible to everyone, especially everyday citizens who want to resist WTO encroachment into the decisions that affect their day-to-day lives. WHOSE TRADE ORGANIZATION is being released in advance of the WTO's November 29-December 3, 1999 Ministerial Summit in Seattle so that those who will live with the results taken at that historic meeting are informed about the potential consequences. The book makes the case -- bolstered by over 1,200 citations from a vast range of sources -- for the review and repair of the WTO so that it can no longer threaten the public safeguards and corporate/governmental accountability standards that citizens have fought so hard for. While the Clinton Administration is seeking expansion of the WTO's jurisdiction through a new "round" of negotiations, Public Citizen is united with civil society groups worldwide calling for the organization's sweeping powers to be reined in, to put the tools of domestic policy decision making back into the hands of citizens and their elected representatives. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Whose Trade Organization" is available through Public Citizen Publications Department 1600 20th Street, NW Washington DC, 20009 USA 1-800-289-3787 OR Fill out the order form on Public Citizen's Web-page: http://www.citizen.org/pctrade/publications/wtobook.htm Price: $18.50 (includes shipping and handling) Bulk Rate: 20 or More Copies 40% off. ORDERS FROM OTHER COUNTRIES: Orders must be pre-paid using a credit card or $U.S. money order made out to Public Citizen. Canada $ 4.52 , + $15.00 book price = $ 19.52 (includes shipping & handling) Mexico $ 9.66, + $15.00 book price = $ 24.66 (includes shipping & handling) All other countries $15.00, + $15.00 book price = $30.00 (includes shipping & handling) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Activist Group Public Citizen Joins Attack on WTO By John Burgess Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, October 14, 1999; Page E01 One of the country's best-known activist groups joined in the chorus of voices criticizing the World Trade Organization yesterday, suggesting the international agency has led the United States and other countries to weaken their environmental, health and safety laws. The attack, coming one day after the AFL-CIO called for more worker participation in global trade talks scheduled for next month in Seattle, promised to turn up the heat on business groups and the free-trade stance taken by the Clinton administration. "The WTO is the final authority," said Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, a consumer watchdog group founded by Ralph Nader. "It can require nations to change their laws and standards to accommodate its decisions made in secret proceedings by trade officials--or else be subject to severe economic sanctions." Claybrook said sovereign nations are being robbed of the authority "to enact basic protections for their own populations." U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky denied Public Citizen's charges, included in a 229-page report. "The United States has not relaxed any environmental law or health or safety law in order to comply with any WTO ruling," she said in an interview. Where changes to laws have been made, Barshefsky said, they served only to equalize treatment of U.S. and foreign companies. Public Citizen argued that the United States has softened certain provisions of the Clean Air Act involving gasoline, while South Korea has lowered meat safety regulations and Australia loosened rules on the import of raw salmon. The criticisms come as delegates from WTO member countries prepare to meet in Seattle next month to try to chart a new round of global trade negotiations. The group has more than 130 member countries. Business groups and the Clinton administration say the WTO brings "rule of law" to trade disputes. That liberalizes trade between nations, raising living standards, and has helped fuel an economic boom in the United States. But some environmentalist groups contend that the WTO has too much power and is hurting living standards in many countries. Many of the decisions that Public Citizen cites concern one country bringing an action at the WTO against a trading partner's environmental, health or safety rules. These challenges often involve a country claiming the real function of such consumer laws is to block the import of goods from other countries. If a WTO tribunal concludes that these laws are administered to discriminate against foreign suppliers, or that they lack scientific basis, they can be declared to violate the laws of world trade. U.S. officials argue that each country in the WTO retains its sovereignty. Countries can legally ignore unfavorable decisions, and some do so. However, they may to sanctions or forced to pay compensation to trading partners. But critics see the WTO as replacing the lawmaking authority of individual nations. Smaller countries have no choice but to go along with WTO rulings or merely the threat of WTO action, Public Citizen contends, while large countries tend to follow the WTO's wishes. Nader called the WTO a "super-national autocratic system . . . that runs courts that would be illegal in this country" because their proceedings are closed to public scrutiny. While its rulings are published, the internal deliberations and presentations of the opposing parties are kept secret. The United States promises that at the Seattle talks it will push for more openness in WTO deliberations. In a speech last night to the Democratic Leadership Council, President Clinton said that the WTO had been seen as a "private priesthood for experts" and now must open up to hear the views of diverse parties. Barshefsky pointed out that the Seattle schedule includes a day in which "nongovernmental organizations" such as labor unions and consumer groups will air their views. Among WTO decisions Public Citizen singled out for criticism: * A ruling that U.S. gasoline import rules discriminated against fuel made in Venezuela and Brazil. Public Citizen said the United States took steps in response that it had previously dismissed as unenforceable and costly. Barshefsky said the United States merely changed the ways in which foreign gasoline producers reported data about their products. * A finding that a European ban on the import of beef from hormone-treated animals was illegal. Europe has ignored the ruling and continues to contend that the ban is necessary to protect against potential health problems. The United States, which exports the meat, has argued that there is no scientific justification for a ban on the imports. * A ruling that South Korea's requirement that meat could have only a 30-day shelf life. Under the threat of WTO action, Korea raised that limit to 90 days, a change that foreign suppliers wanted. c 1999 The Washington Post Company ========================= NEW CITIZEN'S GUIDE TO THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION! On the Internet at http://www.tradewatch.org/publications/gtwpubs.htm FOR MULTIPLE COPIES CONTACT PUBLIC CITIZEN 202-588-1000 OR GO TO http://www.citizen.org/newweb/publicat.htm ********************************** In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Margrete Strand Rangnes MAI Project Coordinator Public Citizen Global Trade Watch 215 Pennsylvania Ave, SE Washington DC, 20003 USA •••@••.••• 202-454-5106 202-547 7392 (fax) To subscribe to our MAI Listserv send an e-mail to •••@••.•••, or subscribe directly by going to our website, www.tradewatch.org (Please indicate organizational affiliation if any, and also where you found out about this listserv) Search the MAI-NOT & MAI-INTL archives at http://lists.essential.org/ ............................................. Bob Olsen, Toronto •••@••.••• .............................................