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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
15 November 2006
Report of the Workshop on the Malaysia-US FTA
Please find attached a report of the Workshop on ‘Malaysia-US Free Trade
Agreement: Issues, Implications and Challenges’, which was held on 6
September 2006 in Kuala Lumpur.
It was jointly organized by the Third World Network (TWN) and the Consumers’
Association of Penang (CAP). The workshop was attended by more than
100 participants representing government ministries and agencies, policy
makers, NGOs, civil society groups, academics, local industries, professional
bodies, trade unions, farmers and people living with HIV/AIDS.
The main objective of the workshop was to share information and views
about the Malaysia-US FTA. There were presentations on the key aspects
of the FTA (market access, services, intellectual property rights, investment,
government procurement, competition), as well as panel discussions on
two main issues: impact of the FTA on the domestic economy, and the
social implications of the FTA.
Among the speakers were the President of the Malaysian Trade Union Congress
(MTUC), the President of PERDASAMA (Persatuan Pedagang dan Pengusaha
Melayu Malaysia),
a representative of local generic pharmaceutical manufacturers, a representative
of people living with HIV/AIDS, a representative from the Coalition
Against Privatization of Healthcare Services, a farmers’ representative
and the Secretary of Sahabat Alam Malaysia.
Best wishes,
Third World Network
2-1, Jalan 31/70A
Desa Sri Hartamas
50480 Kuala Lumpur
Tel: +603-2300 2585
Fax: +603-2300 2595
email: twnkl@po.jaring.my
websites: www.twnside.org.sg and www.ftamalaysia.org
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Workshop on “Malaysia-US Free Trade Agreement: Issues, Implications
and Challenges” – Summary Report
INTRODUCTION
The Workshop on “Malaysia-US Free Trade Agreement: Issues, Implications
and Challenges” was held on 6 September 2006 in Kuala Lumpur. It was
jointly organized by the Third World Network (TWN) and the Consumers’
Association of Penang (CAP). The workshop was attended by more than
100 participants representing government ministries and agencies, policy
makers, NGOs, civil society groups, academics, local industries, professional
bodies, trade unions, farmers and people living with HIV/AIDS.
The workshop was part of a series of public forums organized by the
two organizations to disseminate information about the Malaysia-US Free
Trade Agreement (FTA). It was particularly timely in light of the fact
that negotiations with the United States
on the FTA have begun, with the 3rd round expected to commence on 18
September 2006 in Kuala Lumpur.
The main objective of the workshop was to share information and views
about the Malaysia-US FTA. The workshop was opened by S.M. Mohamed Idris,
President of CAP and Chairman of the TWN. There were two morning sessions,
during which presentations were given by experts, mainly from the TWN,
on the key aspects of the FTA (market access, services, intellectual
property rights, investment, government procurement, competition), following
which there were discussions. There were two afternoon sessions, comprising
panel presentations on two main issues: impact of the FTA on the domestic
economy, and social implications of the FTA. Among the several speakers
were the President of the Malaysian Trade Union Congress (MTUC), the
President of PERDASAMA (Persatuan Pedagang dan Pengusaha Melayu Malaysia),
a representative of local generic pharmaceutical manufacturers, a representative
of people living with HIV/AIDS, a representative from the Coalition
Against Privatization of Healthcare S! ervices, a farmers’ representative
and the Secretary of Sahabat Alam Malaysia. At the
end, there was a closing session with a summary of conclusions.
This report summarizes the key views and conclusions of the Workshop.
GENERAL
While Malaysia may seek to gain benefits from a US FTA, such as preferential
terms of export for its products, and an improved investment climate
for foreign investment, it is important to recognize that bilateral
agreements, especially between a developing and a developed country,
may have significant drawbacks compared to multilateral negotiations
and agreements. The latter is preferable as developing countries have
greater bargaining power via coalitions at the multilateral level, and
it is trade creating, rather than diverting trade from other countries
that are cheaper sources. The consequences of US FTAs, which usually
require the developing country to undertake more burdensome obligations
than required under the WTO (commonly called “WTO-plus obligations”),
are further compounded by disparity in negotiating strength between
the countries. In addition, differing capacities and resources may mean
that the US,
for example, would be better placed to take advantage of the ! FTA opportunities
that are also available to Malaysia, such
as in services, investment, government procurement and intellectual
property.
The Malaysia-US FTA is one of a new breed of bilateral agreements, which
are not merely about trade per se, but are much broader in scope and
encompass a range of economic and social issues. The US Government obtains
its authority to negotiate FTAs from the Bipartisan Trade Promotion
Authority Act of 2002, which also sets certain parameters for what the
US Government can offer in negotiations. Furthermore, US FTAs follow
a template where the chapters and main provisions are very similar and
many parts are not negotiable. Therefore, it is largely possible to
predict the content of a future Malaysia-US FTA on the basis of existing
US FTAs.
Before entering into the Malaysia-US FTA, it is essential that a comprehensive
cost-benefit analysis be conducted, in terms of its various components,
as well as the overall balance. There may be possible benefits in terms
of gaining some market access in some goods to the US. However, this needs to be weighed
against the possible costs, for example in increased US exports to Malaysia,
opening up of services, increased obligations on intellectual property
rights (IPRs) beyond the requirements of the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), and provisions related
to investment, government procurement and competition policy. Malaysia
is likely to suffer costs in terms of having to give up policy space
(space to be able to institute policies for national development) and
use of policy instruments, with ensuing socio-economic and political
implications. Such a cost-benefit analysis would be very useful to create
public discussion on the iss! ue, for which transparency and public
participation are important, given the possible far-reaching effects
on society.
MARKET ACCESS
In 2005, Malaysia
had an annual US$23 billion trade surplus with the US. It may be possible for Malaysia to obtain some extra market access in
the US,
but this may be constrained by structural, legal and political impediments
that limit the offers that the US Trade Representative can make. For
example, restrictive “rules of origin” such as the “yarn forward rule”
would make it difficult for Malaysia
to export more textiles to the US,
even if US tariffs are significantly lowered. On the other hand, the
US’s National Association of Manufacturers estimates
it will be able to double its exports to Malaysia by 2010 under an FTA.
Malaysia currently
has higher tariffs than the US,
so any tariff cuts would demand a bigger sacrifice on Malaysia’s part.
The US will likely
demand that Malaysia
cuts all of its tariffs to zero percent, including on rice, alcohol
and tobacco, although there may be varying periods before these come
into effect. It is essential that Malaysia
analyze the impacts of bringing tariffs down to zero percent on US goods,
particularly for sensitive products such as rice. Bringing tariffs down
to zero percent would mean the loss of a policy instrument to protect
against artificially cheap products coming in from the US.
In agricultural products, Malaysia
may hope to gain some market access, but the gains can be limited. For
example, Australia
was unable to achieve significant additional market access for its main
export, beef, or sugar, in its US FTA. While Mexico
was able to increase its vegetable exports under the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), this benefit was more than offset in products
such as maize, which is the main crop for Mexico,
and other key agricultural products, for which the US gained much more market access.
As a result the main agriculture sector of Mexico was seriously damaged, and
three million Mexican farmers have since left the land. This is compounded
by an inherent imbalance, in that the US
provides agricultural subsidies, allowing cheap US agricultural exports below the
cost of production, with ensuing difficulties for its trading partners.
Economic thinking now suggests that developing countries should not
rapidly decrease their industrial tariffs. Importantly, as a country
develops, it should retain the ability to raise its industrial tariffs
on certain products such as inputs and machinery, at the right moment
and sequence, in order to temporarily protect these sectors and allow
a country to industrialize. If Malaysia’s industrial tariffs on US products are
reduced to zero percent and bound, this will reduce Malaysia’s future ability to move
up the value chain by increasing tariff protection temporarily for new,
high technology industries until they can compete. Such a move would
eliminate policy space, and foreclose the possibility of fostering a
mature industrialized economy.
SERVICES
Services are the most important sector of the Malaysian economy for
employment, local participation, and social policy. The Malaysian Government
has successfully ensured greater local ownership and participation through
careful government policies over the last 50 years.
Malaysia’s
gradual unilateral liberalization of services has allowed calibration
of the degree and rate of liberalization with the growth and capacity
of the local services sector, such that local companies can cope. Importantly,
Malaysia has retained
the policy space to reverse liberalization in some sectors when circumstances
changed or when foreign competition hurt local small and medium enterprises.
Malaysia’s highly effective capital controls and other policies during
the 1997 Asian financial crisis were possible, without paying compensation,
because its financial services liberalization had not been locked in
by committing at the WTO or in an FTA.
At the WTO, services liberalization occurs via a positive list where
only those sectors listed will be opened to foreign competition. Furthermore,
a country has no legal obligation to liberalize, and can liberalize
at its own pace, and under its own conditions. It can even choose not
to liberalize certain sectors. In contrast, in US FTAs, services liberalization
occurs on a negative list basis where all sectors are opened to US competition,
unless they are listed in a “carve-out” or reservations list. This requires
much more detailed knowledge and impact analysis of all the service
sectors, and means that any future new sectors, which may not be known
or exist now, such as new financial instruments, are automatically opened
to US competition.
The US, which has large services companies, has highlighted Malaysia’s
policies in banking, telecommunications, broadcasting, retail/distribution
and professional services sectors as non-tariff barriers and areas where
it wants to see market access.
INVESTMENT
Investment policy is one of the main instruments of government in term
of social engineering (for example, in stipulating equity requirements).
For development reasons Malaysia
has carefully vetted foreign investment applications and imposed conditions
on foreign investors such as transfer of technology.
An investment agreement was consistently and strongly opposed by developing
countries, including Malaysia,
at the WTO, as they were concerned that this would prevent or reduce
their policy space to determine their own investment policies. However,
the obligations of the investment chapter in US FTAs go far beyond the
provisions proposed at the WTO because, for example, it requires US
investors and investments to be treated at least equal to locals (national
treatment), including in pre-establishment rights, which affords national
treatment before an investor enters the country, unless the exceptions
are listed in the FTA. Performance requirements such as transfer of
technology are also prohibited except in certain circumstances or for
listed exceptions.
US
FTAs also have an expropriation provision that requires compensation,
including interest, for direct or indirect expropriation of an investment.
As ‘investment’ is defined very broadly to include tangible and intangible
property, loans, shares, intellectual property etc., investors can directly
sue the state at an international tribunal for violations of the investment
chapter of a US FTA, including the expropriation provision. ‘Indirect
investment’ could mean losses resulting from government regulation or
policy. For example, cases have been brought claiming loss of future
market share under NAFTA provisions, due to banning of dangerous chemicals.
Furthermore, a US FTA investment chapter could affect Malaysia’s ability
to put in place capital controls and other policies such as those used
during the 1997 Asian financial crisis, due to its requirements to allow
free transfers of capital.
GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT
Government procurement is an important macroeconomic tool for stability
and management. It enables the government to spend more to stimulate
the economy in times of recession and if this money is spent on local
products and local companies, its beneficial effects are multiplied
within the local economy. Furthermore, government procurement can be
used to achieve social policy objectives such as assisting disadvantaged
groups or regions.
Many developing countries, including Malaysia, fought to keep government
procurement off the WTO negotiating agenda. The WTO working group had
the mandate to only discuss “transparency in government procurement”,
with possible rules limited to only the transparency aspects, and excluding
market access aspects, i.e., enabling foreign companies to bid on equal
terms with local companies for government contracts.
US FTAs go far beyond what was being discussed at the WTO. US
FTAs typically have a government procurement chapter that requires market
access for US
companies in the sectors listed. This will affect federal, state and
probably municipal governments. Despite some safeguards that can be
included, or even if discussions are limited to transparency aspects,
there will be pressure for Malaysia to progressively
open up government procurement.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
As Malaysia is a member of the WTO, it must abide by the minimum standards
of intellectual property (IP) protection set in the Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and is afforded flexibilities
in its implementation. However, as 98% of patents granted in Malaysia
are to foreigners, it may not want to further increase this protection.
It has been argued that intellectual property rights (IPRs) can increase
innovation, research and development, foreign direct investment, technology
transfer, industrial development and economic growth. However the experience
of other countries and economic theory do not always bear this out.
In particular, a survey of the pharmaceutical industry in Malaysia found that the strength of patent protection
had little or no impact on their decisions to conduct research and development
in Malaysia, invest
in Malaysia
or transfer technology.
Yet, US FTAs require stronger levels of intellectual property protection
than that stipulated by the TRIPS Agreement, as well as remove the flexibilities
provided for in the TRIPS Agreement. In practice, increasing IP protection
would apply to all applicants, not just those from the US.
In addition to requiring parties to the FTA to sign many TRIPS-plus
IP agreements, which may not be in Malaysia’s
interests, the IP chapter of US FTAs also covers trademarks, copyright,
patents and other forms of intellectual property. For example, the copyright
provisions typically extend copyright protection from 50 years (as obliged
under the TRIPS Agreement) to 70 or 95 years after the death of the
author.
Of particular concern is the impact of the IP chapter of US FTAs on
access to affordable medicines. Patented medicines can be more than
100-fold more expensive than their generic equivalents. US FTAs typically
have provisions that increase the number of medicines that can be patented,
make patents last for longer, make patents easier to obtain and allow
five-year monopolies even when there is no patent, via data exclusivity.
Malaysia successfully
issued a type of compulsory licence in 2003 to import some anti-retroviral
medicines used to treat AIDS and as a result, prices fell by 81%. US
FTAs often restrict the situations in which compulsory licences can
be used and can make them ineffective by prohibiting registration of
any medicine until the end of the patent period (at which time a compulsory
licence is no longer needed). The Thai and Peruvian Ministries of Health
have estimated that their US FTAs would cause their medicine spending
to more than double in the first year ! of their US FTA and get worse
after that.
The TRIPS Agreement requires some life forms to be patented (microorganisms)
if they meet patentability criteria, but allows the prohibition of patenting
of plants and animals. TRIPS also requires that protection be granted
for plant varieties either by patents or an effective sui generis system.
Countries have the flexibility to define their own sui generis system
of protection for plant varieties, including safeguarding farmers’ rights
to save, reuse, exchange and sell seeds. The US,
which allows patents on plants and animals, may ask Malaysia to do the same, even though
the Patent Act 1983 does not allow the patenting of animal or plant
varieties or naturally-occurring microorganisms. US FTAs also typically require ratification
of the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties
of Plants (UPOV Convention) 1991, which affords near-monopoly plant
breeders’ rights at the expense of farmers’ rights. Malaysia already
has a sui generis law, the Protection of Ne! w Plant Varieties Act 2004,
which is unique to meet the needs of the country and protects small
farmers and local researchers. This would have to be amended if Malaysia
ratifies UPOV 1991.
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
During the workshop, two panel discussions were held, with representatives
from trade unions (Malaysian Trade Union Congress, MTUC), local generic
pharmaceutical manufacturers (Malaysian Organisation of Pharmaceuticals
Industry, MOPI), association of bumiputera entrepreneurs (Persatuan
Pedagang dan Pengusaha Melayu Malaysia, PERDASAMA), health and environmental
NGOs, people living with HIV/AIDS and farmers giving their views on
the proposed Malaysia-US FTA.
On implications for the domestic economy, one of the key issues and
concerns raised was the probable US
takeover of many businesses, due to the restrictions that may be placed
on the Malaysian Government’s ability to protect and foster local industries.
While local businesses and the private sector drive the economy, they
could be weakened and some even destroyed under the US FTA. A major
concern was also the demand of the US
to open up government procurement, which could result in the loss of
an important tool for macroeconomic stability, national development
and social equity.
Most of the manufacturers of pharmaceuticals in Malaysia are generics manufacturers.
The generics industry as a whole strongly opposes the provisions on
data exclusivity in the US FTA, because of the serious impact it would
have on the industry. It was stressed that the generics industry actually
makes a positive contribution towards the community, as generic medicines
are cheaper.
Furthermore, concerns were raised with regard to the Malaysia-US FTA’s
impact on employment and workers. Development in the economy should
translate into quality employment opportunities and an increased standard
of living for workers and their families. There were worries expressed
that the US FTA could jeopardize these goals, as shown in the case of
Mexico under NAFTA.
People living with HIV/AIDS are extremely concerned that the US FTA’s
TRIPS-plus provisions would result in increased medicine prices. Many
of the HIV-positive community depend on generic medicines that are far
cheaper and easily accessible. If generic medicines become unavailable,
this would deny them access to the medicines required for their survival,
as patented medicines are very expensive. Many have died and many more
will die if medicine prices are increased.
Moreover, the investment chapter of the Malaysia-US FTA is also likely
to impact on healthcare. There were worries that the introduction of
schemes and regulations ensuring equitable distribution of healthcare
could be prevented.
Concerns were also raised that the Malaysia-US FTA would compound the
widespread poverty faced by the majority of Kedah rice farmers. Many
of them have no knowledge about the FTA, yet could be adversely affected
by it, particularly if the country is flooded with cheap agricultural
imports from the US.
Even if the Government were able to continue to protect rice, this would
be meaningless in the face of increased prices of other imported inputs.
Even though the environment chapter of the Malaysia-US FTA could be
used as leverage to ensure that Malaysia enforces its environmental
laws, this should be resolved nationally, rather than allowing the US
to police Malaysia’s implementation of environmental laws. In addition,
there are many other environmental concerns that arise. The investment
chapter under a US FTA, for example, could take away the government’s
policy space to prevent and regulate dirty industries and products.
Cynicism was expressed with regard to whether the US
was genuinely concerned about protecting the environment, especially
when it does not support multilateral environmental agreements such
as the Kyoto Protocol, Convention on Biological Diversity and the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety, and moreover rejects measures such as the labeling
of genetically modified food. There was concern that other measures
under the chapters dealing with the application of sanitary and phytosanitary
measures and tec! hnical barriers to trade, could be abused in the name
of protecting the environment.
In general, the lack of transparency over the negotiations and the rush
to complete negotiations according to the timetable set by the US were also raised
as serious concerns that need to be urgently addressed. Given that the
Malaysia-US FTA may affect different aspects of Malaysian life and all
parts of Malaysian society, public awareness, public participation and
transparency were seen as essential elements of a national discussion
on the issue.
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