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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
06 March 2007
FTA Must Promote Fair, Not Free Trade
Below is an article by Khairy Jamaluddin, a columnist for the New Straits
Times highlighting the pitfalls that the US-Malaysia FTA might have
on Malaysia
and warned that the country is likely to lose more than it benefit.
Some of the issues he raised which warrant concern is the negative impact
that such a pact might have on agriculture, investment and the prices
of medicines through stronger intellectual property rights protection.
The pact will also pose a threat to the country’s sovereignty which
he believes should not be compromised and hope that the government will
not sign away our freedom and dignity.
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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FTA must promote fair, not free trade
04 Mar 2007
Khairy Jamaluddin
(http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Sunday/Columns/20070304084312/Article/index_html)
THIS year is laced with an unusually large dose of irony. 2007 has been
set up as a splendid celebration of half a century of nationhood and
sovereignty, with Malaysia
emerging as a successful, modern democracy that has succeeded in avoiding
any encumbrances by over-dependence on other nations, especially those
which wield considerable strategic strength.
But it is also a year when this hard won independence is under jeopardy.
Independence is not just
freeing ourselves from colonial masters. Independence is also about
maintaining our sovereignty and being able to freely pursue policies
without having to answer to another country.
Simply put, independence must be safeguarded at all times so we can
do what we want to do based on what we think is in our collective interests
as Malaysians.
This year, we are confronted with a serious test to our sovereignty.
And the most worrying part is that most Malaysians are not aware of
what’s going on.
I was travelling in the northern regions recently and casually asked
Haji Manaf, a padi farmer and Umno stalwart in his late 50s, if he had
heard of the Malaysia-United States Free Trade Agreement (FTA) which
is currently being negotiated. He said he had read about it in the Malay
newspapers but really didn’t understand what it was all about.
I explained to him that the FTA was a legally binding document between
our country and the US
which would abolish nearly all tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers,
and provide each other preferential access to each other's market. I
was met with a blank expression on his face. He then asked me, "What’s
in it for me?"
Good question. I told him that currently we have a 40 per cent tariff
on rice imports to protect people like him and to enable us to become
almost self-sufficient in rice over the next few years. I explained
that was part of the reason why he saw people smuggling rice during
his shopping trips to Padang Besar at the Thai border.
He wanted to know what would happen if the US
could freely export their rice into Malaysia. I had to tell him that the
US and other developed countries had extremely high subsidies on farming
and that in some cases it was better to be a cow in Europe than a farmer
in sub-Saharan Africa (the average Euro cow gets US$2 — RM7 — a day
of subsidy which is more than what half the people in the developing
world live on).
His laughter trailed off quickly when I told him that US rice farmers were so heavily subsidised that
they are able to sell at 25 per cent below production cost which means
that US rice could flood our market and
force Haji Manaf and 116,000 other padi farmers out of work.
He said surely the government wasn’t going to commit to such an absurd
agreement. I couldn’t give him a reply. Although I knew the government
doesn’t want to include rice in the market access list for the FTA,
the US was pushing
hard for its inclusion. It may well be one of the 58 contentious issues
which the Minister of International Trade and Industry alluded to when
she was asked recently about the status of the talks without actually
saying what they were.
That’s just rice. The litany of concerns surrounding this FTA is considerably
long. Apart from rice, the agricultural sector as a whole has cause
for worry.
Currently our applied tariff for food items range from 10-40 per cent,
all of which will be effectively removed under the FTA. This will have
a profound effect on the agricultural sector which is experiencing a
new lease of life under the Prime Minister’s green revolution.
After Mexico inked the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) with
the US and Canada, at least a third of their farmers were impoverished
due to the subsidised US corn that flooded into their market.
The US
is notorious for protecting their farmers, and even then not all American
farmers benefit since only one per cent of farms (usually the rich,
corporate farms) receive almost 25 per cent of subsidies.
And while the whole point of the FTA is reciprocity, in other words
what you give me I give you equally, market access for our agricultural
products to the US
may continue to be stymied notwithstanding the agreement.
Tariffs are not the only way to block imports, and our agro-exporters
will continue to confront arbitrary health standards and phyto-sanitary
conditions designed to protect the American consumer from disease.
The issue here is that sometimes these technical standards are not the
product of scientific evaluation but rather the dictates of the domestic
food lobby in the US.
There is also the issue of tariff escalation. We may be hoodwinked into
thinking that tariffs for our agricultural produce will be eliminated.
This may be true for raw materials that meet US health requirements,
but if the food items are processed in Malaysia
and the higher-value added items exported, it will be met with higher
tariffs. These barriers are designed to preserve higher value-added
economic activity within the US
and effectively consigning developing countries at the basic (and less
lucrative) stage of the supply chain.
In manufacturing, pro-FTA advocates assure us that the agreement will
create profits and jobs by opening up the US
market for our exports and also by increasing the flow of US direct
investment into factories and plants in Malaysia.
As far as our exports to the US
are concerned, 80 per cent are currently subjected to zero import duty
and a further 15 per cent pay 0-5 per cent, so the scope for further
increase based on tariff reduction alone looks limited.
In fact, US exporters will benefit from the FTA since average tariffs
for industrial goods are higher in Malaysia.
The US position estimates
that with an FTA, US exports to Malaysia
will double by 2010. It can be safely assumed that a significant portion
of that increase will be at the expense of locally produced goods which
would directly result in job losses and a downward pressure on wages
in the private sector.
Although investments from the US
may increase on the back of the FTA, there are many strings attached
to this. Top of the list of concerns would be the expropriation clause
used in previous US bilateral trade
agreements which basically means that investors can take up cases against
the host government should a change in government policy result in losses
for the company concerned.
This effectively means that formulation of government policy must take
into account the bottom line of US companies above the welfare of citizens
which directly undermines the sovereignty of any country.
The FTA also promises market access for US firms into our services industry.
The principle of reciprocity would suggest that the US
market will also be open to our corporations, but in reality it will
lead to US companies dominating service sectors like telecommunications,
banking and retail in Malaysia.
Our service industry is not export-oriented, so the benefit of opening
up would accrue to the US
firms that are already global in their reach with more capital and know-how.
In more graphic terms, would it be more likely to see CIMB branches
mushroom out all over the US
or for Bank of America to exponentially expand its network here? A no-brainer
there.
Any US FTA is also demanding on intellectual property protection. This
goes beyond the relatively trivial concern of many Malaysians that there
will be a shortage of bootlegged Hollywood
movies.
In fact, the real danger is that stringent patent protection required
by the FTA (which is more onerous than what is stipulated by the World
Trade Organisation) will mean that patents for medicine will be secured
for a longer period, thereby denying patients cheaper, generic options
that can be produced by local companies.
The patent provisions will also mean that US
drug companies will be able to establish property ownership on plants
indigenous to Malaysia
that we have used in alternative medicine. This may eventually mean
that our farmers have to pay a US
drug firm for even the right to cultivate these plants or the equally
disturbing prospect of Mawi promoting Pfizer Ali Cafe proclaiming that
the US-owned blend is now "my choice".
As far as government policy is concerned, apart from the expropriation
clause and the obvious loss in tariff revenue, the FTA is set to introduce
new policies to regulate competition which not only tilt the playing
field towards US companies but actually take away the option for the
government to direct government-linked companies from undertaking unprofitable
but socially responsible investments.
It will also introduce other "Singapore Issues" such as transparency
in government procurement which is used as a policy tool to develop
local, especially Bumiputera companies, and open this up to US corporations.
The FTA will effectively take that policy option away from the government
and curtail its ability to develop local businesses.
The concerns listed above are well documented and the ministry tasked
with negotiating the FTA has been bombarded with memoranda with similarly
expressed arguments against the agreement.
The government has repeatedly stated that any FTA signed will not cede
economic sovereignty to the US,
including the many points that have been highlighted in this article.
Which naturally then begs the question, if all of these concerns are
off the table, what’s there left to discuss? There is no way the US, with other
bilateral agreements under its belt, will agree to anything watered
down. As far as most trade analysts are concerned, the US will not sign an FTA if it doesn’t
get its way on all of these "sensitive" issues.
I hope that the minister with all her experience, wisdom and resolve
will stand her ground. Don’t rush in to anything. It doesn’t matter
to Malaysians if we cannot conclude an agreement before July to take
advantage of US Congressional
approval for the president to fast-track an agreement.
What matters more is that any agreement on trade, whether it is a multilateral
or bilateral variety, is one that promotes fair trade and not free trade.
In this auspicious year when we celebrate 50 years of nationhood, let
us demonstrate that we will not sign away our freedom and dignity.’
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