Google AI
The Times Australia
Business and Money

Corporations prepare to sue over action to save lives as pandemic reveals trade flaws

  • Written by: Patrcia Ranald, Honorary Research fellow, University of Sydney

Global companies are positioning themselves to use little-known rules in trade agreements such as the Comprehensive Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP[1]) to claim millions of dollars in compensation for restrictions imposed during the pandemic.

They and other companies have successfully lobbied for rules in the CPTPP and other bilateral and regional agreements that give them rights to bypass courts including Australia’s High Court and sue governments in extraterritorial tribunals for income they claim restrictions have cost them, using so-called Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) procedures.

Such provisions do not exist in the rules of the World Trade Organisation iteslf, which is the body formally charged with regulating global trade.

Read more: When even winning is losing. The surprising cost of defeating Philip Morris over plain packaging[2]

The Philip Morris tobacco company used such rules in a Hong Kong-Australia agreement to claim billions of dollars in compensation from Australian for plain packaging legislation.

Defeating this claim took Australia seven years and A$12 million in legal costs.[3]

There have been increasing numbers[4] of such cases against governments regulating to reduce carbon emissions and combat climate change.

An international arbitration law firm [5] Aceris Law LLC has told its clients

while the future remains uncertain, the response to the COVID-19 pandemic is likely to violate various protections provided in bilateral investment treaties and may bring rise to claims in the future by foreign investors

An Australian law firm Alston & Bird[6] is advertising an event called “The coming wave of COVID-19 arbitration – looking ahead”.

Legal scholars critical of ISDS say governments could face an avalanche[7] of ISDS cases after the pandemic is over.

ISDS clauses establish rights to sue

Corporations prepare to sue over action to save lives as pandemic reveals trade flaws Phillip Morris lost its case against Australia’s plain packs law in the High Court, then went to an extraterritorial tribunal. LUKAS COCH/AAP

Foreign investors could allege that governments are breaching the “direct expropriation” clauses of ISDS rules by appropriating private health and other assets for public use.

Lock down rules that affect profits could be interpreted as “indirect expropriation”.

The pandemic is also raising questions about other aspects of Australia’s trade agreements.

Despite pleas from the Productivity Commission[8], each is negotiated in secret[9] without an independent evaluation [10]of its costs and benefits.

Often the agreements open up essential services[11] including health, to private foreign investment, with only limited carve outs to allow regulation which can be wound back, but not widened, over time.

They have also allowed pharmaceutical companies to increase their 20-year monopoly on new medicines[12], delaying the availability of cheaper medicines.

In the past month the realities of the pandemic have forced the Australian government to (at least temporarily) back away from this approach.

It has directed private hospitals[13] to treat pandemic patients.

Read more: Three simple things Australia should do to secure access to treatments, vaccines, tests and devices during the coronavirus crisis[14]

It has assisted local firms to reestablish the capacity to manufacture equipment such as facemasks[15].

And it has ramped up[16] screening of foreign investment by the Foreign Investment Review Board, in a way trade agreements would normally prevent[17].

Post-pandemic trade policies should reject both the extremes of recent agreements and the Trump and Hanson policies of building walls and a return to high tariffs.

Post-pandemic, we should wind such clauses back

Australia should also reject the trap of taking sides in the US-China trade wars.

Trade agreements should be negotiated openly in a system that takes account of the specific needs of developing countries.

They should reinforce internationally-agreed and fully-enforceable labour rights and environmental standards, allow countries such as Australia to maintain the manufacturing capacity that will be needed in the event of crises and enable governments to regulate for purposes of public health and the environment.

They most certainly should not strengthen medicine or other monopolies, or give additional legal rights such as ISDS to global corporations that already have enormous market power.

References

  1. ^ CPTPP (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ When even winning is losing. The surprising cost of defeating Philip Morris over plain packaging (theconversation.com)
  3. ^ A$12 million in legal costs. (theconversation.com)
  4. ^ increasing numbers (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ law firm (www.acerislaw.com)
  6. ^ Alston & Bird (www.lexology.com)
  7. ^ avalanche (www.iisd.org)
  8. ^ Productivity Commission (www.pc.gov.au)
  9. ^ negotiated in secret (www.smh.com.au)
  10. ^ independent evaluation (www.smh.com.au)
  11. ^ essential services (link.springer.com)
  12. ^ increase their 20-year monopoly on new medicines (www.nytimes.com)
  13. ^ directed private hospitals (www.theguardian.com)
  14. ^ Three simple things Australia should do to secure access to treatments, vaccines, tests and devices during the coronavirus crisis (theconversation.com)
  15. ^ facemasks (www.abc.net.au)
  16. ^ ramped up (www.smh.com.au)
  17. ^ normally prevent (www.dfat.gov.au)

Authors: Patrcia Ranald, Honorary Research fellow, University of Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/corporations-prepare-to-sue-over-action-to-save-lives-as-pandemic-reveals-trade-flaws-136604

Business Times

Job scams create hiring risk for Australian businesses

By Lauren Anderson, Workplace Expert at Indeed Job scams are no longer the obvious, poorly written emails many Australians...

Eumundi Markets: One of the Sunshine Coast’s most powerful busine…

As Queensland prepares for Small Business Month in May, Experience Eumundi is highlighting the critical role the iconic Eum...

What It Takes to Be a Board Member on a Major Public or Private C…

Board seats carry prestige, influence and, in some cases, substantial remuneration. But the reality is less glamorous tha...

The Times Features

Owning a Restaurant: Buying One or Braving the Challeng…

Owning a restaurant has long been one of the most alluring—and misunderstood—paths in small busine...

Supermarket Prices Are Up — and So Is Dinner at a Modes…

For many Australians, the weekly grocery shop and a simple night out for dinner have quietly becom...

In 2006, The Devil Wears Prada Became One of the First …

When The Devil Wears Prada premiered in 2006, it was marketed as a sharp, entertaining adaptation ...

Protecting High-Value Homes Before Sale: A Practical Gu…

Selling a premium home is rarely just about listing and waiting. At the top end of the market, buy...

Eumundi Markets: One of the Sunshine Coast’s most power…

As Queensland prepares for Small Business Month in May, Experience Eumundi is highlighting the cri...

Club Med Expands Exclusive Collection Portfolio with a …

Club Med, the global leader in premium all-inclusive holidays for 75 years, and Central Group Capita...

Cost of living increases worry Farrer residents

COST OF LIVING ‘CRUNCH’ HITS FARRER HARD, THE NATIONALS HEAR During a visit to Albury this week...

What's On: Two Psychics and a Medium – Australian …

HIT LIVE SHOW TWO PSYCHICS AND A MEDIUM EMBARK ON  AUSTRALIAN TOUR — AND NO TWO NIGHTS WILL BE T...

Before vaccines, diphtheria used to kill hundreds each …

The Northern Territory[1] and Western Australia[2] are experiencing outbreaks of an almost-era...