Let's begin with some simple points, assuming conditions that now
prevail--not, of course, the terminus of the unending struggle for freedom
and justice.
There is a "public arena" in which, in principle, individuals can
participate in decisions that involve the general society: how public
revenues are obtained and used, what foreign policy will be, etc. In a
world of nation-states, the public arena is primarily governmental, at
various levels. Democracy functions insofar as individuals can participate
meaningfully in the public arena, meanwhile running their own affairs,
individually and collectively, without illegitimate interference by
concentrations of power. Functioning democracy presupposes relative
equality in access to resources--material, informational, and other--a
truism as old as Aristotle. In theory, governments are instituted to serve
their "domestic constituencies" and are to be subject to their will. A
measure of functioning democracy, then, is the extent to which the theory
approximates reality, and the "domestic constituencies" approximate the
population.
In the state capitalist democracies, the public arena has been extended
and enriched by long and bitter popular struggle. Meanwhile concentrated
private power has labored to restrict it. These conflicts form a good part
of modern history. The most effective way to restrict democracy is to
transfer decision-making from the public arena to unaccountable
institutions: kings and princes, priestly castes, military juntas, party
dictatorships, or modern corporations. The decisions reached by the
directors of GE affect the general society substantially, but citizens
play no role in them, as a matter of principle (we may put aside
transparent myth about market and stockholder "democracy").
Systems of unaccountable power do offer some choices to citizens. They
can petition the King or the CEO, or join the ruling Party. They can try
to rent themselves to GE, or buy its products. They can struggle for
rights within tyrannies, state and private, and in solidarity with others,
can seek to limit or dismantle illegitimate power, pursuing traditional
ideals, including those that animated the U.S. labor movement from its
early origins: that those who work in the mills should own and run them.
The "corporatization of America" during the past century was an attack
on democracy--and on markets, part of the shift from something resembling
"capitalism" to the highly administered markets of the modern
state/corporate era. A current variant is called "minimizing the state,"
that is, transferring decision-making power from the public arena to
somewhere else: "to the people," in the rhetoric of power; to private
tyrannies, in the real world. All such measures are designed to limit
democracy and to tame the "rascal multitude," as the population was called
by the self-designated "men of best quality" during the first upsurge of
democracy in the modern period, in 17th century England; the "responsible
men," as they call themselves today. The basic problems persist,
constantly taking new forms, calling forth new measures of control and
marginalization, and leading to new forms of popular struggle.
The so-called "free trade agreements" are one such device of
undermining democracy. They are designed to transfer decision-making about
people's lives and aspirations into the hands of private tyrannies that
operate in secret and without public supervision or control. Not
surprisingly, the public doesn't like them. The opposition is almost
instinctive, a tribute to the care that is taken to insulate the rascal
multitude from relevant information and understanding.
Much of the picture is tacitly conceded. We've just witnessed yet
another illustration: the effort of the past months to pass "Fast Track"
legislation that would permit the Executive to negotiate trade agreements
without congressional oversight and public awareness; a simple Yes or No
will do. "Fast Track" had near-unanimous support within power systems, but
as the Wall St. Journal ruefully observed, its opponents may have an
"ultimate weapon": the majority of the population. The public continued to
oppose the legislation despite the media barrage, foolishly believing that
they ought to know what is happening to them and have a voice in
determining it. Similarly, NAFTA was rammed through over public
opposition, which remained firm despite the near unanimous and
enthusiastic backing of state and corporate power, including their media,
which refused even to allow the position of the prime opponents (the labor
movement) to be expressed while denouncing them for various invented
misdeeds.
Fast Track was portrayed as a free trade issue, but that is inaccurate.
The most ardent free trader would strongly oppose Fast Track if s/he
happened to believe in democracy, the issue at stake. That aside, the
planned agreements hardly qualify as "free trade agreements" any more than
NAFTA or the GATT/WTO treaties, matters discussed elsewhere.
The official reason for Fast Track was articulated by Deputy U.S. Trade
Representative Jeffrey Lang: "the basic principle of negotiations is that
only one person [the President] can negotiate for the U.S." The role of
Congress is to rubber stamp; the role of the public is to
watch--preferably, to watch something else.
The "basic principle" is real enough, but its scope is narrow. It holds
for trade, but not for other matters: human rights, for example. Here the
principle is the opposite: members of Congress must be granted every
opportunity to ensure that the U.S. maintains its record of
non-ratification of agreements, one of the worst in the world. The few
enabling conventions even to reach Congress have been held up for years,
and even the rare endorsements are burdened with conditions rendering them
inoperative in the United States; they are "non self-executing" and have
specific reservations.
Trade is one thing, torture and rights of women and children another.
The distinction holds more broadly. China is threatened with severe
sanctions for failing to adhere to Washington's protectionist demands, or
for interfering with its punishment of Libyans. But terror and torture
elicit a different response: in this case, sanctions would be
"counterproductive." They would hamper our efforts to extend our human
rights crusade to suffering people in China and its domains, just as
reluctance to train Indonesian military officers "diminishes our ability
to positively influence [their] human rights policies and behavior," as
the Pentagon recently explained. The missionary effort in Indonesia
therefore must proceed, evading Congressional orders. That is only
reasonable. It suffices to recall how U.S. military training "paid
dividends" in the early 1960s, and "encouraged" the military to carry out
their necessary tasks, as Defense Secretary McNamara informed Congress and
the President after the huge army-led massacres of 1965, which left
hundreds of thousands of corpses in a few months, a "staggering mass
slaughter" (New York Times) that elicited unconstained euphoria among the
"men of best quality" (the Times included), and rewards for the
"moderates" who had conducted it. McNamara had particular praise for the
training of Indonesian military officers in U.S. universities, "very
significant factors" in setting the "new Indonesian political elite" (the
military) on the proper course.
In crafting its human rights policies for China, the Administration might
have also recalled the constructive advice of a Kennedy military mission
to Colombia: "as necessary execute paramilitary, sabotage and/or terrorist
activities against known communist proponents" (a term that covers
peasants, union organizers, human rights activists, etc.). The pupils
learned the lessons well, compiling the worst human rights record of the
'90s in the hemisphere by the recommended means, to be rewarded by
increasing military aid and training under "drug war" pretexts dismissed
as "a myth" by Amnesty International, Colombian human rights activists
(those who survive), and other competent observers.
Reasonable people can easily understand, then, that it would be
counterproductive to press China too hard on such matters as torture of
dissidents or atrocities in Tibet. That might even cause China to suffer
the "harmful effects of a society isolated from American influence," the
reason adduced by a group of corporate executives for removing the U.S.
trade barriers that keep them from Cuban markets, where they could labor
to restore the "helpful effects of American influence" that prevailed from
the "liberation" 100 years ago through the Batista years, the same
influences that have proven so benign in Haiti, El Salvador, and other
contemporary paradises--by accident, yielding profits as well.
Such subtle discriminations must be part of the armory of those who
aspire to respectability and prestige. Having mastered them, we can see
why investors' rights and human rights require such different treatment.
The contradiction about the "basic principle" is only apparent.
Black Holes
It is always enlightening to seek out what is omitted in propaganda
campaigns. Fast Track received enormous publicity. But several crucial
issues disappeared into the Black Hole that is reserved for topics rated
unfit for public consumption. One is the fact, already mentioned, that the
issue was not trade agreements, but rather democratic principle; and that
in any event the agreements were not about <I>free trade. Still more
striking was that throughout the intense campaign, there appears to have
been no public mention of the upcoming treaty that must have been at the
forefront of concern for every knowledgeable participant: the Multilateral
Agreement on Investment (MAI), a far more significant matter than bringing
Chile into NAFTA or other tidbits served up to illustrate why the
President alone must negotiate trade agreements, without public
interference.
The MAI has powerful support among financial and industrial
institutions. Why then the silence? A plausible reason comes to mind. Few
political and media leaders doubt that were the public to be informed, it
would be less than overjoyed about the MAI. Opponents might once again
brandish their "ultimate weapon," if the facts break through. It only
makes sense, then, to conduct the negotiations under a "veil of secrecy,"
to borrow the term used by the former Chief Justice of Australia's High
Court, Sir Anthony Mason, condemning his government's decision to remove
from public scrutiny the negotiations over "an agreement which could have
a great impact on Australia if we ratify it."
No similar voices were heard here. It would have been superfluous: the
veil of secrecy remained impenetrable, defended with much greater
vigilance in our free institutions.
Within the United States, readers of this journal are among the lucky
few who know something about the MAI, which has been under intensive
negotiation in the OECD ("the rich men's club") since May 1995. The
original target date was May 1997. Had the goal been reached, the public
would have known as much about the MAI as they do about the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, another huge public gift to concentrated
private power, kept largely to the business pages. But the OECD countries
could not reach agreement on schedule, and the target date was delayed a
year. The current deadline is April 27, only a month away, as I write.
The original and preferred plan was to forge the treaty in the World
Trade Organization. But that effort was blocked by Third World countries,
particularly India and Malaysia, which recognized that the measures being
crafted would deprive them of the devices that had been employed by the
rich to win their own place in the sun. Negotiations were then transferred
to the safer quarters of the OECD, where, it was hoped, an agreement would
be reached "that emerging countries would want to join," as the London
Economist delicately put it--on pain of being barred from the markets and
resources of the rich, the familiar concept of "free choice" in systems of
vast inequality of power and wealth.
For almost three years, the rascal multitude has been kept in blissful
ignorance of what is taking place. But not entirely. In the Third World it
was a live issue by early 1997. In Australia, the news broke through in
January 1998, in the business pages, eliciting a flurry of reports and
controversy in the national press; hence Sir Anthony's condemnation,
speaking at a convention in Melbourne. The opposition party "urged the
Government to refer the agreement to the Parliamentary committee on
treaties before signing it," the press reported. The Government refused to
provide Parliament with detailed information or to permit parliamentary
review. Our "position on the MAI is very clear," the Government responded:
"We will not sign anything unless it is demonstrably in Australia's
national interest to do so." In brief, "We'll do as we choose"--or more
accurately, as our masters tell us; and following the regular convention,
the "national interest" will be defined by power centers, operating in
closed chambers.
Under pressure, the Government agreed a few days later to allow a
Parliamentary committee to review the MAI. Editors reluctantly endorsed
the decision: it was necessary in reaction to the "xenophobic hysteria" of
the "scaremongerers" and the "unholy alliance of aid groups, trade unions,
environmentalists and the odd conspiracy theorist." They warned, however,
that after this unfortunate concession, it is "vitally important that the
Government does not step back any further from its strong commitment" to
the MAI. The Government denied the charge of secrecy, noting that a draft
of the treaty was available on the internet--thanks to the activist groups
that placed it there, after it was leaked to them.
We can be heartened: Democracy flourishes in Australia after all.
The derisive dismissal of the charge of secrecy, a device that might be
adopted by more cynical U.S. commentators when they finally agree to
mention the issue, has consequences that merit some thought. It entails
that the media should gracefully exit the stage. After all, any meaningful
evidence they use could be discovered by ordinary folk with diligent
search, and analysis/commentary/debate are declared irrelevant. (Just as
this was sent to press, Fred Hiatt obliged in the <I>Washington Post,
speaking for the editors, though he failed to draw the obvious conclusions
about the journal's future).
In Canada, now facing a form of incorporation into the United States
accelerated by "free trade, the "unholy alliance" achieved much greater
success. For a year, the treaty has been discussed in leading dailies and
news weeklies, on prime time national TV, and in public meetings. The
Province of British Columbia announced in the House of Commons that it "is
strongly opposed" to the proposed treaty, noting its "unacceptable
restrictions" on elected governments at the federal, provincial, and local
levels; its harmful impact on social programs (health care, etc.) and on
environmental protection and resource management; the extraordinary scope
of the definition of "investment"; and other attacks on democracy and
human rights. The provincial government was particularly opposed to
provisions that allow corporations to sue governments while they remain
immune from any liability, and to have their charges settled in "unelected
and unaccountable dispute panels," which are to be constituted of "trade
experts," operating without rules of evidence or transparency, and with no
possibility of appeal.
The veil of secrecy having been shredded by the rude noises from below,
it became necessary for the Canadian government to reassure the public
that ignorance is in their best interest. The task was undertaken in a
national CBC TV debate by Canada's Federal Minister of International
Trade, Sergio Marchi: he "would like to think that people feel reassured,"
he said, by the "honest approach that I think is exuded by our Prime
Minister" and "the love of Canada that he has."
That ought to settle the matter. So democracy is healthy north of the
border too.
According to CBC, the Canadian government--like Australia--"has no
plans at this time for any legislation on the MAI," and "the trade
minister says it may not be necessary," since the MAI "is just an
extension of NAFTA."
There has been discussion in the national media in England and France,
but I do not know whether there or elsewhere in the Free World it was felt
necessary to assure the public that their interests are best served by
faith in the leaders who "love them," "exude honesty," and steadfastly
defend "the national interest."
Not too surprisingly, the tale has followed a unique course in the
world's most powerful state, where "the men of best quality" declare
themselves the champions of freedom, justice, human rights, and--above
all--democracy. Media leaders have surely known all along about the MIA
and its broad implications, as have public intellectuals and the standard
experts. The business world has been intimately involved in planning and
implementation from the outset: for example, the United States Council for
International Business, which, in its own words, "advances the global
interests of American business both at home and abroad." In January 1996,
the Council even published A Guide to the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment, available to its business constituencies and their circles,
surely to the media. But in a most impressive show of self-discipline, the
Free Press has succeeded in keeping those who rely on it in the dark--no
simple task in a complicated world. We return to details.
The corporate world overwhelmingly supports the MAI. Though silence
precludes citation of evidence, it is a fair guess that the sectors of the
corporate world devoted to "enlightening the public" are no less
enthusiastic. But once again, they understand that the the "ultimate
weapon" may well be unsheathed if the rascal multitude gets wind of the
proceedings. The dilemma has a natural solution. We've been observing it
now for almost three years.
Worthy and Unworthy Constituencies
Defenders of the MAI have one strong argument: critics do not have
enough information to make a fully convincing case. The purpose of the
"veil of secrecy" has been to guarantee that outcome, and the efforts have
had some success. That is most dramatically true in the United States,
which enjoys the world's most stable and long-lasting democratic
institutions and can properly claim to be the model for state-capitalist
democracy. Given this experience and status, it is not surprising that the
principles of democracy are clearly understood in the United States, and
lucidly articulated in high places. For example, by the distinguished
Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington, in his text American
Politics, where he observes that power must remain invisible if it is to
be effective: "The architects of power in the United States must create a
force that can be felt but not seen. Power remains strong when it remains
in the dark; exposed to the sunlight it begins to evaporate." He
illustrated the thesis in the same year (1981) while explaining the
function of the "Soviet threat": "you may have to sell [intervention or
other military action] in such a way as to create the misimpression that
it is the Soviet Union that you are fighting. That is what the United
States has been doing ever since the Truman Doctrine."
Within these bounds--"creating misimpressions" to delude the public,
and excluding them entirely--responsible leaders are to pursue their craft
in democratic societies.
Nonetheless, it is unfair to charge the OECD powers with conducting the
negotiations in secret. After all, activists did succeed in putting a
draft version on the internet, having illicitly obtained it. Readers of
the "alternative press" and Third World journals, and those infected by
the "unholy alliance," have been following the proceedings since early
1997 at least. And keeping to the mainstream, there is no gainsaying the
direct participation of the organization that "advances the global
interests of American businesses," and their counterparts in other rich
countries.
But there are a few sectors that have somehow been overlooked: the U.S.
Congress, for example. Last November, 25 House representatives sent a
letter to President Clinton stating that the MAI negotiations had "come to
our attention"--presumably, through the efforts of activists and public
interest groups. They asked the President to answer three simple
questions.
"First, given the Administration's recent claims that it cannot
negotiate complicated, multisectoral, multilateral agreements without fast
track authority, how has the MAI nearly been completed," with a text "as
intricate as NAFTA or GATT" and with provisions that "would require
significant limitations on U.S. laws and policy concerning federal, state
and local regulation of investment?"
Second, "how has this agreement been under negotiation since May 1995,
without any Congressional consultation or oversight, especially given
Congress' exclusive constitutional authority to regulate international
commerce?"
"Third, the MAI provides expansive takings language that would allow a
foreign corporation or investor to directly sue the U.S. government for
damages if we take any action that would restrain `enjoyment' of an
investment. This language is broad and vague and goes significantly beyond
the limited concept of takings provided in U.S. domestic law. Why would
the U.S. willingly cede sovereign immunity and expose itself to liability
for damages under vague language such as that concerning taking any
actions `with an equivalent effect' of an `indirect' expropriation?"
On point three, the signatories might have had in mind the suit by the
Ethyl Corporation--famous as the producer of leaded gasoline--against
Canada, demanding $250 million to cover losses from "expropriation" and
damages to Ethyl's "good reputation" caused by pending Canadian
legislation to ban a gasoline additive that Canada regards as a dangerous
toxin and significant health risk--in agreement with the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, which has sharply restricted its use, and
the State of California, which has banned it entirely. Or perhaps the
signers were thinking of the suit against Mexico by the U.S.
hazardous-waste management firm Metalclad, asking $90 in damages for
"expropriation" because a site they intended to use for hazardous wastes
was declared part of an ecological zone.
These suits are proceeding under NAFTA rules. The intention presumably
is to explore and if possible expand their (vague) limits. In part they
are probably just intimidation, a standard and often effective device
available to those with deep pockets to obtain what they want through
legal threats that may be completely frivolous.
"Considering the enormity of the MAI's potential implications," the
congressional letter to the President concluded, "we eagerly await your
answers to these questions." An answer reached the signers a few months
later, saying nothing. The media were advised of all of this, but I know
of no coverage.
Another segment of the population that has been overlooked, along with
Congress, is the population. Apart from trade journals, the first articles
in the mainstream appeared at the end of 1997, in local journals. The
<I>Chicago Tribune (Dec. 4, 1997) reviewed some of the terms of the MAI
and noted that the matter has "received no public attention or political
debate," apart from Canada. In the U.S., "this obscurity seems
deliberate," the <I>Tribune reports. "Government sources say the
administration...is not anxious to stir up more debate about the global
economy." In the light of the public mood, secrecy is the best policy,
relying on the collusion of the information system.
The Newspaper of Record broke its silence a few months later,
permitting a paid advertisement by the International Forum on
Globalization, which opposes the treaty (Feb. 13, 1998). The ad quotes
<I>Business Week (Feb. 9), which described the MAI as "The most explosive
trade deal you've never heard of...[it] would rewrite the rules of foreign
ownership, affecting everything from factories to real estate and even
securities. But most lawmakers have never even heard of the Multilateral
Agreement on Investment," let alone the public. Why not, the Forum asks,
implicitly answering with a review of the basic features of the treaty.
A few days later (Feb. 16), NPR's Morning Edition ran a segment on the
MAI, and NPR has had further coverage since. A week later, the Christian
Science Monitor ran a (rather thin) piece. <I>The New Republic had already
taken notice of rising public concern over the MAI. The issue had not been
properly covered in respectable sectors, <I>TNR concluded, because "the
mainstream press," while "generally skewed to the left...is even more
deeply skewed toward internationalism." Press lefties therefore failed to
recognize the public opposition to Fast Track in time and have not noticed
that the same troublemakers "are already girding [ for] battle" against
the MAI. The press should confront its responsibilities more seriously and
launch a preemptive strike against the "MAI paranoia" that has "ricocheted
through the Internet" and even led to public conferences. Mere ridicule of
"the flat earth and black helicopter crowd" may not be enough. Silence may
not be the wisest stance if the rich countries are to be able to "lock in
the liberalization of international investment law just as GATT codified
the liberalization of trade."
Perhaps in reaction to the congressional letter or the surfacing of the
crazies, Washington issued an official statement on the MAI on February 17
1998. The statement, by Under Secretary of State Stuart Eizenstat and
Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Jeffrey Lang, received no notice to my
knowledge. The statement is boilerplate, but deserves front-page headlines
by the standards of what had already appeared (essentially nothing). The
virtues of the MAI are taken as self-evident; no description or argument
is offered. On such matters as labor and the environment, "takings," etc.,
the message is the same as the one delivered by the governments of Canada
and Australia: "Trust us, and Shut Up."
Of greater interest is the good news that the U.S. has taken the lead
at the OECD in ensuring that the agreement "complements our broader
efforts," hitherto unknown, "in support of sustainable development and
promotion of respect for labor standards." Eizenstat and Lang "are pleased
that participants agree with us" on these matters. Furthermore, the other
OECD countries now "agree with us on the importance of working closely
with their domestic constituencies to build a consensus" on the MAI. They
join us in understanding "that it is important for domestic constituencies
to have a stake in this process."
"In the interest of greater transparency," the official statement adds,
"the OECD has agreed to make public the text of the draft agreement,"
perhaps even before the deadline is reached.
Here we have, at last, a ringing testimonial to democracy and human
rights. The Clinton Administration is leading the world, it proclaims, in
ensuring that its "domestic constituencies" play an active role in
"building a consensus" on the MAI.
Who are the "domestic constituencies"? The question is readily answered
by a look at the uncontested facts. The business world has had an active
role throughout, as we learn, for example, from the publications of the
U.S. Council for International Business. Congress has not been informed.
The annoying public--the "ultimate weapon"--has been consigned to
ignorance. A straightforward exercise in elementary logic informs us
exactly who the Clinton Administration takes to be its "domestic
constituencies."
That is a useful lesson. The operative values of the powerful are
rarely articulated with such candor and precision. To be fair, they are
not a U.S. monopoly. The values are shared by state/private power centers
in other parliamentary democracies, and by their counterparts in societies
where there is no need to indulge in rhetorical flourishes about
"democracy."
The lessons are crystal clear. It would take real talent to miss them,
and to fail to see how well they illustrate Madison's warnings over 200
years ago, when he deplored "the daring depravity of the times" as the
"stockjobbers will become the pretorian band of the government--at once
its tools and its tyrant; bribed by its largesses, and overawing it by
clamors and combinations."
These observations reach to the core of the MAI. Like much of public
policy in recent years, particularly in the Anglo-American societies, the
treaty is designed to undercut democracy and rights of citizens by
transferring even more decision-making authority to unnacountable private
institutions, the governments for whom they are "the domestic
constituencies," and the international organizations that serve their
interests at public expense.
The Terms of the MAI
What do the terms of the MAI actually state, and portend? If the facts
and issues were allowed to reach the public arena, what would we discover?
There can be no definite answer to such questions. Even if we had the
full text of the MAI, a detailed list of the reservations introduced by
signatories, and the entire verbatim record of the proceedings, we would
not know the answers. The reason is that the answers are not determined by
words, but by the power relations that impose their interpretations. Two
centuries ago, in the leading democracy of his day, Oliver Goldsmith
observed that "laws grind the poor, and rich men make the law"--the
<I>operative law, that is, whatever fine words may say. The principle
remains valid.
These are, again, truisms, with broad application. In the U.S.
Constitution and its Amendments, one can find nothing that authorizes the
grant of human rights (speech, freedom from search and seizure, the right
to buy elections, etc.) to what legal historians call "collectivist legal
entities," organic entities that have the rights of "immortal
persons"--rights far beyond those of real persons, when we take into
account their power. One will search the U.N. Charter in vain to discover
the basis for the authority claimed by Washington to use force and
violence to achieve "the national interest," as defined by the immortal
persons who cast over society the shadow called "politics," in John
Dewey's evocative phrase. The U.S. Code defines "terrorism" with great
clarity, and U.S. law provides severe penalties for the crime. But one
will find no wording that exempts "the architects of power" from
punishment for their exercises of state terror, not to speak of their
monstrous clients (as long as they enjoy Washington's good graces):
Suharto, Saddam Hussein, Mobutu, Noriega, and others great and small. As
the leading Human Rights organizations point out year after year,
virtually all U.S. foreign aid is illegal, from the leading recipient on
down the list, because the law bars aid to countries that engage in
"systematic torture." That may be law, but is it the meaning of the law?
The MAI falls into the same category. There is a "worst case" analysis,
which will be the right analysis if "power remains in the dark," and the
corporate lawyers who are its hired hands are able to establish their
interpretation of the purposely convoluted and ambiguous wording of the
draft treaty. There are less threatening interpretations, and they could
turn out to be the right ones, if the "ultimate weapon" cannot be
contained and democratic procedures influence outcomes. Among these
possible outcomes is the dismantling of the whole structure and the
illegitimate institutions on which it rests. These are matters for popular
organization and action, not words.
Here one might raise some criticism of critics of the MAI (myself
included). The texts spell out the rights of "investors," not citizens,
whose rights are correspondingly diminished. Critics accordingly call it
an "investor rights agreement," which is true enough, but misleading. Just
who are the "investors"?
Half the stocks in 1997 were owned by the wealthiest 1 percent of
households, and almost 90 percent by the wealthiest tenth (concentration
is still higher for bonds and trusts, comparable for other assets); adding
pension plans leads only to slightly more even distribution among the top
fifth of households. The enthusiasm about the radical asset inflation of
recent years is understandable, considering which voices are heard,
sometimes believed. And effective control of the corporation lies in very
few institutional and personal hands, with the backing of law, after a
century of judicial activism.
The innocent talk of "investors" should not conjure up pictures of Joe
Doakes on the plant floor, but of the Caterpillar corporation, which has
just succeeded in breaking a major strike by reliance on the foreign
investment that is so highly lauded: using the remarkable profit growth it
shares with other "domestic constituencies" to create excess capacity
abroad to undermine efforts by working people in Illinois to resist the
erosion of their wages and working conditions. These developments result
in no slight measure from the "financial liberalization" of the past 25
years, which is to be enhanced by the MAI; it is worth noting too that
this era of financial liberalization has been one of unusually slow growth
(including the current "boom," the poorest recovery in postwar history),
low wages, high profits--and, incidentally, trade restrictions by the
rich.
A better term for the MAI and similar endeavors is not "investor rights
agreements" but "corporate rights agreements."
The relevant "investors" are collectivist legal entities, not persons
as understood by common sense and the tradition, before the days when
modern judicial activism created contemporary corporate power. That leads
to another criticism. Opponents of the MAI often allege that the
agreements grant too many rights to corporations. But to speak of granting
too many rights to the king, or the dictator, or the slaveowner, is to
give away too much ground. Why should they have any rights at all? Rather
than "corporate rights agreements," these measures might be termed, more
accurately, "corporate power agreements," since it is hardly clear why
such institutions should have any rights at all.
When the corporatization of the state capitalist societies took place a
century ago, in part in reaction to massive market failures,
conservatives--a breed that no longer exists--bitterly objected to this
attack on the fundamental principles of classical liberalism. And rightly
so. One may recall Adam Smith's critique of the "joint stock companies" of
his day, particularly if management is granted a degree of independence;
and his attitude toward the inherent corruption of private power, probably
a "conspiracy" against the public when businessmen meet for lunch, in his
acid view, let alone when they form collectivist legal entities and
alliances among them, with extraordinary rights granted by state power.
With these provisos in mind, let us recall some of the intended
features of the MAI, relying on what information has reached the concerned
public, thanks to the "unholy alliance."
"Investors" are accorded the right to move assets freely, including
production facilities and financial assets, without "government
interference" (meaning a voice for the public). By modes of chicanery
familiar to the business world and corporate lawyers, the rights granted
to "foreign investors" transfer easily to "domestic investors" as well.
Among democratic choices that might be barred are those calling for local
ownership, sharing of technology, local managers, corporate
accountability, living wage provisions, preferences (for deprived areas,
minorities, women, etc), labor-consumer-environmental protection,
restrictions on dangerous products, small business protection, support for
strategic and emerging industries, land reform, community and worker
control (that is, the foundations of authentic democracy), labor actions
(which could be construed as illegal threats to order), and so on.
"Investors" are permitted to sue governments at any level for
infringement on the rights granted them. There is no reciprocity: citizens
and governments cannot sue "investors." The Ethyl and Metalclad suits are
exploratory initiatives.
No restrictions are allowed on investment in countries with human
rights violations: South Africa in the days of "constructive engagement,"
Burma today, etc. It is to be understood, of course, that the Don will not
be hampered by such constraints. The powerful stand above treaties and
laws.
Constraints on capital flow are barred: for example, the conditions
imposed by Chile to discourage inflows of short-term capital, widely
credited with having insulated Chile somewhat from the destructive impact
of highly volatile financial markets subject to unpredictable herd-like
irrationality. Or more far-reaching measures that might well reverse the
deleterious consequences of liberalizing capital flows. Serious proposals
to achieve these ends have been on the table for years, but have never
reached the agenda of the "architects of power." It may well be that the
economy is harmed by financial liberalization, as the evidence suggests.
But that is a matter of little moment in comparison with the advantages
conferred by the liberalization of financial flows for a quarter-century,
initiated by the governments of the U.S. and U.K., primarily. These
advantages are substantial. Financial liberalization contributes to
concentration of wealth and provides powerful weapons to undermine social
programs. It helps bring about the "significant wage restraint" and
"atypical restraint on compensation increases [which] appears to be mainly
the consequence of greater worker insecurity," which so encourage Fed
chair Alan Greenspan and the Clinton Administration, sustaining the
"economic miracle" that arouses awe among its beneficiaries and deluded
observers, particularly abroad.
Enthusiasm for these wonders is ebbing, however, among the managers of
the global economy, as the near-disasters that have accelerated since
financial flows were liberalized from the 1970s have begun to threaten the
"domestic constituencies" as well as the general public. Chief economist
of the World Bank Joseph Stiglitz, the editors of the London Financial
Times, and others close to the centers of power have begun to call for
steps to regulate capital flows, following the lead of such bastions of
respectability as the Bank for International Settlements. The World Bank
has also somewhat reversed course. Not only is the global economy very
poorly understood, but serious weaknesses are becoming harder to ignore
and patch over. There may be changes, in unpredictable directions.
Returning to the MAI, signatories are to be "locked in" for 20 years.
That is a "U.S. government proposal" according to the spokesperson for the
Canadian Chamber of Commerce, who doubles as senior adviser of Investment
and Trade for IBM Canada, and is selected to represent Canada in public
debate.
The Treaty has a built-in "ratchet" effect, a consequence of provisions
for "standstill" and "rollback." "Standstill" means that no new
legislation is permitted that is interpreted as "non-conforming" to the
MAI. "Rollback" means that governments are expected to eliminate
legislation already on the books that is interpreted as "non-conforming."
Interpretation, in all cases, is by you-know-who. The goal is to "lock
countries into" arrangements which, over time, will shrink the public
arena more and more, transferring power to the approved "domestic
constituencies" and their international structures. These include a rich
array of corporate alliances to administer production and trade, relying
on powerful states that are to maintain the system while socializing cost
and risk for nationally-based transnational corporations--virtually all
TNCs, according to recent technical studies.
The current target date for the MAI is April 27, but further delays are
likely because of disputes within the club. According to rumors filtering
through the organs of power (mainly the foreign business press), these
include efforts by the European Union and the United States to allow
certain rights to constituent states (perhaps affording the EU something
like the vast internal market that U.S.-based corporations enjoy),
reservations by France and Canada to maintain some control over their
cultural industries (a still greater problem for smaller countries), and
European objections to the more extreme and arrogant forms of U.S. market
interference, such as the Helms-Burton act.
The Economist reports further problems. Labor and environmental issues,
which "barely featured at the start," are becoming harder to suppress. It
is becoming more difficult to ignore the paranoids and flat-earthers who
"want high standards written in for how foreign investors treat workers
and protect the environment." Worse still, "their fervent attacks, spread
via a network of internet websites, have left negotiators unsure how to
proceed." One possibility would be to pay attention to what the public
wants. But, quite properly, that option is not mentioned: it is excluded
in principle, since it would undermine the whole point of the enterprise.
Even if the deadline isn't met and the MAI is abandoned, that wouldn't
show that it has "all been for nothing," the <I>Economist informs its
constituency. Progress has been made, and "with luck, parts of MAI could
become a blueprint for a global WTO accord on investment," which the
recalcitrant "developing countries" may be more willing to accept--after a
few years of battering by market irrationalities, the subsequent
discipline imposed on the victims by the world rulers, and growing
awareness by elite elements that they can share in concentrated privilege
by helping to disseminate the doctrines of the powerful, however
fraudulent they may be, however others may fare; and we can expect "parts
of MAI" to take shape elsewhere, perhaps in the IMF, which is suitably
secretive.
From another point of view, further delays give the rascal multitude
more opportunity to rend the veil of secrecy.
It is important for the general population to discover what is being
planned for them. The efforts of governments and media to keep it all
under wraps, except for their officially-recognized "domestic
constituencies," are surely understandable. But such barriers have been
overcome by vigorous public action before, and can be again.
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