日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

 

TPP has inherent financing flaws

By Kevin P. Gallagher
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China Daily, October 9, 2013
Adjust font size:

I observed this entire process up close when I led a Boston University task force that examined the risks of capital flows between developed and developing countries. Our main focus was on the extent to which the regulation of cross-border finance was compatible with many of the trade and investment treaties across the globe.

The task force consisted of former and current central bank officials, IMF and World Trade Organization functionaries, members of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, scholars, and representatives of civil society. We found that US trade and investment treaties were the ones least compatible with new thinking and policy on regulating global finance. The report was published earlier this year.

US treaties still mandate that all forms of finance move across borders freely and without delay, even though that was a key component in triggering the global financial crisis. Deals like the TPP will only make it worse, because they would allow private investors to directly file claims against governments that regulate them. This would be a significant departure from a WTO-like system where nation-states (that is, the regulators) decide whether claims can be filed.

Therefore, under the so-called investor-state dispute settlement procedure, a few financial companies would have the power to sue others for the cost of financial instability to the public that the companies themselves were instrumental in creating.

Can there be a more pernicious way to deal with these issues? It seems like a repeat of the classic trope, "heads, I win; tails, you lose".

Such provisions also fly in the face of recommendations on investment by a group of 250-odd US and globally renowned economists in 2011. The IMF decided to embrace this new thinking in 2012, saying: "These agreements in many cases do not provide appropriate safeguards or proper sequencing of liberalization, and could thus benefit from reform to include these protections."

If even a traditionally conservative institution like the IMF can get its head around these new realities, why can't the US government?

Until Washington sees more clearly the connection between the problems carelessly created by financial companies, which are often headquartered in the US, and what their actions mean for the economic and social fate of hundreds of millions of people, there can be only one logical consequence. Emerging market economies should refrain from taking on new trade and investment commitments unless they have in place proper cross-border financial regulations.

Leaked text from a TPP document reveals that Chile and other countries have given suggestions that could provide such safeguards. If the US really intends to establish a trans-Pacific partnership, then it should work with Chile and Malaysia to devise an approach that gives all of the potential TPP member countries the tools they need to prevent and mitigate financial crises.

The author is an associate professor of international relations at Boston University and part of the Ford Foundation's project, Reforming Global Financial Governance.

The Globalist.

 

   Previous   1   2  


Print E-mail Bookmark and Share

Go to Forum >>0 Comment(s)

No comments.

Add your comments...

  • User Name Required
  • Your Comment
  • Enter the words you see:   
    Racist, abusive and off-topic comments may be removed by the moderator.
Send your storiesGet more from China.org.cnMobileRSSNewsletter
主站蜘蛛池模板: 郁南县| 棋牌| 东兰县| 多伦县| 大化| 南靖县| 雷波县| 尉氏县| 临潭县| 邛崃市| 祁连县| 大同县| 九台市| 红安县| 渭南市| 南陵县| 靖江市| 无棣县| 连云港市| 富川| 汉源县| 巢湖市| 三都| 新郑市| 阜新| 云梦县| 鄂温| 时尚| 武隆县| 都江堰市| 锡林郭勒盟| 阿拉善左旗| 缙云县| 静宁县| 安康市| 沙洋县| 枣阳市| 嘉定区| 进贤县| 延长县| 沽源县|