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15 March 2004
Contents:
- The Devil in the Detail: AFTINET summary and analysis of USFTA
- Update on parliamentary committees inquiring into USFTA
- Public meeting on the USFTA: Sydney 1 April , 6pm, Tom Mann Theatre, Surry
Hills
1. The Devil in the Detail: AFTINET summary and analysis of USFTA
We have produced the following summary and
analysis of the text of the USFTA.
The Devil in the Detail: summary of
the text of the
Australia US Free Trade Agreement (USFTA)
Informing Public Debate
The USFTA was supposed to remove trade
barriers between the US and Australia and lead to economic growth. Australian farmers were
supposed to gain from removal of US agricultural tariffs (taxes on imports) and quotas
(limits on amounts). But community organisations became concerned when US negotiators
identified regulation like price controls on medicines and Australian content rules in
film and television as barriers to trade. The 800 page text of the agreement is at www.dfat.gov.au.
The text justifies our concerns, as it is
completely lopsided. The US sugar market is excluded and beef and dairy tariff reductions
are phased in over 18 years. The National Farmers' Federation has declared "This is
not a free trade agreement" (US disappoints on agriculture in trade deal
media release, 9 February 2004).
This summary of the text shows that, despite
assurances, the agreement weakens Australian price controls on medicines and limits the
regulation of Australian content in new forms of media. It adopts US copyright laws which
will cost consumers more. It sets up joint US-Australian committees to review policies on
medicines, quarantine and food labelling and enables many policies to be challenged by the
US government. It treats social regulation of essential services like tariffs,
"bound" or frozen at current levels and subject to challenge if increased. In
short, it weakens governments' right to regulate and locks in moves towards US-style
policies without democratic debate or decision.
The USFTA can still be debated and rejected. A
Senate Select Committee and the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties will hold public
inquiries over the next three months and report in June. Although Parliament cannot vote
on the whole agreement, it will vote on some legislation required for implementation,
which can be blocked in the Senate. This summary enables you to take part in the public
debate and tell Senators and members of parliament to reject the agreement if you believe
it is not in the public interest.
The USFTA and economic growth
The original CIE economic consultants study
commissioned by the government assumed totally free trade in agriculture yet predicted
gains for the Australian economy of only 0.3% after 10 years. Other economic studies by
ACIL consultants and the Productivity Commission predicted losses. (Australian APEC Study
Centre, An Australia-US Free Trade Agreement: Issues and implications, Canberra,
2001, and ACIL Consultants, A Bridge too Far? Canberra www.rirdc.gov.au/reports/GLC/ACIL-ABridgeTooFar.pdf.)
The government has admitted that the CIE study
is no longer valid, because the gains in agriculture are much less than predicted. The
government said it would conduct a competitive tender process for another study, then
announced a week later that CIE consultants had again been selected. As After noting
reports that the Australian negotiators had advised the government to reject the USFTA,
Allan Wood wrote in The Australian on March 9, "The modelling work
commissioned by the government is not going to convince anyone if it simply confirms
Howard's view. It certainly won't dispel the suspicion that the government has something
to hide."
USFTA Dispute Process limits democracy
The dispute process enables a government to
claim that a law or policy of the other country is in breach of the USFTA, or is
preventing it from getting the benefits expected from the agreement (Article 21.2). The
dispute process requires initial consultations, referral to a Joint Committee of US and
Australian government officials and finally, if not resolved, to a dispute panel of three
agreed trade law experts. Hearings may or may not be public, and the panel may or may not
invite non government representatives to make written submissions. The panel's initial
decision can be revised after comments from the governments, before final decision. The
panel can order that a law be changed or compensation be paid. The decision may or may not
be made public and cannot be appealed. (Articles 21.5 21.11).
This is process based on trade law that can be
used to challenge social regulation judged to be inconsistent with the agreement, like the
pricing of medicines or the regulation of essential services. It is a clear restriction on
the democratic right of governments to regulate in the public interest.
The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
(PBS) and the cost of medicines
a) Review of Decisions of the
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme means higher costs
The USFTA changes the PBS process to allow
drug companies to seek reviews of PBS decisions
Drug companies can charge high prices for new
medicines because they have the exclusive patent rights to produce them for 20 years. In
the US, common prescription medicines cost three to ten times the price paid in Australia,
and many people cannot afford them. Australian prices are affordable because the
government uses the PBS to buy medicines at low wholesale prices by comparing the price
and effectiveness of new medicines with the prices of similar generic medicines whose
patents have expired. The government then makes them available at subsidised prices,
$20-30 for wage earners and less for pensioners. The difference between the wholesale
price and the subsidised price is the cost of the PBS to taxpayers. This cost is very low
per person compared with the US and other countries (The Australia Institute (2003)
Trading in our Health System? Canberra www.tai.org.au )
The Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee
only lists new drugs for subsidy if they offer real health benefits, and
offer value for money. US drug companies say this is unfair, and that they want higher
wholesale prices.
The USFTA gives drug companies more
opportunities to influence the Committee before its decisions, and also provides for an
independent review of decisions not to list their drugs on the PBS. There is also an
opportunity for companies to apply for price adjustments after drugs have been listed.
(Side Letter on Pharmaceuticals).
The government says that these changes will
not mean higher prices to consumers, but has been less clear about whether the cost of the
PBS to taxpayers will rise. There is no doubt that drug companies will use their huge
resources to argue for higher priced drugs to be listed, and for price rises after drugs
are listed. Professor David Henry of Newcastle University has predicted that the review
process "pushes towards higher, not lower, prices" (ABC Radio National PM,
March 4, 2004). US Trade Representative Robert Zoellick has reported to the US Senate that
under the USFTA Australias drug prices will rise (Sydney Morning Herald,
Drug costs will rise with deal: US official March 11, 2004).
b) Joint US-Australia Medicines
Working Group based on commercial principles
The USFTA sets up a joint medicines working
group based on the same commercial principles which contribute to the high cost of
medicines in the US (Annex 2c). These principles include the "need to recognise the
value" of "innovative pharmaceutical products" through strict intellectual
property rights protection. The principles do not include the
Australian public health goal of affordable access to medicines for all. This is
completely unbalanced. The inclusion of this committee in the USFTA ensures that the US
government can influence future policy and challenge it on trade grounds.
c) Changes to Patent Laws could
delay access to cheaper medicines
The USFTA contains changes to patent laws
which could delay access to cheaper generic medicines. These include extensions of patent
periods in some circumstances, and changes which make it easier for drug companies raise
legal objections and delay the production of generic drugs. (Article 17.10). In the US,
drug companies have used such legal tactics aggressively. Since the PBS price control
system relies on comparisons with cheaper generic drugs, delays in the production of
generic drugs will contribute to price rises .
Extension of copyright means higher
costs for libraries and education bodies
The USFTA extends the period for which
copyright payments must be made from 50 years after the death of the author to 70 years,
in line with US law (article 17.4). This will be costly for libraries and educational
bodies, as Australia has adopted the US copyright standard without the US's more generous
rules for copying for research and education purposes.
Copyright law is supposed to provide a balance
between fair rewards for authors and excessive protection which raises prices. The
Australian Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee recommended that
copyright not be extended without a public inquiry. The USFTA denies us this public debate
(Henry Ergas "Patent Protection an FTA complication", Australian Financial
Review, 24 February 2004, p. 63).
Restrictions on Regulation of
Investment and Services
The USFTA is a negative list
agreement for two key areas, investment and services. All of Australias laws and
policies on investment and services at all levels of government are affected by the
agreement unless they are listed as reservations. There are two annexes which list
reservations:
Annex I Stand-still: is a list of areas
where laws that do not conform to the USFTA will be allowed to remain. However, these laws
are "bound" at current levels, like tariffs, and cannot be changed, except to
make them less regulatory. New regulation can be challenged by the US government on the
grounds it is trade restrictive or too burdensome for business. This is a significant
restriction on democracy.
Annex II Carve-out: lists reserved areas
for which governments can make new laws without restrictions. However, some of these are
limited. For example, health, education and welfare services are listed, but only to the
extent that they are established or maintained for a public purpose.
Investment
US investment in Australia must be given
"national treatment", meaning it must be treated in the same way as local
investment (Article 11.3). US investors cannot be required to use local products, transfer
technology or contribute to exports (Article 11.9).
Existing limits on foreign investment are
retained for newspapers and broadcasting, Telstra, Qantas, Commonwealth Serum
Laboratories, urban leased airports and coastal shipping. However, these limits are
subject to "standstill" and cannot be increased. The Foreign Investment Review
Board (FIRB) retains the power to review investments of over $50 million in these areas,
and in military equipment, and security systems, the uranium and nuclear industries (Annex
1).
Regulation of foreign investment can only be
increased for urban residential land, maritime transport, airports, media co- production,
tobacco, alcohol and firearms (Annex 2).
However the threshold for FIRB review of all
other investment in existing businesses has been lifted from $50 million to $800 million.
US investment in new businesses in areas not listed as reservations will not be reviewed
at all. The US government estimates that if these rules had applied over the last three
years, nearly 90% of US investment in Australia would not have been reviewed (US Trade
Representative, 'Summary of the US-Australia Free Trade Agreement, Trade Facts, p 1,
8 February 2004). The Australian government is also proposing to extend these changes to
investors from other countries. This is a massive reduction in review powers.
No Investor-state Complaints now
but could develop later
The government has claimed that there is no
process which allows corporations to challenge laws or sue governments in the USFTA. The
US wanted this process, based on the North American Free Trade Agreement model which has
enabled corporations to challenge environment laws and sue governments for millions of
dollars. However the USFTA does provide a foot in the door for
such a process. It there is a "change in circumstances" an investor can request
consultations with the other government to make a complaint. The other government is then
obliged to "promptly enter consultations with a view towards allowing such a claim
and establishing such procedures" (Article 11.16.1).
Services: the USFTA and public
services
Services include health,
education, water, postal, energy and environmental services. The USFTA applies to all
levels of government federal, state and local.
The text states that the services chapter does
not apply to public services (Article 10.1). These are defined as services not
supplied "on a commercial basis, nor in competition with one or more service
suppliers". This is the same flawed definition that has been used in other
agreements, such as the WTO Services Agreement (GATS). In Australia many public services
are supplied on a commercial basis or in competition with other service suppliers,
including health, education, water, energy and post. Such services could be covered by the
agreement, unless they are listed as reservations.
USFTA rules do not apply to subsidies or
grants (Article 10.1). This protects public funding of public services from being
challenged .
Australia must treat US companies as if they
were Australian companies (Article 10.2). Australia must also give full "market
access", which means no requirements to have joint ventures with local firms, no
limits on the number of service providers, and no requirements on staffing numbers for
particular services (Article 10.4).
Australias qualifications, licensing and
technical standards for services cannot be 'more burdensome than necessary to ensure the
quality of the service (Article 10.7). Regulations could be challenged by the US
government on these grounds.
These obligations apply to all services unless
they have been specifically reserved.
Services reservations
Annex I - Stand-still:
Existing laws and polices of state and local governments are listed as reservations but
are "bound" at current levels, and cannot be made more regulatory.
Annex II Carve-out: Social
welfare, public education, public training, health and child care are reserved, but only
to the extent that they are established or maintained for a public purpose,
which is not defined. If the US challenged a childcare regulation, for example, it is
unclear what Australia would have to do to prove that the childcare services were
established or maintained for a public purpose.
Note that water, energy and public
broadcasting services are not listed as reservations, and are therefore included in the
agreement.
Water services at risk
Water has not been excluded through any
reservations, so any Commonwealth regulation of water services will have to comply with
the USFTA. State and local government water services regulation will be kept at
standstill, so if they are changed the US could challenge them. The agreement
assumes that public water services will be protected , but many water services are already
delivered on a commercial basis, so the protection is highly doubtful.
Telstra Privatisation Side Letter
This letter outlines the government's policy
to sell the rest of Telstra. The US insisted on this letter. This issue is still being
debated by the Australian parliament as a matter of public policy, and should not be part
of a trade agreement
Australian content in film, television
and music
The government claims that USFTA protects
Australian content and culture. In reality, there are strict limits on future governments'
ability to ensure that Australian voices continue to be heard.
Under Annex I, Australias existing local
content quotas are 'bound", and if they are reduced in the future they cannot later
be restored to existing levels. Under Annex II, future Australian governments are limited
in the laws they can introduce for new media.
For multichannelled free-to-air commercial TV
Australian content is capped at 55% on no more than 2 channels, or 20% of the total number
of channels made available by a broadcaster, up to only three channels. For
free-to-air commercial radio broadcasting Australian content is capped at 25%.
The expenditure requirement on Australian content for subscription television
is limited to 10% (which can rise to 20% for drama channels, but again, only on conditions
which allow the US to challenge).
There are more restrictions on interactive audio and/or video services,
since the Australian government must first prove that Australian content is not readily
available. Any rules must be applied transparently and be no more trade restrictive than
necessary, and can be challenged by the US. These restrictions severely limit the capacity
of future governments to respond to new circumstances and new forms of media.
Public broadcasting
Because public broadcasting is not listed in
either of the Annexes, it is not excluded from the agreement. The funding of public
broadcasting is protected by the general exclusion of subsidies and grants (Article 10.1).
However the regulation of public broadcasting could be affected by the agreement because
the definition of public services excludes services provided on a commercial basis or in
competition with other service providers. SBS advertising or ABC product marketing may not
be excluded by this definition. This ambiguity may mean that the US could challenge some
regulation of public broadcasting, claiming it is inconsistent with the USFTA.
Quarantine, GE labelling and the
Environment
New processes have been established under the
USFTA which will give the US government and US companies direct input into Australian laws
and policies on quarantine and technical standards, including labelling of GE food.
(a) Quarantine
Two new committees have been established with
representatives from both sides. The first, called the Committee on Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Matters, deals with quarantine policy and processes. However, one of its
objectives is to facilitate trade between Australia and the US. Its functions
include resolving through mutual consent matters that may arise between the
Parties (Article 7.4). The second committee is a technical working group, which is also
established with the objective of facilitating trade (Annex 7-A, para 1).
Australias quarantine regulations should
be made on a scientific basis in the interests of Australia, not as part of a trade
dialogue with a much more powerful country. The promotion of trade and the quarantine
protection of Australias environment, crops and livestock are separate roles which
should not be combined.
(b) Genetically Engineered food
labelling laws and crop regulation
The US does not have labelling of GE food, has
challenged EU labelling laws through the WTO and identified Australian labelling laws as a
barrier to trade. The USFTA requires Australia and the US to give positive
consideration to accepting the other partys technical regulations as
equivalent to their own, and to give reasons if they do not (Article 8.5).
Australia must give US representatives the
same rights as Australians to participate in the development of Australias standards
and technical regulations. The USFTA even states that the Australian government will
recommend that Australian non-governmental bodies should also let US government
representatives have the same rights as Australian citizens to participate in Australian
NGO processes for developing standards for Australia (Article 8.7).
These changes to processes and procedures for
regulation of quarantine and GE regulation give the US a formal role in Australias
policy. It ensures that trade obligations to the US will be high on the list of priorities
when regulations are being made.
(c) Environment
There is a general clause stating that
Australia and the US will be able to make laws that are necessary to protect human, animal
or plant life or health. However, these laws must not be a disguised restriction on
trade in services (Article 22.1 incorporating GATS Article XIV).
Both Australia and the US have committed to
encouraging the development of 'flexible, voluntary and market-based mechanisms' for
environmental protection (Article 19.4). Since much environmental regulation is not and
cannot be voluntary or market based, this is an extraordinary statement to have in a trade
agreement. Fortunately the statement cannot be enforced through the disputes process,
which only applies to environment laws if a government fails to enforce its own laws
(Article 19.7.5).
Tariff cuts, Government Procurement
and Manufacturing Jobs
Australia's remaining tariffs are on textiles,
clothing and footwear (15-25%) and on motor vehicles and parts (5-15%). Both of these
industries employ thousands of workers of non-English speaking background in regional
areas of high unemployment. Tariffs on motor vehicle parts will fall from 15% to zero when
the USFTA comes into force, which will mean immediate job losses. Tariffs on assembled
motor vehicles will be phased out by 2010 and on clothing by 2015 (Annex 2b). Some state
governments also have purchasing schemes which require foreign contractors to form links
with local firms to support local employment. These will not be permitted under the USFTA.
State governments are still considering whether they will agree to the government
procurement chapter of the agreement. Regional employment studies are needed to assess
these impacts.
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2. Submissions to
Parliamentary Inquiries into the USFTA
AFTINET will circulate a draft for comment
before submssions are due.
a) Senate Select Committee on the
USFTA
The closing date for submissions is Friday, 30
April 2004.
Membership: Senators Boswell, Brandis
(Deputy Chair), Conroy, Cook (Chair), Ferris, Harris, O'Brien and Ridgeway.
The Committee shall examine impacts of the
agreement on Australias economic, trade, investment and social and environment
policies, including, but not limited to, agriculture, health, education and the media.
Submissions should be sent by email to FTA@aph.gov.au
Or by mail to the Senate Select Committee on the USFTA, Parliament House, Canberra.
Mr Brenton Holmes (02) 6277 3527 or Ms Tanya Stacpoole (02) 6277 3163
Fax: (02) 6277 3830
b) Joint Standing Committee on
Treaties
Closing date for Submissions Tuesday 13 April
2004.
The Committee invites interested individuals
and organisations to make a submission to the inquiry. On the USFTA. The Committee will
report by 23 June 2004.
Submissions should be emailed to jsct@aph.gov.au or sent by post to The Secretary , Joint
Standing Committee on Treaties, R1-109 , Parliament House, Canberra ACT 2600, telephone
(02) 6277 4002 or fax on (02) 6277 2219.
The Committee has agreed on an initial program
of public hearings in each State and Territory, as follows (subject to change):
Monday 19 April - Sydney
Tuesday 20 April - Melbourne
Wednesday 21 April - Hobart
Thursday 22 April - Adelaide
Friday 23 April - Perth
Monday 3 May - Darwin
Tuesday 4 May - Cairns
Wednesday 5 May - Brisbane
Thursday 6 May - Sydney
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3. Public meeting
USFTA Sydney 1 April 6pm tom Mann Theatre
Thursday 1 April 2004, 6 pm, Tom Mann Theatre,
136 Chalmers St, Surry Hills (three minutes walk from Central Station).
Speakers:
* Doug Cameron, Vice
President ACTU
* Dr Peter Sainsbury,
President, Public Health Association of Australia
* Rev. Harry Herbert, Uniting
church Minister, Director, UnitingCare
* Dr. Patricia Ranald,
Convenor, Australian Fair Trade and Investment Network (AFTINET)
* Plus a speaker from the media/arts
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