New Stories
the Multilateral Agreement on Investment - the MAI
Monday 26 October 1998
MAI deserves being revived
The death of the much-hated and much-debated
Multilateral Agreement on Investment comes at an
unfortunate moment. If there was ever a time when the
world needed a system of rules on foreign investment, it is
now.
Large parts of the world economy are in recession. Investor
confidence around the globe has been shaken. Yet talks on
the MAI by the 29-nation Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) have reached a
dead end.
France, worried about the proposed agreement's impact on
culture, has said it will no longer participate. Canada, which
also has concerns about its cultural industries, pulled out,
too.
[must we give the uninformed the right to bable DTN]
October 16, 1998 Death by 1,000 trade cuts
Sid Tafler
IN VICTORIA -- Barry Appleton was reaching for metaphors: "death by a thousand nicks";
chemicals that are harmless on their own but "very volatile" when mixed together. The potential victim of these explosive chemicals is our body politic, our collective will to determine the future of the country. And the concoction of chemicals is the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI), the subject of intense scrutiny over the past three weeks at a series of provincial committee hearings that ended yesterday in Victoria [ full story ]
Thursday, October 15, 1998 France pulls out of MAI talks
Canada loses big ally in investment treaty process
Heather Scoffield
Ottawa -- Attempts to revitalize talks for a controversial international investment treaty flopped yesterday after France -- Canada's strongest ally at the negotiating table -- announced it would no longer participate. [ full story ]
The MAI is designed to establish a whole new set of global rules for investment that will give transnational corporations the unrestricted right to buy, sell, and move their operations whenever and wherever they want around the world, completely free of government intervention or regulation," says Tony Clarke, president of the Ottawa-based Polaris Institute.
From: whitehallk@citenet.net (MML)
Fri May 2, 1997
COMMENTARY ON THE MAI (as broadcast on CBC Radio at c.8a15 on Thurs May
1st 1997)
The parties and the candidates are off and running in another election to
choose a national government. Yet an issue which may not even get raised
could make this and subsequent elections almost irrelevant. That issue
is the multilateral agreement on investment - the MAI. It is NAFTA on
steroids - a proposed agreement amongst the 29 developed nations of the
OECD which will, in effect, put the actions of international investors
and transnational corporations beyond the reach of our laws.
Most Canadians have never heard of this agreement because negotiations
have been conducted virtually in secret. This is particularly alarming
because Canada is playing a key role in promoting the deal. In effect,
while the Chretien government is campaigning on a promise to return to
liberal values and policies, it is brokering a deal which makes such
policies next to impossible.
The MAI is explicitly designed to forbid government use of investment
rules to promote social, economic, or environmental goals. At a time
when Canadians' top priority is reducing unemployment, the government is
pushing a deal which will cripple its ability to promote job creation.
The MAI states that no government, federal, provincial or municipal, will
be able to oblige any foreign corporation investing in Canada to provide
jobs, do research or invest in productive activity.
One section of the MAI would, quote, "outlaw" any measure that restricts
the right of foreign investors to bid on government contracts and to buy
up privatized crown corporations. Public interest guarantees for such
privatized services would also be outlawed. For example, a privatized
utility could not be obliged to provide equitable services to
rural areas. Foreign corporations could not be required to buy local
goods or hire locally.
The MAI would not only stop governments from passing new regulatory
legislation. It would oblige them to gradually, quote, "roll back"
existing laws which do not conform to MAI liberalization goals. If we
sign this deal, our existing tax, labour, consumer protection and
environmental laws could all be up for review by unelected international
panels. One of the first challenges would almost certainly come from the
tobacco and alcohol industries who could use the MAI to turn back laws
restricting the advertising and promotion of their products.
Unlike NAFTA, this agreement is binding for twenty years, and gives
corporations the right to sue governments directly for any perceived
violation of their rights. Like NAFTA, the dispute settlement mechanism
is binding, beyond our courts and legislature.
Only a few last minute glitches have prevented this constitution for the
global economy from being signed this month. The four to five month
delay and the current election campaign have given Canadians a narrow
window of opportunity to demand a full public debate. If we don't,
future elections may well be reduced to the status of ritual.
For commentary, this is Murray Dobbin in Vancouver.
A letter from Margaret Lefebvre on MAI and the OECD
* "Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored
* to government, and recognized as its most conspicuous and sacred
* responsibility, all talk of the sovereignty of Parliament and of
* democracy is idle and futile ... Once a nation parts with control of
* its currency and credit, it matters not who makes that nation's laws.
* Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. "
*
* -- Prime Minister Mackenzie King --
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