You down with TPP?
Calvin
reckons the trade deal would merely turn
Farmers take a break from harvesting rice at a
paddy field in Ha Hoi village, 20 km (12.5 miles) south of
In recent weeks, this paper has carried stories expressing the ambivalence of Vietnamese firms toward the impending Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)—a twelve-nation, “no-Chinas-allowed” trade agreement that is being negotiated in secret.
Though the TPP has
been in the works for years, Obama says he wants to get it done by the end of
the year.
And some people are real scared about it.
Last month, noted
rich person Michael Bloomberg published an editorial in theNew
(Don’t worry
smokers. I’m sure you’ll still be able to light up in elevators here, no
matter what happens.)
Generally speaking
though, everyone has been left to guess what the TPP will mean for their own
country’s ability to pass public health and consumer protection laws.
Many fear, for
instance, that the TPP would render American quality control inspections an
“illegal trade barrier.”
Others believe it
could have the power to improve quality control.
Last year, a trio
of concerned Congresspersons wrote a letter to Obama and Team TPP asking them
to force exporters to meet
Similar alarm
bells have been rung about vague plans to enact strict intellectual property
standards and internet use restrictions.
Ultimately,
though, no one beyond the secret negotiating tables knows what will really
happen. However, not knowing much about the potential impact of the TPP
hasn’t stopped people from writing about it.
Much has also been
made about
Proponents of the
agreement say “yarn forward” will give manufacturers working in the 12 TPP
member states a toll-free ride into American malls so long as every stitch
and cog in their products has been produced inside the TPP (i.e. not in
China). If a hundred or so things don’t happen (e.g.
This boost is
expected to come from mega-manufacturers relocating shoe and clothing
factories from
Some commentators
have charged that “yarn forward” amounts to nothing but a grand
protectionist-colonialist scheme designed to force Asian factory owners to
buy American textiles and pay poor Vietnamese people to turn them into cheap
shoes and clothes.
An independent
journalist named Greg Rushford recently alleged that Obama’s secret strategy
will prop up uncompetitive textile mills in the American South while offering
little to no tariff concessions to the likes of Vietnam.
Proponents of the
TPP have countered that this is simply not the case—especially if
That’s a big
“if.” State-owned shoe (VINTAS) and clothing (VINATEX) makers dropped
the ball on creating a local supply chain five years ago, when they announced
that
Today, about 75
percent of every shoe and shirt made in
Rumor has it that
Instead, Japanese,
Australian, South Korean and Taiwanese corporations are pumping billions into
developing thread, yarn and fabric factories here.
Which begs the
question: what benefit will the TPP really bring the average Vietnamese
person?
Turning a rice
farmer into the wage slave of an international conglomerate with one eye on
the door doesn’t sound like much of a plan for the future.
But it would
appear as though it’s the only plan
By Calvin
Godrey, Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 9, 2013
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