ActionAid International, 26 January 2006
Multinational companies have an undue influence over the
making of global trade rules at the Worl d Trade Organization (WTO). Big
business lobbyists have privileged access to government policymakers and use it
to push trade agreements that undermine the fight against poverty.
ActionAids report Under the Influence highlights many
examples of privileged corporate access to, and excessive influence over, the
WTO policy-making process. It argues that governments must take urgent action
to curb corporate influence in the WTO and put the rights of poor people before
the profits of multinationals in the current round of global trade talks.
Lobbying the trade superpowers
In recent years, huge lobbying industries have mushroomed in
the EU and US capitals, where the two trade superpowers develop their policies
for WTO negotiations.
in the EU
· around 15,000
lobbyists are based in Brussels roughly
one for every member of staff at the European Commission (EC);
· more than 70% of Brussels lobbyists
represent business interests, while only 10% advocate for environmental, human
rights, public health and development interests;
· annual
corporate lobbying expenditure in Brussels
is estimated to be between 750 million and 1 billion.
in the US
· around 17,000
lobbyists work in Washington DC, outnumbering lawmakers in US Congress by about
30 to one
· nearly half of all US
legislators who go into the private sector when they leave Congress join the
lobbying industry
· corporations and lobby groups spent
nearly $13 billion influencing US Congress and federal officials from 1998 to 2004
equivalent to the combined economic output of Cambodia and Ethiopia in 2004
· the
pharmaceutical industry spent over $1 billion lobbying in the US
in 2004 alone.
Companies have a
legitimate interest in shaping the policies that affect how they do business in
the global economy. But ActionAid believes the WTOs policy agenda is being
dominated by a narrow set of corporate interests, while poor peoples interests
are largely excluded.
The EU and USs corporate trade agenda
The EU and the US
are home to 80% of the worlds biggest multinational corporations. They are
also the worlds dominant trade powers, and have a publicly stated commitment
to promote their commercial interests by opening up markets in developing
countries through the WTO.
The EU and US continue to claim they are acting in the
interests of poor countries in the current development round of trade
negotiations, due to conclude this year. But the outcome of last December's WTO
summit in Hong Kong shows the reality is very different.
By offering small
cuts in agricultural export subsidies in return for greatly increased access to
the developing countries markets for services and manufactured goods, the EU
and US are aggressively pursuing a self-interested agenda on behalf of their
multinational companies. This threatens to undermine poor peoples rights and
outlaw the trade policies that developing countries need to build thriving
economies.
ActionAids report exposes how multinational companies
are:
1) given privileged access to WTO policy-makers that is
denied to poor people and public interest groups:
in the EU
The European Services Forum (ESF) a corporate lobby group
set up by former EU trade commissioner Leon Brittan when he was still in office
represents services multinationals such as British Telecom, Lloyds and Suez.
Despite denials from top EC officials, new evidence confirms ESF enjoys
privileged access to senior policy-makers in EU commissioner Peter Mandelsons
trade department.
ESF also has easy access to the 133 Committee, a powerful
but secretive body made up of EC officials and trade experts from the EUs
member states, which formulates important EU policies for WTO negotiations. In
contrast to ESFs easy access, details of 133 Committee meetings are kept
secret from the public and parliaments in the EU.
in the US
Business lobbyists representing corporations such as Coca-Cola,
McDonalds, Pfizer and Wal-Mart dominate the US Trade Policy Advisory
Committees, giving multinationals a free rein to influence the development of
the USs WTO
negotiating positions in Washington DC.
A total of 742 official external advisors to the USs
trade department have access to confidential WTO negotiating documents and
attend meetings with US
trade negotiators. Of these 742 advisers, 93% represent business lobby groups
and corporations including Burger King, Halliburton and Monsanto.
at the WTOs base in Geneva
The US
government brought corporate lobbyists on to its delegation at the WTOs base
in Geneva to negotiate directly
with developing country officials during the run-up to the WTOs Hong
Kong summit in 2005. These meetings are meant to take place
between governments only. The US
included the business lobbyists in its delegation to promote its negotiating
positions on food aid and cotton subsidies. These policies benefit US
agribusiness multinationals including Archer Daniels Midland and Cargill, but
often hurt poor communities in developing countries.
2) having undue influence over WTO policies that has
damaging impacts on poor communities:
in WTO negotiations on services
The EC adopted key demands made by corporate pressure group
the European Services Forum (ESF) to force open services markets in poor
countries for multinational companies. The EC is pushing ESFs agenda
aggressively in WTO negotiations, including by the use of arm-twisting tactics.
Despite massive opposition from developing countries, the EC
and ESF got almost everything they wanted into the services text of Decembers
Hong Kong WTO ministerial declaration. If adopted as it stands, the deal is set
to increase pressure on poor countries to open up their markets for basic
services such as water, healthcare and education. Previous episodes of
liberalisation in these sectors have restricted poor people's access to these
essentials.
in WTO
negotiations on intellectual property
Senior officials from Pfizer, the worlds largest drug
company, negotiated directly with the director-general of the WTO and officials
from WTO member states in 2003 to block a proposal from developing countries
that would allow them to import cheaper copies of patented drugs during public
health emergencies, including the HIV and AIDS pandemic.
Although the
agreement reached allows countries in theory to import copies of drugs during
health crises, relentless and sometimes aggressive lobbying by the drug
multinationals helped ensure the process known as compulsory licensing is
so restrictive and complex that to date no developing country has successfully
used it.
The drug lobby also helped to make sure the WTOs agreement
on intellectual property means key countries that are able to manufacture
cheaper copies of patented medicines including Brazil,
India and Thailand
are only permitted to do so under compulsory license. This is in spite of the
fact that large numbers of people in poor countries suffering with conditions
such as HIV and AIDS rely on cheaper drugs from these countries for treatment.
3) setting up
global networks of influence to shape countries WTO positions and national
trade policies:
global networks the
Yum! Brands alliance
Yum! Brands, a group of multinational fast food chains
including KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, has helped set up new global lobbying
networks to influence the WTOs agriculture talks. It formed the US Food Trade
Alliance in 2005, whose members include the food multinationals Burger King,
Dominos, Dunkin Donuts, McDonalds and Starbucks.
Yum! Brands corporate
coalition heads the Global Alliance for Liberalized Trade in Food and
Agriculture, which is made up of food industry lobby groups from 15 countries
including Australia,
Brazil, Canada
and Japan. The
Global Alliances members are pushing governments to prise open agricultural
markets through the WTO, including in developing countries.
influencing national laws Indias
new patent act
PhRMA, a US
drug industry group whose members include Pfizer and Merck, waged a
comprehensive lobbying campaign in India
that helped push through a new WTO-compliant patent law in 2005. Drug industry
representatives lobbied the Indian prime ministers office and used their easy
access to government officials to put pressure on the Indian government to
bring in the new law. Campaigners fear it will deny AIDS treatment to up to 350,000
people who depend on low-cost Indian drugs worldwide.
4) funding think-tanks and front groups that advocate
trade policies harmful to poor communities
A large number of hardline pro-business think-tanks have
grown rapidly in the EU recently. Analysts believe donations funnelled from
corporate backers are a major factor behind their expansion. Institutes such as
the Centre for a New Europe, the Edmund Burke Foundation and the International
Policy Network promote policies that benefit a narrow set of corporate
interests, including stronger intellectual property protection for the
multinationals patented drugs in developing countries.
Almost all of the radically pro-business think-tanks that
were asked to disclose their funding sources in a recent survey failed to do so.
However, recent investigations reveal Pfizer gave $470,000 to the Edmund Burke
Foundation between 2001 and 2004 on condition that it would promote private
healthcare policies.
ActionAids recommendations
Big businesss privileged access to policy-makers is
contributing to global trade rules that undermine the fight against poverty. Governments
must take urgent action to curb corporate influence in the WTO, and to address
the WTOs anti-democratic policymaking procedures.
ActionAid calls on WTO members to put the needs of poor
people above those of multinational corporations, and calls on the EU and US to
stop pushing developing countries to open their markets to foreign
multinationals through the WTO.
If the final trade deal is anything like the declaration
that came out of the recent Hong Kong ministerial
meeting, ActionAid believes poor countries must reject it.
the WTO secretariat
and WTO member countries must
· take action
to include poor peoples groups in the trade policymaking process, as well as
address the WTOs anti-democratic and non-transparent negotiating procedures
the EU must
· introduce new
laws to increase transparency and accountability in lobbying, as well as put an
end to cases of privileged access for corporate lobbyists
the US
must
· ensure
broader representation of public interest groups on its Trade Advisory
Committees, and require lobbyists to file comprehensive reports into a publicly
available internet database
corporations should
· disclose
their lobbying positions on key public policy issues, as well as membership and
funding of trade associations, think-tanks and campaigns to influence public
policy.
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