US And South Korea Trade Deal ‘Will Damage Working Families’

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THE AFL-CIO will join with its Korean trade union allies and strongly oppose the just-completed South Korea-UStrade deal (KORUS) because of the damage it will do to working familes, farmers and domestic producers in both countries.

Negotiators worked down to the wire to seal the deal before the end of April 1, so it could meet a 90-day required notice period for Congress. By meeting the deadline, the Bush White House can have the deal considered under Fast Track trade promotion authority, which expires June 30.

AFL-CIO President John Sweeney warns the flawed deal, which would be the largest trade deal since the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994, contains no enforceable protections for core workers’ rights, and it will undermine both governments’ ability to provide affordable and high-quality public and social services, and to protect food safety, the environment and public health.

Further, Sweeney says: ‘Rushing these important negotiations to meet the deadline for consideration under the current Fast Track authority virtually ensures that issues important to both countries have been railroaded through, without adequate consultation or consideration.

Alan Reuther, UAW government affairs director, told the House Ways and Means Committee a few weeks ago that the deal is likely to jeopardize tens of thousands of US auto jobs by further opening the US auto market to Korean cars while failing to address the barriers to the sale of US automobiles in Korea.

The United States already has a $14 billion trade deficit with South Korea, and almost $12 billion of that is in autos and auto parts.

President Bush is pushing hard to renew Fast Track, which allows the president to negotiate trade deals but prevents Congress from improving or rejecting harmful provisions by allowing only ‘yes’ or ‘no’ votes on such agreements.

Fast Track would enable the Bush administration to pass more bad trade deals that are skewed in favor of big business, not workers.

Workers in both countries have protested against the proposed pact.

Only last Sunday, workers in Korea marched against the deal. And in February, some 100 workers from the United States and Korea demonstrated in Washington, D.C., one of a series of protests from Seattle to Seoul, involving US and South Korean trade unionists and allies against yet another bad trade deal skewed in favor of big business at the expense of workers.

Last year, unions in both countries issued a declaration saying KORUS, like other trade agreements pushed by the Bush White House, fails to protect workers’ rights and the environment and undermines governments’ ability to regulate public services while strongly protecting the investments and profits of multinational corporations.

The declaration was signed by the AFL-CIO, Change to Win, the Federation of Korean Trade Unions (FKTU) and the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU).

Meanwhile, the Korea deal could jeopardize state programmes that provide medicines for America’s poor and elderly.

Since negotiations began in June 2006, the US trade representative (USTR) has been doggedly attacking South Korea’s public drug reimbursement formulary as a potential barrier to trade.

The rub is that the USTR’s latest demands won’t just raise prices in Korea – it may raise prices in American states too.

This is because Korea’s drug formulary is substantially similar to the ‘preferred drug lists’ used by at least 40 American states for Medicaid purchases.

Adjusted for inflation, Medicaid spending on pharmaceuticals by state governments declined in 2005, while overall national drug spending increased at double the rate of inflation the same year, and by over five times since 1994.

But the federal government can sue states to preempt laws and programmes that conflict with FTAs. Thus, whatever is required of Korea in the FTA may apply to the US as well.

Last month, the AFL-CIO Executive Council issued a statement calling on Congress to institute new reforms on trade that ‘stop our jobs from being exported and put our workers and the companies they work for on a level playing field.’

The Executive Council statement outlines the principles that should be embodied in all US trade policies:

‘lEnforceable International Labor Organization standards in every trade agreement, so no government and no corporation can gain a comparative advantage by violating workers’ human rights.

‘l Reform of the environment, investment, government procurement, intellectual property rights and services provisions in trade agreements.

‘l Our negotiators must not put our trade laws on the chopping block, nor should they make irreversible commitments with respect to immigration policy.

‘l We need more transparency and much broader public participation in the negotiation of trade rules, at both the national and international levels. Business is not the only constituency affected by trade, and it should not be the only nongovernmental group at the table when these deals are cut.’

Meanwhile, Boeing Co workers around the world now have a new and stronger voice to deal with the multinational aerospace giant with the formation last week of the Global Union Alliance.

The new alliance is made up of the Machinists (IAM) – which represent about 40,000 Boeing workers in the US and Canada – and unions from five other nations where Boeing has major production facilities.

Says IAM President Thomas Buffenbarger: ‘Just as Boeing is a global company, the unions representing its workers must act like a global union.

‘No longer can Boeing workers in one nation afford to bargain or organise in isolation. Our goal is fair treatment for Boeing’s global workforce, without regard to language, borders or nationality.’

Union representatives from Australia, Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden and the United States met last week in Portland, Oregon, at a summit organised by the IAM and the International Metalworkers’ Federation (IMWF).

The unions agreed to coordinate their efforts to organise Boeing’s workers worldwide—including workers at the company’s suppliers—and to increase communication and coordination among the unions on bargaining issues.

The alliance also called on Boeing and its suppliers to abide by and enforce internationally recognised labour standards, including the freedom of workers to join together in unions.

Buffenbarger added: ‘As one of the most successful corporations in the world, it is incumbent on Boeing to set the highest standards when it comes to fundamental human rights, which include the right to form labour unions and to engage in collective bargaining.

‘The alliance will work to bring in other unions that represent Boeing workers. The company has some 150,000 employees in 70 countries.’