Groser has said he does not want transparency because he does not want to negotiate in the media. There is a reason for this. The more people find out about this draft agreement, the more they realise it is not want we want or need in New Zealand.
Many of the proposals in the TPP negotiations are not new. There have been previous attempts to give sweeping new rights to patent holders, more rights to banks and finance companies, rights to companies exporting genetically modified organisms and rights to companies allowing them to challenge government laws on protecting the environment or promoting public health.
Similar proposals for the extension of corporate rights were proposed in the Multilateral Agreement on Investment in 1995 and in proposals for "new issues" in the World Trade Organisation in 1997. After opposition from NGOs and civil society, academics and researchers, businesses and citizens across the globe, these proposals were dropped.
But the large companies lobbying for these agreements did not give up. When the World Trade Organisation started to get too democratic and started negotiations that would respect the rights of developing countries (the Doha Development Round), they switched their attention to a new forum, the TPPA.
We should not allow this agreement to be signed in anything like its current form.
The question for New Zealand and other countries is what kind of international agreements we need. Is our major problem a lack of rights for multinational corporations? Or is our challenge to strengthen our domestic economy and agree fair rules for international trade, while respecting the environment, the rights of workers and the inclusion of all?
The priority should be better policies so our economy supports decent jobs and small business, our tax system ensures everyone pays their fair share, our environment and public health are protected, and companies are properly regulated to avoid more Pike River accidents, finance company collapses and leaky homes.
This means we need a better balance of rights and responsibilities for companies and citizens. Stop pedalling the TPP bicycle and release the text.
Debate on this article is now closed.