A different set of rules
by
David Conway
Hot on
the heels of the latest annual
Bilderberg get-together in Berkshire, England, political leaders at the just-concluded G8
summit in Lough Erne, Northern Ireland, announced that the EU and
US intend to broker a free-trade agreement between them by the end of next
year, with talks towards one due to begin next month.
How
should supporters of free-markets respond to the news of such an agreement –
with jubilation, indifference, or dismay? Prima facie, such a deal
can only be good news. The removal or lowering of tariffs fosters trade and
thereby supposedly facilitates mutually beneficial international division of
labour which in turn, by fostering a greater interdependency between nations,
reduces the chances of war between them.
In
reality, however, the prospect of such an agreement is anything but a cause for
celebration for freedom lovers. The problem is that so called
international ‘free-trade’ deals are invariably anything but truly such. They
formalize highly managed trade in ways that are often deeply detrimental to the
interests of ordinary citizens of the countries which are parties to them.
Why is
that so?
Well,
along with the reduction and elimination of tariffs on goods imported between
participating states, such agreements involve mutual acceptance of common
regulations and standards in the name of the harmonization of trade and
creation of a level playing-field. In reality, such regulations invariably
stifle genuine competition between producers and potential producers, favoring
larger, already established corporations over new entrants, since compliance
costs invariably favor bigger units and not smaller new entrants. As was
observed about the
impending deal by the libertarian-minded Conservative MP Douglas Carswell:
Simply allowing willing buyers and sellers to trade freely with one another is not quite what the architects of this trade deal have in mind… [W]hat is envisaged might be better described as a mercantilist arrangement, drawn up by officialdom on both sides of the Atlantic. Far from free trade with mutual standard recognition, the small print is all about common standards, which define under what conditions transatlantic trade is permitted…. If that was not complicated enough, all kinds of vested interests are already lobbying to make sure the rules get written a certain way – preferably one that favors them, but shuts out their rivals.

















