Canada’s Trade Deals Have Nothing To Do With Creating Canadian Jobs – They Are All About ‘Corporate Empowerment’

By Mark Taliano 

Sometimes, the simplest solutions are the best ones.  Unfortunately, though, Canada’s extreme concentration of corporate power often precludes the solutions from ever seeing the light of day.Demonstration Against the Proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)

The first step towards resolution of this problem is nomenclature. We need to free corporate-fashioned words from their false meanings.

Here are some examples.  Trade deals, including the so-called “free trade” deals which have crippled North American manufacturing , are more accurately described as “corporate empowerment” deals. Invariably, these deals empower transnational companies to relocate where wages are low (or in the case of prison labour, non-existent), where collective bargaining doesn’t exist, and where unions are impotent or non-existent.

Corporate empowerment deals, including the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and the as yet unratified Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPPA), a bilateral agreement with China, empower corporations to the extent that government legislation becomes subordinated to corporate profits. 

 At least NAFTA arbitrations are public (and Canada has yet to win a case), but the FIPPA arbitrations will not even be made public. If Canada determines that its sovereignty, economic, or environmental needs are more important than Chinese state-owned corporate profits, the case will be heard outside Canadian law, and in private.

The “freedom” being exercised by these deals is clearly corporate freedom from the shackles of democratically legislated rules, regulations, and laws.  The false notion that they are “free”, or that “liberalized” trade agreements are “liberal” for anyone but the corporations, should be put to rest.  Trade agreements negotiated over the last 30 years or so have been neither free, nor liberal, for the people of Canada.

 “Globalization” is another corporate-engineered word that is intentionally deceiving.  The globalization being described is not “democratic” globalization, nor is it the globalization of improved human rights, or a globalized respect for the environment.  Quite the opposite is the case. Corporate globalization, a more accurate description, has led to top-down corporate rule, diminished respect for human rights as defined by the United Nations, and reckless destruction of the world environment.

The word “capitalism” is also wearing new clothes, thanks to corporate messaging of the “free marketeers”, and those who profess a love for “free enterprise”. Now the term more often refers to state-subsidized “monopoly capitalism” (think Walmart, Monsanto, etc.).  The new “capitalists” are the speculators who drive up world prices of food and fuel, as they trade in commodities, derivatives, and hedge funds.  In the world of these boom/bust/starvation-creating “capitalists”, the term is divorced from production, and it is too often divorced from the notion of the “public good” as well.

 The term “privatization”, a hallmark of neo-liberalism/neo-conservatism, has also been crafted to mislead the public. Now the term more accurately describes anti-public “hyper-privatization.

 In many instances, hyper-privatization means that para-private interests are making in-roads into the public sphere to the detriment of the public.  One such instance would be Public Private Partnerships (P3 arrangements). Evidence clearly shows that P3 hospitals cost more and are, therefore, an unnecessary burden on the public.  This, however, has not stopped them from gaining a foothold in Canada.

Another example of hyper-privatization would be healthcare.  Once the insurance lobbies  persuade the public of the false-logic that privatized healthcare is the way to “move forward”, we will be stuck with a multi-tiered, inefficient, and costly healthcare system, (similar to the U.S system) that will be an unnecessary disservice to the public.

The deconstruction of the corporate nomenclature gives us a clearer view of what is happening, but there are still huge impediments, or firewalls, to achieving a better economy and a better world. 

Some of these firewalls include self-interested lobby groups that have disproportionate influence over public discourse and legislative polities. A list of these powerful organizations, as described by award-winning investigative reporter Nick Fillmore, in his June 6, 2013 piece, “It’s high time the Liberals or NDP challenged our ‘corporate elite'”includes:

  • Canadian Council Of Chief Executives
  • Canadian Bankers Association
  • Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers
  • Canadian Chamber of Commerce

 Once past the nomenclature, and the corporate-media supported “firewalls” though, the list of better alternatives reveals itself. 

One (of many) glaring examples, as described by George H. Crowell in his article, “An Urgently Needed Change in Monetary Policy: Borrowing from Bank of Canada would make governments debt-free” is brilliant in its simplicity.

 Crowell argues that we should do what we did until about 1974:  instead of paying billions of dollars in interest on debts to private banks, the federal government should resume the practice of borrowing from the publicly-owned Bank of Canada, interest free. 

The benefits that would accrue, including the elimination of government debt, would empower the government to spend money on public institutions, improve the economy, and so on.

Unfortunately, productive changes to our monetary policy, as endorsed by the Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform (COMER), are largely ignored by corporate media, since such changes wouldn’t serve the immediate self-interests of their corporate owners.

Getting past the nomenclature and the lobby groups are the first steps to opening up the dialogue for a better Canada. Powerful special interest groups such as the ones listed above will not be our partners in the endeavour, but unearthing the seemingly simple solutions is a necessary step to rebuilding this country, and the global community.

Mark Taliano is a Niagara resident and regular contributer to Niagara At Large. If you wish to contribute posts of interests or concern to people in the greater Niagara Region, in Ontario or western New York, contact NAL publisher at drapers@vaxxine.com for more information. We have a forum, now engaged in by thousands of people per day, for information and debate here.

(Niagara At Large invites you to join in the conversation by sharing your views on the content of this post below. For reasons of transparency and promoting civil dialogue, NAL only posts comments from individuals who share their first and last name with their views.)

5 responses to “Canada’s Trade Deals Have Nothing To Do With Creating Canadian Jobs – They Are All About ‘Corporate Empowerment’

  1. Michael Dorosh

    All these years have gone by and I still CANNOT figure out how free trade benefits this country……Many jobs have been lost (including mine) because of free trade….

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  2. Gerry Chamberland

    Mark. You have hit the nail squarely on the proverbial head. Now if we can somehow pass over the regulatory bodies (ie. government etc) that reinforce corporate speak because they either own shares or businesses that promotes such thinking, we would go a long way to making changes for the benefit of the electorate. I think it’s going to take a major shock for the people to look at this and wonder why we don’t implement the ideas in this article.

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  3. It’s high time the Liberals or NDP challenge this … true… right now we only have the Green Party that takes a stand.

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  4. ‘free trade’ / globalization is corporate governance and the freedom for transnational corporations to plunder resources, while decimating the environment and dismantling nation states, local governments & indigenous communities.

    it’s corporate fascism, and these fucking fascists have no allegiance to any country, culture or community. they are loyal to their bankers & shareholders, that’s it.

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  5. Gerry Chamberland

    The issue as I see it is that the framing of free trade only takes into consideration the products themselves without including human beings. So we have lifeless corporations affecting life itself yet no such discussion ever takes place. Such issues as labour practices, ecology, resource depletion, democratically agreed upon rules that affect nation states as well as communities in which the electorate live are never part of the free trade discussion. In essence, free trade is not “free” if in its implementation it is affecting the population in a negative way and accomplished undemocratically. What is really going on is multinationals circumventing democracy by using undemocratic ploys to get what they want in an effort to enrich a small segment of the population. Generally, corporations abhor democracy because it is seen as inefficient and gets messy. They tout market forces but will stop at nothing to garner market share until they have a monopoly.

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