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Why Democrats May End Up on the Wrong Side of the Social Security Privatization War

By Lori Wallach and Todd Tucker, AlterNet. Posted July 31, 2007.


The push to cover the planet in trade deals is intended to give foreign investors new "rights." Now these deals are being used to keep failed private retirement systems in corporate hands.
peruvianclient
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"Congress rejected Social Security privatization in 2005 and should reject it again in 2007 -- whether it's for Americans, Peruvians or Canadians. The promise of a secure retirement shouldn't stop at America's borders."

This was the reaction of William McNary, a leading Social Security activist, after finding out that some Democrats are supporting a Bush NAFTA expansion for Peru that would give Citibank, a major Democratic donor, the right to sue the country if it reverses its failed Social Security privatization.

Fair trade activists already knew that an important part of the push to cover the planet in trade deals is to give foreign investors new "rights," including the right to sue governments for compensation when public interest regulations wind up hurting their bottom line.

But the latest Bush trade proposal goes even further. Buried in the Peru pact's hundreds of pages are provisions that could empower foreign investors involved in Peru's privatized Social Security system to demand compensation from the Peruvian government (in U.N. and World Bank tribunals) if the privatization were reversed.

To top it all off, the only U.S. company involved in the lucrative "private retirement account" industry in Peru is Citibank, which has recently come under fire for its offshoring of U.S. service jobs, as well as its close ties to leading Democratic politicians. The amount that Citibank could demand under the "free trade agreement" (FTA) rules could be considerable. In fact, the corporation could make virtually unlimited claims for "lost" future profits, as the license to provide the private accounts is not time limited under Peru's privatization statute and can only be removed for cause. Not surprisingly, Citibank has stepped up its lobbying on trade in the new Congress. And the financial services industry has been in a mad push to support the Peru FTA, cheering the pact for providing a precedent for similar provisions in future trade deals.

Peruvian groups say the FTA provisions would severely chill their ability to reverse the privatization, because the government would not be able to afford to pay major damages for the right to restore a public service.

"For 25 years, Peru's governments have faithfully implemented neoliberal policies supported by Washington, [while] income per person in Peru has scarcely grown in a generation," said Julio Cesar Bazán, president of the Unitary Confederation of Peruvian Workers, and a leader of a recent two-day general strike in Peru against the FTA. "The Peru-U.S. FTA not only does not get us out of this socioeconomic hole, it gives corporations like Citibank the tools to make sure we're forced to stay there."

Trade pact sneak attack

When Democrats regained control of Congress -- in no small part thanks to numerous House and Senate candidates nationwide who focused their successful campaigns on ending Bush's damaging NAFTA expansion agenda -- the prospect of stopping Bush's NAFTA assault seemed certain.

Then on May 10, in a surprise news conference, some Democratic leaders announced a deal with the White House to support pending FTAs with Peru and Panama. Although not one U.S. union or environmental, faith or development group supports the deal, it would revive these expansions of NAFTA and facilitate their passage by the majority of the congressional GOP and a minority of the Democrats. Tragically, the Peru FTA's social-security-threatening provisions were not removed by this "deal," despite demands in advance from Bazán and other Peruvian labor and retiree leaders, a Peruvian archbishop and U.S. faith and fair trade groups.


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See more stories tagged with: trade, peru fta, democrats, congress

The writers are director and research director, respectively, of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch division. They also blog at EyesOnTrade.org.

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View:
Privatizers won't quit
Posted by: Democritus on Jul 31, 2007 3:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alhough the plan to put Wall Street in charge of our social insurance system has been beaten back, the corporations that would privatize Social Security are just biding their time. Countries that have tried privatized pension schemes have seen these schemes fail, and that provides bad advertising for trying a similar scheme here. If Peru can be forced to stick with its failed privatization plan, it can be listed as a country with a "successful" private insurance plan when next the corporations start their push for private accounts in U.S. Social Security. Democrats should get wise and reverse what they have done.

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» RE: Privatizers won't quit Posted by: Lincoln fan
And don't forget CAFTA, GATT, WTO, FTAA, etc ...
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 31, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the Democrats who vote yea to these faux "free" trade SCAMS, I seriously doubt that they care to read the fine print but instead prefer to WASTE time making a show on the rightwing media outlets.

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Supply Side Religion
Posted by: jim_altman on Jul 31, 2007 6:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So long as the supply side gospel according to Milton Friedman remains unchallenged in Washington, deluded Democrats will fork over more and more authority to corporate interests. Liberal pundits should remember that it was JFK who first introduced the USA to the corporate model of government, staffing the cabinet with businessmen rather than retired generals. A good case could be made that corporate interests have never had the best interests of our nation or people at the tops of their agendas.

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» RE: Supply Side Religion Posted by: Lincoln fan
I'm not surprised
Posted by: sausage on Jul 31, 2007 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Two years ago a Democratic state representative said, after a vote deregualating the telephone industry,:""With this bill, Iowa is kind of leading the parade on deregulation[.]" The telecom deregulation bill was signed without demure by then Governor, and erstwhile Democratic presidential aspirant, Tom Vilsack.

The above bit of recent history is illustrates whither the current state of the Democratic Party, indistinguishable from the Rockefeller Republicans of three decades ago.

This should come as no surprise. Many of today's staunchest Democrats became so during the upheavel of the Vietnam War era, refugees, as it were, of pro-war Nixonian-Republican families. Hell no, they weren't gonna go.

And being better educated than the sons and grandsons of the New Deal who did go, these erstwhile Republicans gradually took over the party of FDR, Truman and JFK and fashioned it into something more to their liking; welfare for the very poor and the very rich--Though to be fair Democrats will rein in the excesses of the wealthy every so often with a slap on the wrist in the form of a mild tax increase -- and crumbs for those in between.

Granted any Democrat is better than all Republicans. But both are more beholden to corporate interests than to the voting public. I will say that Democrats, as old John D. Rockefeller, do throw a few dimes the way of the citizenery once in awhile. But that's not going to be enough in the future

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» Well said. Posted by: sausage
taxation without representation there's the rub
Posted by: solrev on Jul 31, 2007 6:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The baby boomers are going to cause an economic crash if something is not done. What the government appears to be doing is laundering all the money they can into the hands of the masters before the crash. The social security system has been raided to the point of no return. If the government decides the treasury bonds being held by the social security system are worthless IOUs as Bush calls them, then the treasury bonds being held by Japan and China are also worthless. The US defaults and we have a worldwide depression. The government can not default on the social security system IOUs, so the solution is not to pay them. Increase retirement age for the baby boomers and reduce payments to make the system solvent until the baby boomers are dead. By the way this is also the biggest obstacle to universal healthcare, we can not afford to keep the baby boomers alive. This solves the social security problem but it also causes another problem. Many baby boomers have been maximizing their 401s and employer savings plans that end up in the stock market. Reducing social security will cause the baby boomers to withdraw money from the stock market at an even faster rate. The stock market will crash; the lower it goes the boomers will require more money and the lower it goes. Enter privatization screw the baby boomers and prop up the stock market with the money of youth. This may be the best solution. Another option would be to stop raiding the social security system tomorrow, and then, the government crashes tomorrow and would be forced to live with a balanced budget. If that happened how would the masters get any money. If that did happen and the income tax, social security tax and medicare tax were actually spent to improve the lives of we the people, we could have universal healthcare and a balanced budget. A fiscal conservative liberal, how is that for a political party? Come to think about it that is what the Declaration of Independence was all about.

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RON PAUL WISHES TO MAKE SOCIAL SECURTY PAY OFF BETTER...
Posted by: poppop_schell on Jul 31, 2007 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
by allowing funds to be invested in AAA quality private sector bonds which have higher interest rates than federal debt instruments thus giving you more return for your retirement. He also will NOT allow government to raid the SS fund.

ronpaul2008.com

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RON PAUL = RED HERRING
Posted by: Roverton on Jul 31, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He's still got lots of bad history to explain before I give him a serouls look. Mike Gravel and Dennis Kucinich have WAY better plans for the USA. Why go back to a republican for ANYTHING now? That would be the definition of insanity. Doing the same thing and expecting a different result.

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True, NAFTA did not work as planned, but...
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 31, 2007 10:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...unemployment in the US is under 5%, despite the Bush inability to produce new jobs. (Will folks ever stop beating on Bill Clinton for surviving with a reactionary GOP Congress?)

Social security "privatization" in the UK has run into some problems, but I am not aware that the Labour government has given up on it. So tossing that word around as an epithet leaves a lot unsaid.

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Government accountability to FTAs....
Posted by: akpasta on Jul 31, 2007 2:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One thing I've never been explained as far as FTA's "right" to sue governments for reparations to their bottom line is, why on earth would Venezuela (for example) comply wit Exxon or something if they were sued for, say, socializing their oil resources? What is forcing governments to pay the company that is suing them?

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» Contract law? Posted by: Sojourner
It's not "free trade" if it takes thousands of pages of regulations!!!
Posted by: rjf7r on Aug 1, 2007 4:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A real free (and probably much fairer) trade agreement would be short, simple, and totally in the open.

This so-called "free trade" is nothing of the kind, a lie, a sham.

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It's ALL just Bush's giveaway to the corporations of everything in pursuit of fascism
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Aug 1, 2007 9:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Free" trade that isn't, corporate welfare, deregulation - it all takes from the poor and gives to the rich - his base, by his own words.

Ian

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