Showing posts with label International Labor Standards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Labor Standards. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Can free trade work for all? Canada throws down gauntlet as U.S. attempts to avoid labor obligations imposed on its trade partners

One of the purposes of the May 14, 2015 conference Working for All? New Ideas and Innovative Strategies to Enhance Economic and Social Benefits in Trade Agreements co-hosted by the GWU Elliott School and the International Labor Organization was to shake up Washington policy discussions about incorporation of labor, human rights and social welfare concepts in free trade agreements.

For me, remarks made by Pierre Bouchard (Director of Bilateral and Regional Labour Affairs, Canada) were the highlight of the conference.  Bouchard used the event to highlight a tricky negotiation point with the United States Trade Representative regarding labor provisions in the Trans-Pacific Partnership currently under negotiation.  While the U.S. has made strides in strengthening labor provisions in free trade agreements negotiated after NAFTA, in fact the U.S. has inserted a footnote in each of the post-NAFTA free trade agreements to make sure these broader FTA labor provisions do not apply to the 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories like Puerto Rico.  This actually decreases the level of obligation the U.S. agreed to in the NAFTA labor side agreement (NAALC) which contains no such limitation.*  Canada, unlike recent U.S. trading partners like Peru, Singapore, Bahrain and the Central American nations, seems to have both the leverage and the willingness to press this point with USTR.  For U.S. labor rights advocates who have utilized the NAALC as a tool to press for improved labor law enforcement at the federal and state level, it is critical that the Government of Canada prevail on this point.  Hopefully other trading partners in the TPP support Canada in this endeavor if for no other reason than the U.S. should not impose international labor obligations on its trading partners that it is not willing to commit to itself.

Other remarks to highlight during the conference include:

  • The Trans-Pacific Partnership eliminates labor law exemptions for Export Processing Zones in member states (Carol Pier, Deputy Undersecretary, International Labor Affairs, U.S. Department of Labor).
  • Globalization and trade have traditionally been engines of inequality and their gains have not been broadly shared (Lance Compa, Senior Lecturer, Cornell University).  Compa also shared his experiences with the Fruit of the Loom labor rights framework in Honduras.
  • Switzerland and China have negotiated a free trade agreement with labor provisions (Silvia Formentini, Trade and Sustainable Development, European Commission).
  • Chile has negotiated free trade agreements with labor provisions with, in succession, Canada, the U.S., the EU, Japan and now China.  As a comparatively smaller country and economy, Chile must adopt different tactics with each of these trade partners (Pablo Lazo Grandi, Permanent Mission of Chile to UN in Geneva).
  • Canada ratified the ILO Forced Labor Convention (No. 29) as a result of negotiating a free trade agreement with the EU (Pierre Bouchard).
  • Freedom of Association has been seen as a barrier to the Right of Establishment and Investment in the EU (Tonia Novitz, University of Bristol.  For more information, see this 2010 European Parliament briefing note The Impact of the ECJ Judgments on Viking, Laval, Ruffert and Luxembourg on the Practice of Collective Bargaining and the Effectiveness of Social Action or Novitz's 2008 piece A Human Rights Analysis of the Viking and Laval Judgments). 
  • The EU Employer Federation is in favor of ILO standards in the Transatlanltic Trade and Investment Partnership/TTIP (Thomas Zielke, Representative of German Interest and Trade).
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 * In fact, a number of NAALC complaints filed with Canada and Mexico allege ineffective labor law enforcement by  U.S. state authorities as well as federal authorities - particularly the Washington Apple, De Coster Egg Packing, New York Workers' Compensation cases (not to mention the North Carolina Public Workers case which is still pending with Canadian authorities).

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Save the Date! May 14, 2015 All Day ILO Conference in Washington, DC on labor issues in trade agreements



Working for All? New Ideas and Innovative Strategies to Enhance Economic and Social Benefits in Trade Agreements

9:00 am to 5:00 pm 

 

Participation is free, but prior registration is required.  Please register here


Thursday, March 28, 2013

First U.S. labor report under U.S.-Bahrain FTA issued relates to Arab Spring

Check out my latest item in the International Employment Lawyer newsletter on the December 2012 U.S. Labor Department report on labor issues during Bahrain's Arab Spring.  This report breaks new ground for the U.S. Labor Department which for the past 19 years has tended to be reluctant in its reports to openly call out U.S. trading partners for inadequate labor legislation - or in the case of Bahrain, a complete lack of legislation prohibiting workplace discrimination. 

The report discusses the close partnership between the U.S. Departments of Labor and State and the United States Trade Representative (which has ultimate authority for enforcing the provision of the free trade agreement) in investigating the petition filed by the AFL-CIO and negotiating issues with the Government of Bahrain.  While in the past I have criticized the 2004 requirement that the Labor Department consult with other agencies on petitions filed under labor provisions of free trade agreements, it appears that inter-agency cooperation in examination and resolution of these petitions can be a critical element in effective application of FTA labor provisions, especially in cases where peoples' lives and human rights are at stake.  The active involvement of the International Labor Organization in setting up dialogue between Bahraini trade unions, employer groups and government officials also led to the first time workers unlawfully terminated for exercising their trade union rights have been reinstated in the context of a U.S. FTA labor petition.

While the 2012 Bahrain report makes significant advances in the jurisprudence in the area of enforcing labor rights through free trade agreements, human rights advocates found that the year and 4 months it took for U.S. DOL to issue its report sent a signal that the U.S. might not be serious about its commitment to worker rights in Bahrain. Moreover, the human and worker rights issues stemming from Bahrain's Arab Spring are ongoing, as several medics who provided care to demonstrators in 2011 are still incarcerated.

As an interesting side note, the European Parliament is also keeping a close watch on the human rights situation in Bahrain.