MAI Statement Oct 1997
JOINT NGO STATEMENT ON THE MULTILATERAL
AGREEMENT ON INVESTMENT (MAI)
NGO/ OECD Consultation on the MAI Paris: 27 October, 1997
INTRODUCTION
As a coalition of development, environment and consumer
groups from around the world, with representation in over 70
countries, we consider the draft Multilateral Agreement on
Investment (MAI) to be a damaging agreement which should not
proceed in its current form, if at all.
There is an obvious need for multilateral regulation of
investments in view of the scale of social and environmental
disruption created by the increasing mobility of capital.
However, the intention of the MAI is not to regulate
investments but to regulate governments. As such, the MAI is
unacceptable.
MAI negotiations began in the OECD in the Spring of 1995,
more than two years ago, and are claimed to be substantially
complete by the OECD. Such negotiations have been conducted
without the benefit of participation from non-OECD countries
and civil society, including non-governmental organizations
representing the interests of workers, consumers, farmers or
organizations concerned with the environment, development
and human rights.
As a result, the draft MAI is completely unbalanced. It
elevates the rights of investors far above those of
governments, local communities, citizens, workers and the
environment. The MAI will severely undermine even the meagre
progress made towards sustainable development since the Rio
Earth Summit in 1992.
The MAI is not only flawed in the eyes of NGOs, but
conflicts with international commitments already made by
OECD member countries:
The MAI fails to incorporate any of the several relevant
international agreements such as the Rio Declaration; Agenda
21; UN Guidelines for Consumer Protection (1985); the UNCTAD
Set of Multilaterally Agreed Principles for the Control of
Restrictive Business Practices (1981); and the HABITAT
Global Plan of Action.
The MAI fails to comply with OECD commitments to integrate
economic, environmental and social policies (1).
The MAI removes responsibilities on transnational
enterprises which were previously agreed by the OECD under
the OECD Guidelines for Multilateral Enterprises 1976 (2).
The exclusion of developing countries and countries in
transition from the negotiations is inconsistent with OECD
policy on development partnerships (3).
Problems with the MAI stem both from the broad restrictions
it places on national democratic action, and from its
failure to include sufficient new systems of international
regulation and accountability.
As the MAI stands, it does not deserve to gain democratic
approval in any country. All the groups signing this
statement will campaign against its adoption unless changes,
including those cited below, are incorporated into the body
of the MAI.
SUBSTANTIVE CONCERNS
As drafted, the MAI does not respect the rights of countries
- in particular countries in transition and developing
countries - including their need to democratically control
investment into their economies.
The level of liberalisation contained in the MAI has already
been opposed as inappropriate by many developing countries.
However, non-OECD countries are under increasing pressure to
join.
There are differing investment and development needs of OECD
and non-OECD countries. In particular, the potential for
economic diversification and development of the developing
countries - especially the least developed countries - and
countries in transition would be severely undermined by the
provisions of the MAI. The standstill principle would cause
particular problems for countries in transition, many of
which have not yet developed adequate business
regulation.
The MAI's withdrawal provision would effectively bind
nations to one particular economic development model for
fifteen years; prevent future governments from revising
investment policy to reflect their own assessment of the
wisest economic course; and force countries to continue to
abide by the agreement even if there is strong evidence that
its impact has been destructive.
The MAI contains no binding, enforceable obligations for
corporate conduct concerning the environment, labour
standards and anti-competitive behaviour. The MAI gives
foreign investors exclusive standing under a legally binding
agreement to attack legitimate regulations designed to
protect the environment, safeguard public health, uphold the
rights of employees, and promote fair competition.
Further, citizens, indigenous peoples, local governments and
NGOs do not have access to the dispute resolution system,
and subsequently can neither hold multinational investors
accountable to the communities which host them, nor comment
in cases where an investor sues a government.
The MAI will be in conflict with many existing and future
international, national and sub-national, laws and
regulations protecting the environment, natural resources,
public health, culture, social welfare and employment laws;
will cause many to be repealed; and will deter the adoption
of new legislation, or the strengthening of existing ones.
The MAI is explicitly designed to make it easier for
investors to move capital, including production facilities,
from one country to another; despite evidence that increased
capital mobility disproportionately benefits multinational
corporations at the expense of most of the world's
peoples.
WE CALL ON THE OECD AND NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS TO:
With regard to substantive concerns:
1) Undertake an independent and comprehensive assessment of
the social, environmental, and development impact of the MAI
with full public participation. The negotiations should be
uspended during this assessment.
2) Require multinational investors to observe binding
agreements incorporating environment, labour, health, safety
and human rights standards to ensure that they do not use
the MAI to exploit weak regulatory regimes. Ensure that an
enforceable agreement on investor responsibilities takes
precedence over any agreement on investor rights.
3) Eliminate the investor state dispute resolution mechanism
and put >into place democratic and transparent mechanisms
which ensure that civil society, including local and
indigenous peoples, gain new powers to hold investors to
account.
4) While none of the undersigned NGOs object to the rights
of investors to be compensated for expropriation by a nation
state, there are adequate principles of national law and
jurisprudence to protect investors in circumstances such as
these. The current MAI exceeds these well accepted concepts
of direct expropriation, and ventures into areas undermining
national sovereignty. We therefore request that OECD members
eliminate the MAI's expropriation provision so that
investors are not granted an absolute right to compensation
for expropriation. Governments must ensure that they do not
have to pay for the right to set environmental, labour,
health and safety standards even if compliance with such
regulations imposes significant financial obligations on
investors.
With regard to process concerns:
1) Suspend the MAI negotiations and extend the 1998 deadline
to allow sufficient time for meaningful public input and
participation in all, countries.
2) Increase transparency in the negotiations by publicly
releasing the draft texts and individual reservations and by
scheduling a series of on going public meetings and hearings
in both member and non member countries, open to the media,
parliamentarians and the general public.
3) Broaden the active participation of government
departments in the official negotiations beyond state,
commerce and finance to a broader range of government
agencies, ministries and parliamentary committees.
4) Renegotiate the terms of withdrawal to enable countries
to more easily and rapidly withdraw from the agreement when
they deem it in the interest of their citizens. Developing
countries and countries in transitions which have not been a
party to the negotiations must not be pressurised to join
the MAI.
CONCLUSION
The current MAI text is inconsistent with international
agreements signed by OECD countries, with existing OECD
policies, and with national laws to promote sustainable
development. It also fails to take into account important
work carried out by investment experts and official bodies
such as the UNCTAD "development friendliness"
criteria for investment agreements (4) and other work on
investor responsibility.
If the OECD policy statements are to have any meaning, the
above provisions must be fully integrated in the MAI with
the same legal force as those on economic liberalisation.
Given our grave concerns about the MAI and the
unrealistically short time frame within which the MAI is
being concluded, we look to the OECD and its member
governments to fundamentally reconsider both the process and
substance of the draft agreement. We call on the OECD to
make a specific and detailed written response to our
concerns. We also call on the OECD to avoid talking publicly
about its consultations with NGOs without also talking about
the serious concerns raised at those consultations.
Finally, we will continue our opposition to the MAI unless
these demands are met in full.
Notes:
(1) OECD Ministerial Communique May 1997 (2) OECD Code of
Conduct for Multinational Enterprises, Paris 1992 (3)
"Shaping the 21st Century: The Contribution of
Development Cooperation", OECD 1997. (4) UNCTAD, World
Investment Report 1997; UNCTAD Expert Meeting,"
Development Friendliness Criteria for Investment
Frameworks", 1997.
*****
Mike Dolan, Field Director, Global Trade
Watch, Public Citizen
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