New York time
FEBRUARY 6,
2014, 12:01 AM
Europeans
Undermining Trade Negotiations
By SIMON
JOHNSON
DESCRIPTION
Simon
Johnson, former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, is the
Ronald A. Kurtz professor of entrepreneurship at the M.I.T. Sloan School of
Management and co-author of “White House Burning: The Founding Fathers, Our
National Debt, and Why It Matters to You.”
The Obama
administration would like to negotiate separate free-trade agreements with some
Pacific trading partners and with the European Union. The prospects of sufficient
support on Capitol Hill for the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership are being weakened by European demands to
include financial regulation in its partnership. The Europeans should drop this
demand for political reasons and because it makes no sense from the perspective
of making the financial system safer. (For more on current sticking points for
Trans-Pacific Partnership see my Dec. 5 post.)
TODAY’S
ECONOMIST
Perspectives
from expert contributors.
Trade
agreements of this kind need to pass both houses of Congress. The way this has
been handled in the past is first to pass what is now called trade promotion
authority – it used to be known as fast-track authority – which authorizes the
administration to bring a trade agreement to Congress that would be voted up or
down, without amendment.
While first
adopting trade promotion authority does not assure passage of a subsequently
completed agreement, chances of adoption are greatly increased because the
details of that agreement do not get amended in the congressional process,
which would make for cumbersome rounds at the negotiating table. But for trade
promotion authority to pass, enough members of Congress, including key people
in leadership positions, must be confident that they will like what will be in
trade agreements that have not yet been fully negotiated.
Senator
Harry Reid of Nevada, the Senate majority leader, said recently that he did not
support trade promotion authority, so this looks like an uphill climb for the
Obama administration.
The primary
goal of negotiations with the European Union is to bring about convergence on
the details of product safety and similar regulation. If a seat belt is good
enough for the German authorities, it should be good enough for American
regulators, and vice versa. Converging on such details is not without
controversy – think of genetically modified food – but still a sensible goal.
Countries in the European Union have relatively high income, and American trade
with them is largely within industries, so further liberalization of this kind
would not be disruptive to particular sectors. The proposed agreement could
create modest but sensible gains from trade on both sides. (See this primer
from the ever-helpful Congressional Research Service.)
Many
officials on the American side would prefer to leave financial regulation out
of partnership with the European Union, and there is strong precedent for this
approach, as Jeffrey J. Schott and I explained in a recent policy brief.
Financial regulation is already covered in forums including the Basel Committee
for Banking Supervision, the United States-European Union Financial Markets
Regulatory Dialogue and the International Organization of Securities
Commissions. From my personal experience, I would be surprised if any week went
by without some sort of substantive exchange between regulators in the United
States and their European counterparts.
Nevertheless,
the European Commission is determined to include financial regulation in the
new partnership, and various representatives were in Washington making this
case recently. Their argument is that we need to have a legally binding treaty
that will commit the United States and Europe to trust each other’s rules,
including on bank capital (i.e., how much equity is used to fund banks,
relative to their debts) and on all the details of derivatives (including how
transactions are structured and reported).
To be
clear, the European Union proposal is not to negotiate financial regulation
within the new partnership – they acknowledge that it is better handled in
other forums – but rather to use the trade agreement as a way to enforce
compliance with agreed-upon principles of cooperation.
For
example, if the Europeans felt one of their financial services companies was
being treated unfairly by the United States, they could bring a case through
the dispute resolution mechanism of the partnership, which could then rule
against the action of the Federal Reserve or other regulator on the grounds
that it violated American treaty obligations.
There are
three problems with this approach.
The first
is that the European vision of financial services companies is very different
from what has been, and what should be, the view in the United States.
Continental
Europe remains deeply committed to sprawling and rather coddled universal
banks, which are allowed to engage in a very wide range of investment and
operational activities.
From an
American perspective, banks have a big advantage because they have access to
funding from the Federal Reserve and other forms of explicit and implicit
downside insurance from the government. Allowing big banks to expand the range
of their activities puts all others in the private sector at great
disadvantage. (I am aware that Goldman Sachs is adding Danish windmills to its
broad portfolio of energy and industrial assets, but this only points to the
unfortunate way in which America’s established policy has broken down.)
The second
problem is that Europe can hardly be said to have its financial house in order.
Yes, a process of financial reform is underway in Europe, as Mr. Schott and I
discuss in our paper. But where will this end up, given the current economic
difficulties in Europe and the power of their “national champion” banks? It is
far from clear that the United States should tie itself, by treaty, to European
details to be named later (as described in a recent “road map” and a guide to
what has been done.)
Third, I am
in favor of a treaty that would specify exactly how global megabanks and other
cross-border financial companies would be handled in the context of impending
failure. In fact, discussions of cross-border “resolution,” as the jargon puts
it, are largely meaningless without some sort of legal commitment.
But this
should be a separate agreement that is fully aired in public. This is not
likely to happen; the interests opposing it are too strong. In any case,
attaching it or pretending that down the road it could be attached to a trade
agreement is not at all helpful.
If the
Europeans want to keep the prospects for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership alive, they should drop their proposal to include financial
regulation. Their current approach threatens to undermine further support not just
for the proposals but also for any trade agreement that would be covered by a
potential trade promotion authority.
Student: Yamileth Arauz R.
Of course, this kind of decisions from parties of such economic power would affect most of the planet's economy, above all, the poorest countries, as usual. Even though it has been said that the US is still going through a period of financial issues, it still has something that will not let them give up on conserving their economic control: pride. Of course, and as usual, with this type of agreements, the US is, for sure, running after treaties in which they can take advantage of the other parties in order to reinforce their internal finance. On the other hand, Europeans will do their part, obviously, and will struggle to obtain the advantage for themselves. At the end anyway, the most likely result is that the poorest countries will continue impoverishing, and the richest ones will keep on getting richer.
ReplyDeleteI heard through the grapevine, that the last economic recession in the US was intentionally caused. That would only mean that the economic elites are still doing whatever it takes to gain more power (No, nothing has been left to chance).
These are some words from the article that I looked up (due to its meaning or pronunciation):
Cumbersome /ˈkʌm·bər·səm/ adj
› difficult to do or manage and taking a lot of time and effort:Critics say that the process for amending the Constitution is cumbersome, but others defend it.
Senator /ˈsen·ə·t̬ər/ n [C] (abbreviation Sen.)
Senate /ˈsen·ət/ n [U]
Controversy /ˈkɑn·trəˌvɜr·si/ n [C/U]
Brief /briːf/ noun [C]
› WORKPLACE instructions that explain what someone's work or task is:His brief was to streamline the group's financial services operation.give sb/prepare a brief We have prepared a brief for a full study by a consultant.
› LAW a document that shows the facts of a legal case that will be argued by a lawyer in a court:to prepare/file/submit a brief
Treaty /ˈtriːti/ noun [C] (plural treaties)
› GOVERNMENT, LAW an agreement between two or more countries, formally approved by their governments
Underway adjective [after verb] (also under way) /ˌʌn.dəˈweɪ/ /-dɚ-/
C2 If something is underway, it is happening now: Economic recovery is already underway.
get underwayC2 to begin:The film festival gets underway on 11 July .
Undermine /ˌʌn·dərˈmɑɪn/ v [T]
› to gradually weaken or destroy someone or something:The incompetence and arrogance of the city’s administration have undermined public confidence in government.
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/american-english/