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Congressional Financial Services Committee leaders: Exclude ISDS from US-EU deal

US House Financial Services Committee (Photo: Wikipedia)

Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch | 3 Dec 2014

Congressional Financial Services Committee leaders: Exclude ISDS from US-EU deal

U.S. congressional leaders, including the highest-ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, have just sent a letter to the Obama administration warning against TAFTA/TTIP provisions that could restrict Congress’ ability to prevent another financial crisis.

The letter calls for ISDS to be excluded from the pact, or at a minimum, for financial regulations to not be subject to ISDS. It also warns against replicating rules of pre-financial-crisis trade agreements that conflict with common-sense prudential regulations, such as restrictions on risky financial products, policies to stem the spread of risk, capital controls, financial transaction taxes, and more.

The letter, championed by Congresswoman Maxine Waters, can be found here: http://democrats.financialservices.house.gov/FinancialSvcsDemMedia/file/001%20Maxine%20Waters%20letters/2014_12_01%20House%20letter%20to%20Administration%20on%20financial%20services%20in%20TTIP.pdf.

See below for the press release from Congresswoman Waters’ office. Please circulate widely.


For Immediate Release
Contact: Christopher Spina
December 3, 2014
202-226-3904
Christopher.Spina@mail.house.gov

Leading House Members Urge Administration to Elevate Financial Stability in Trade Talks with E.U.

WASHINGTON. D.C. — This week, Democratic leaders of the House Financial Services Committee and the Congressional Progressive Caucus expressed concern that a trade deal currently under negotiation between the U.S. and the European Union could restrict the ability of Congress to enact measures aimed at promoting growth and stability and protecting the rights of consumers.

In a letter led by Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA), Ranking Member of the House Financial Services Committee, four Democratic lawmakers warned U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew against including financial services rules of past U.S. trade deals in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).

Joining Waters on the letter is Congressman Lacy Clay (D-MO), the Ranking Member on the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade, Congressman Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) and Congressman Keith Ellison (D-MN), co-chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. The lawmakers argue that U.S. trade rules should provide greater certainty that trade commitments will not infringe on governments’ ability to adequately regulate financial markets and protect consumers.

“If financial service market access provisions of past pacts were included in TTIP,” the letter states, “it could expose to challenge a variety of non-discriminatory financial regulations, including, potentially, those that many countries have adopted in the wake of the 2007-2008 financial crisis.”

The House members also argue against the inclusion of provisions in TTIP “that restrict the use of capital controls, which the International Monetary Fund and leading economists have endorsed as legitimate policy tools for preventing and mitigating financial crises.”

Capital controls are measures governments use to regulate the rapid mobility of capital, especially short-term, speculative capital, which can have a very destabilizing effect on the global financial system. U.S. trade and investment agreements largely prohibit any restrictions on the movement of capital into and out of a country, even during a crisis, and they deem capital controls an actionable measure that can trigger private investor-state claims.

Finally, the lawmakers express grave concern over the inclusion in TTIP of an investor-state dispute settlement mechanism, which confers special legal privileges to a single type of economic actor – foreign investors – by empowering them to directly sue governments for laws and regulations that interfere with their expectations.

“Private foreign investors should not be empowered to circumvent U.S. courts, go before extrajudicial tribunals and demand compensation from U.S. taxpayers because they do not like U.S. domestic financial regulatory policies with which all firms operating here must comply,” the letter states.

Some large European financial firms have listed U.S. policies that they claim violate existing trade obligations and that they are seeking to have eliminated via TTIP negotiations. If the pact includes investor-state privileges, such firms could attack U.S. policies in tribunals composed of private attorneys empowered to order the U.S government to compensate the firms.

“We believe there will be a great deal of resistance to any agreement that exposes U.S. financial regulations to the interpretations of international tribunals,” the letter states. “We strongly urge that the investor-state dispute settlement provision be excluded from TTIP, or at the very minimum, that it not apply to the financial sector.”

The text of the letter is below. A signed version is available online.


December 1, 2014

The Honorable Jacob J. Lew
Secretary of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20220

The Honorable Michael Froman
U.S. Trade Representative
600 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20508

Dear Secretary Lew and Ambassador Froman:

We are pleased that the Administration has withstood pressure from the European Union (EU) to subject U.S. financial regulations to some of the proposed provisions of a Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). We very much agree that work on financial regulatory and prudential cooperation should continue uninterrupted in existing international coordination channels. We appreciate your continued refusal to expose financial regulations to “regulatory cooperation” terms proposed for TTIP in a manner that could undermine recent financial reforms that Congress has passed and that our regulators are now implementing, or to subject new U.S. financial safeguards to pre-review by foreign officials.

We are concerned, however, about provisions included in past U.S. trade deals that, if replicated in TTIP, could infringe on Congress’ policy space to enact measures to guarantee U.S. financial stability, as well as consumer protection safeguards. The issue of binding financial services to the market access rules of past U.S. trade agreements is deeply complex and goes to the heart of ongoing efforts to preserve and protect the stability of the international financial system.

Some have argued that market access in financial services should be kept out of TTIP altogether, given the fact that our financial markets already are open and the lack of a deeper formal arrangement in this area has not been an obstacle to transatlantic financial service commerce or investment. In fact, we currently have a high level of trade with the EU, and investment dominates the $4.64 trillion U.S.-EU relationship. Last year, U.S. and EU companies reported at least $2.43 trillion in trans-Atlantic revenue, much of which stems from cross-border transactions and investments in the financial services sector.

If financial service market access provisions of past pacts were included in TTIP, it could expose to challenge a variety of non-discriminatory financial regulations, including, potentially, those that many countries have adopted in the wake of the 2007-2008 financial crisis. TTIP should not bind financial services to similar rules that could limit the maintenance or establishment of certain forms of financial regulations with respect to committed sectors. Past pacts’ market access rules could be interpreted, for example, as forbidding bans of, or restrictions on, certain financial products. (The World Trade Organization’s Appellate Body, for example, interpreted these rules to hold that the U.S. ban on Internet gambling was a forbidden “zero quota.”) Previous market access rules could also conflict with policies designed to mitigate systemic risk or to protect depositors’ savings from high-risk proprietary trading.

We know that the Administration believes that the “prudential exception” provision in past U.S. trade agreements provides countries with sufficient policy space to regulate on a prudential basis. But this is a two-sentence “exception.” The first sentence says a government should not be stopped from taking prudential measures. The second sentence says that a government may not take such measures, if to do so would avoid their obligations under the agreement. It appears to be self-cancelling; or, at best, as many legal scholars have concluded, the language is ambiguous and could create a burden of proof in favor of the claimant and against the defending government.

Moreover, it’s not clear to us how the prudential defense would cover consumer protection measures in the Dodd-Frank Act or in any future measures aimed at safeguarding the interests and rights of consumers, as opposed to the safety and soundness of individual financial institutions.

TTIP should also not replicate rules from past trade agreements that restrict the use of capital controls, which the International Monetary Fund and leading economists have endorsed as legitimate policy tools for preventing and mitigating financial crises. Nor should TTIP include provisions that could limit Congress’ prerogative to enact a financial transaction tax to curb speculation while generating revenue. If TTIP is to include provisions on capital transfers, could you please explain how the TTIP language will be altered relative to past pacts so as not to prohibit macro-prudential financial stability measures such as capital controls, which were recently endorsed by the IMF Board of Directors, with the support of the United States?

Finally, we were very disappointed to learn that the Administration is pushing to include an investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism in TTIP that would bind our financial policies to even broader obligations than past agreements. Past U.S. trade pacts have explicitly included “futures, options, and other derivatives” in the definition of “investments” for which foreign investors are guaranteed special rights, including a guaranteed minimum standard of treatment and compensation for “regulatory takings.” Private foreign investors should not be empowered to circumvent U.S. courts, go before extrajudicial tribunals and demand compensation from U.S. taxpayers because they do not like U.S. domestic financial regulatory policies with which all firms operating here must comply.

We note that the absence to date of recourse by U.S. and EU firms to an investor-state dispute settlement mechanism has not deterred U.S.-EU investment, and recent academic studies have not found that entering agreements with expansive investor protections increases the amount of foreign investment a country attracts. Even a conservative pro-trade think tank in Washington recently recognized that the investor-state dispute settlement mechanism is not essential to the task of freeing trade and advocated for TTIP to exclude the mechanism. We believe there will be a great deal of resistance to any agreement that exposes U.S. financial regulations to the interpretations of international tribunals. We strongly urge that the investor-state dispute settlement provision be excluded from TTIP, or at the very minimum, that it not apply to the financial sector.

We appreciate your efforts to ensure that TTIP does not undermine our efforts to protect consumers and guarantee financial stability. We look forward to hearing your responses to our specific concerns at your earliest convenience.

Sincerely,

MAXINE WATERS
Ranking Member
House Financial Services Committee

WM. LACY CLAY
Ranking Member
House Financial Services Subcommittee
on Monetary Policy and Trade

KEITH ELLISON
Co-Chair
Congressional Progressive Caucus

RAÚL M. GRIJALVA
Co-Chair
Congressional Progressive Caucus


 source: Public Citizen