A new generation of trade policy: potential risks to diet-related health from the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement
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Gleeson, Deborah
Thow, Anne-Marie
Labonte, Ronald
Stuckler, David
Kay, Adrian
Snowdon, Wendy
Friel, Sharon
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BioMed Central
Abstract
Trade poses risks and opportunities to public health nutrition. This paper discusses the potential food-related public
health risks of a radical new kind of trade agreement: the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement (TPP). Under
negotiation since 2010, the TPP involves Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand,
Peru, Singapore, the USA, and Vietnam. Here, we review the international evidence on the relationships between
trade agreements and diet-related health and, where available, documents and leaked text from the TPP
negotiations. Similar to other recent bilateral or regional trade agreements, we find that the TPP would propose
tariffs reductions, foreign investment liberalisation and intellectual property protection that extend beyond
provisions in the multilateral World Trade Organization agreements. The TPP is also likely to include strong investor
protections, introducing major changes to domestic regulatory regimes to enable greater industry involvement in
policy making and new avenues for appeal. Transnational food corporations would be able to sue governments if
they try to introduce health policies that food companies claim violate their privileges in the TPP; even the
potential threat of litigation could greatly curb governments’ ability to protect public health. Hence, we find that
the TPP, emblematic of a new generation of 21st century trade policy, could potentially yield greater risks to health
than prior trade agreements. Because the text of the TPP is secret until the countries involved commit to the
agreement, it is essential for public health concerns to be articulated during the negotiation process. Unless the
potential health consequences of each part of the text are fully examined and taken into account, and binding
language is incorporated in the TPP to safeguard regulatory policy space for health, the TPP could be detrimental
to public health nutrition. Health advocates and health-related policymakers must be proactive in their engagement
with the trade negotiations.
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Globalization and Health 9 (2013)
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