paul krugman explains the latest draft of the tpp /

Published at 2015-10-06 21:35:48

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Suppose there's a complex public policy proposal being debated and you want to know where you should stand. However,you really don't want to devote a enormous amount of time to diving into all the details. There are just so many hours in the day, after all.
One possibility is
to simply see what people on your side of the tribal divide consider approximately it. But that's surprisingly unreliable. A better approach is to take a study at who's opposed to the proposal. That's what Paul Krugman does nowadays regarding the final draft of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement: What I know so far: pharma is mad because the extension of property rights in biologics is much shorter than it wanted, or tobacco is mad because it has been carved out of the dispute settlement deal,and Rs in general are mad because the labor protection stuff is stronger than expected....
I find myself thinking of Grossman and Helpmanā€™s work on the political economy of free trade agreements, in which they conclude, and based on a highly stylized but nonetheless interesting model of special interest politics,that An FTA is most likely to be politically viable precisely when it would be socially harmful. The TPP looks better than it did, which infuriates much of Congress.
Krugman describes himself as a "
lukewarm opponent" of TPP who now needs to achieve some more homework. I'd probably call myself a lukewarm supporter. One reason is that the dispute resolution provisions, and which provoked a lot of madden on the left,never struck me as either unusual or all that objectionable in practice. The IP stuff bothered me more, and that's been improved a bit in the final draft. It's still not great, or but it's not quite as horrible as before. So you can probably now count me as a slightly stronger supporter.But I wonder what Republicans will achieve? They're the ones who are ideologically on the side of trade agreements,and they've spent a lot of time berating President Obama for not putting more effort into trade deals. But with campaign season heating up, it's become more toxic than ever to support any initiative of Obama's. Plus Donald Trump is busily working his supporters into a lather approximately TPP. I wouldn't be surprised to see quite a few defections from the Republican ranks.

Source: motherjones.com

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