Still not loving ISDS: 10 reasons to oppose investors' super-rights in EU trade deals

Document 5170
Corporate Europe Observatory | 16 April 2014

Still not loving ISDS: 10 reasons to oppose investors' super-rights in EU trade deals

At the end of March, the European Commission launched a public consultation over its plan to enshrine far-reaching rights for foreign investors in the EU-US trade deal currently being negotiated. In the face of fierce opposition to these investor super-rights, the Commission is trying to convince the public that these do not endanger democracy and public policy. See through the sweet-talk with Corporate Europe Observatory’s guide to investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS).

- Reason 1: ISDS is a tool for big business to make governments pay when they regulate
- Reason 2: Corporate super-rights are an instrument to rein in democracy
- Reason 3: The investor rights provide VIP treatment to companies
- Reason 4: The investor-state arbitration system is fundamentally flawed
- Reason 5: The Commission’s ‘reform’ agenda does not even touch upon these basic flaws of the system
- Reason 6: The risks of being sued by big business are ever growing for governments
- Reason 7: The investor privileges enable backdoor corporate attacks on court decisions
- Reason 8: The investor rights do not bring the economic benefits claimed for them
- Reason 9: The global tide is turning against excessive corporate rights
- Reason 10: There are alternatives

Read the article here: http://corporateeurope.org/international-trade/2014/04/still-not-loving-isds-10-reasons-oppose-investors-super-rights-eu-trade


  Fuente: CEO