Sunday, November 17, 2013

Interest groups and the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement

From an economic point of view, lowering barriers to trade between nations is widely seen as valuable policy reform. However, as this article describes, the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement is "A free trade agreement that is neither about trade nor freedom." In fact, information from leaked papers suggests that of the 29 chapters under negotiation, only 5 actually negotiate trade while the 24 others "aim to influence many issues, such as food and environmental standards, intellectual property, and pharmaceutical formularies." 

The TPPA is a clear example of how legislation is supplied in accordance with demand, and the demand in this case is largely derived from firms in industries sensitive to intellectual property issues. Trade agreements have potential create massive new rents in nearly every industry, so the secrecy and focus on pleasing the firms providing input to the negotiations doesn't come as a surprise based on our studies in public choice.

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