Category: Globalisation

This G7 reflects our G-zero world, ruled by self-interest instead of global ambition | Tom Kibasi | The Guardian

An Extinction Rebellion banner reads ‘G7 Act Now’ on a beach at St Ives, on Sunday.

Over the past 18 months, the pandemic has reaffirmed the centrality of nation states in human affairs, with little international coordination and the sidelining of multilateral institutions. Nations with the capacity to act globally seem to lack the ambition beyond the pursuit of their narrowly defined national interest. Those with the ambition lack the means or commitment. And so the G7 meeting reflects the reality that we now live in a G-zero world.

Source: This G7 reflects our G-zero world, ruled by self-interest instead of global ambition | Tom Kibasi | The Guardian

A global agreement on corporate tax is in sight – let’s make sure it happens | Nadia Calviño, Daniele Franco, Bruno Le Maire and Olaf Scholz | The Guardian

President Biden

For more than four years, France, Germany, Italy and Spain have been working together to create an international tax system fit for the 21st century. It is a saga of many twists and turns. Now it’s time to come to an agreement. Introducing this fairer and more efficient international tax system was already a priority before the current economic crisis, and it will be all the more necessary coming out of it.

Source: A global agreement on corporate tax is in sight – let’s make sure it happens | Nadia Calviño, Daniele Franco, Bruno Le Maire and Olaf Scholz | The Guardian

Old Dog Thought- Worth knowing- Globalisation, an equaliser Trump wants stopped.

Cambodian female workers in Nike, Asics and Puma factories suffer mass faintings | Global development | The Guardian

Sportswear brands review spate of incidents in factories where employees on short-term contracts work 10-hour days in 30C temperatures

Source: Cambodian female workers in Nike, Asics and Puma factories suffer mass faintings | Global development | The Guardian

“Hail Prez Trump!”: White Nationalist Media Celebrate Trump Inauguration

As President Donald Trump took the oath of office and delivered his inaugural address, prominent white nationalist media figures cheered online.  White nationalists’ inaugural praise is the natural culmination of Trump’s presidential campaign, which engaged in a disturbing relationship with leading figures in the racist movement. B

Source: “Hail Prez Trump!”: White Nationalist Media Celebrate Trump Inauguration

History suggests Australia could be left behind by next industrial revolution – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

There’s a new industrial revolution just around the corner, and deterioration within the key institutions of suffrage, education and land policy indicate that Australia may be one of the countries left behind this time.

Source: History suggests Australia could be left behind by next industrial revolution – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

These Are The Criminals and Corporations That Have Gotten Really, Really Rich Off The Refugee Crisis – The Huffington Post

An interactive guide to the 21st century gold rush.

Source: These Are The Criminals and Corporations That Have Gotten Really, Really Rich Off The Refugee Crisis – The Huffington Post

Globalisation and free market capitalism are tearing our societies apart

Economic ideologies come and go but globalisation, as the biggest failure, has outstayed its welcome, says Dr Adnan Al-Daini.

Source: Globalisation and free market capitalism are tearing our societies apart

The World Bank Report Says Globalization Brings Inequality AnonHQ

The free trade has been beneficial for some countries, but has left developing nations in a perpetual state of struggle. According to Kamal Ahmed, who is a specialist in the field of Economics and a journalist for the BBC, a report published by the World Bank highlighted …

Source: The World Bank Report Says Globalization Brings Inequality AnonHQ

10 Signs The Global Elite Are Losing Control

Source: 10 Signs The Global Elite Are Losing Control

We shouldn’t turn our backs on the world economy

Remember globalisation? It was big news some years back. Now, however, the leaders of the global economy worry that public opinion is turning against it, pressuring governments to reverse it.

Source: We shouldn’t turn our backs on the world economy

We shouldn’t turn our backs on the world economy

Remember globalisation? It was big news some years back. Now, however, the leaders of the global economy worry that public opinion is turning against it, pressuring governments to reverse it.

Source: We shouldn’t turn our backs on the world economy

Globalisation: Winners and losers in the gathering storm of alienation

The inequality and alienation of globalisation has seen a backlash in the UK, U.S. and now Australia. John Menadue flags a serious gathering storm ahead.

Source: Globalisation: Winners and losers in the gathering storm of alienation

‘Medical tourism’ plan revealed: Australia leads top secret push for globalisation of healthcare: QANTAS Dental Care Charter to Phuket leaves Tuesday. Don’t forget the Jetstar Transplant to Mumbai still has vacancies.

Trade Minister Andrew Robb.

Need a new liver?  Why not head to France. A hip replacement? Japan could be the place for you.

According to a leaked document, the highly secretive Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) negotiations that will resume in Geneva on Monday will include discussion of wide-ranging reforms to national public health systems to promote “offshoring” of health care services.

Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey have been saying that healthcare expenditure is unsustainable, but Andrew Robb is quietly engaged in negotiations that could potentially see scarce healthcare dollars going overseas

But health unions and trade experts say the negotiations, which are being led by Australia, the US and the European Union, could lead to massive growth of “medical tourism” to the detriment of investment in Australian public hospitals and local healthcare.

The leaked discussion paper – published by the non-government organisations Associated Whistle-Blowing Press and Public Services International – has for the first time revealed TiSA countries including Australia are actively discussing measures to boost the “cross-border delivery of health services”.

“Thanks to the secrecy that’s surrounded these talks, we haven’t known what is being negotiated in our name, and the Australian public haven’t been aware of the potentially huge health implications,” said Michael Whaites, NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association organiser and spokesman.

“Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Treasurer Joe Hockey have been saying that healthcare expenditure is unsustainable, but Trade Minister Andrew Robb is quietly engaged in negotiations that could potentially see scarce healthcare dollars going overseas,” Mr Whaites said.

“You can ask whether the government is working in a co-ordinated manner, and indeed what is their real intention on the future of Medicare?”

The leaked “concept paper on health care services within TISA negotiations,” reportedly tabled by the Turkish government  in negotiations in Geneva last September, argues there is “huge untapped potential for the globalisation of healthcare services,” creating massive business opportunities from what is a $US6 trillion ($7.7 trillion) per year industry.

The proposed regime would involve health professionals authorising patients to be treated in other TiSA countries (for reasons including long waiting times in the home country or inadequate expertise for specific medical problems); and the patients’s costs being reimbursed through their home country’s social security system, private insurance coverage or other healthcare arrangements.

According to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, a further TiSA negotiation round in December 2014 made “good progress” in dealing with issues that included “facilitation of patient mobility”.

However, Professor Jane Kelsey, an expert on trade in services at the University of Auckland, warned that health-service-exporting countries such as Australia would find that qualified staff are diverted to health export services “that often have better pay and facilities, eroding the personnel base for public facilities and perpetuating inequalities in the health care system”.

Education and training investments may also be diverted “to benefit foreign healthcare users, rather than local citizens and taxpayers”.

Fifty countries including Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the EU (representing its 28 member countries) and the US are engaged in the TiSA negotiations, which began in 2013.

Mr Robb said the TiSA will “strengthen job-creating services” and that the Australian government wants an agreement “that supports each party’s right to protect public health”.

“As is common practice with many negotiations on international treaties, draft negotiating texts of the TiSA are not public documents,” Mr Robb wrote in a letter to the nurses and midwives’ union.

 
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