Rstofer, its the US's strong position that any "innovative financial products" of any kinds whatsoever, no matter how predatory, should be allowed. At several points you've described regulations we used to have in the past (funny how many Americans dont realize that the laws have been changed and especially, WHY) that violate the US's core trade goal, in financial services, DEREGULATION = "progressive liberalisation" which means ever less regulation, irreversibly, for corporations. SO for you to say that some financial products should not be allowed because people wont know they are falling into a trap. why you're sounding too much like me!
What we have now is a lot like feudalism, with serfs being bound to the land.
Look at it this way, an 'opening' is a concession, suddenly everything gets locked down by the trick of "having been paid for".
"Other countries' (corporations) traded concessions to get their rights to
exploit "serve" us, they paid for us fair and square. Thats what trade deals do.
If you then regulate - (you cant, its forbidden by an international agreement, thats why DoddFrank and the ACA are being eliminated, its
really being rolled back (!)..)
Because, since we committed to open health insurance in 1998, that also meant we could not fix it after that date, because doing so would spoil its profitability for this hypotetical foreign investor, so a million Americans have had to die (really!) to avoid doing anything that deprives banks (insurance companies, etc.) from all around the world of their
legitimate expectations of profits.
(Now thats likely a
crime against humanity because we had the money all along to fix it- but didnt, in fact as insurance companies are experts at
collecting money for decades and then dumping people when they get sick and then the government ends up paying,
it actually would have been cheaper and still would be - if we didnt count the compensation which soon we will in theory SOON have to pay, under the GATS article XXI procedure, to simply give everybody involved healthcare for free!) And as we committed to this path back in the 90s, they will claim to deserve and will likely ask the WTO to force us to pay them, compensation. And they will likely win because it will be undebatable that indeed, we
did add new regulations after February 26, 1998. Thats what will be at issue. Not whether any of our objections to the deal (postulating some future uncorrupt Administration, Congress, Senate, etc) make sense. Or not. Thats irrelevant. This is the system we have today, one which is totally rigged, so rigged they refuse to tell us about it knowing that they all would be laughed out of existence and office, and their deals would all be torn up.
Why do overseas banks want US customers? Lack of financial sophistication. Also, probably the least regulated market on Earth in a developed country.
Shouldnt we be happy that India wants our poor patients? Do insurance companies want the patients?
Not necessarily, their proposal is just for the WTO to force us to make health insurance portable, along with a bunch of other things, (one of them is making it easier to outsource engineers) The rich countries are dragging their feet on the promises they made back in the 1990s, and India wants the WTO to force us to open up our services to former WTO DG (and ex NZ PM) Michael Moore called the "cleansing disinfectant of competition". Neoliberalism is a sort of cult, that sees corporations as the future. They want a "world without walls" for corporations.
Nobody is asking anybody to lose any money. They couldn't, anyway, insurance is a business whose intent is making money. and the hope is to make the rest of the world less generaous and more business friendly, for example, they would like governments to stop helping the poor. Instead, they want a partnership among thieves, where governments eliminate the risk for them in exchange for the FS firms taking away their responsibilities to their people. irreversibly.
Conditions in the US in 1998 (the year signatories to the agreement linked below froze regulation, newer regulations were frozen) were a nightmare for people with any kind of chronic condition, but very nice for insurers.
Whether its housing, banking or health insurance, don't make any mistake that anybody is doing anything out of the goodness of their hearts, no its all about maximizing profit and eliminating moral hazard.
Using this system they will create a new normal which is the lowest common denominator of regulation. Just in time for millions to lose their jobs. Imagine that.
If foreign financial services firms have been hyped up to see our market as more valuable than it turns out to be, just like happens with housing, it might turn out to be mutual, because their markets may turn out to not be generating the growth that we expect because
we underestimate their level of exploitation and the lack of upward mobility there, too! After all, there is a reason countries like India have so many poor people, and it has nothing to do with America.. (despite how they would like to blame it on us) Its a problem thats been thousands of years in the making. Both India and China had very bad inequality, (even under Communism which starved maybe as many as 30 million people in rural areas to death in the early 60s in a completely avoidable, ideologically driven "famine" without the rest of the world even realizing it had happened.)
I think our corporations are overestimating their profit potential in developing markets, because they are underestimating the willingness of their rich to exploit their poor. So, using an allaged need to mistreat our poor more giving up the bird in the hand, giving up good jobs here, or sending our poor patients there, in order to get more business there, is nuts.
Nomatter what we do there likely are only a few decades at most, before almost everything that can be automated will be, even in poor countries, will be. That will mean poverty for billions of their unemployed and ours as well, and many now employed wont be - So they wont buy our products in large numbers, no matter what we do.. in other words they wont be "growth" or any kind of replacement for the middle class we're so eager to lose, in fact have already written off as gone, instead it will be a total disaster.
Instead both will stagnate but both sets of crooks will have extracted all sorts of promises and changes they NEVER could have gotten at the ballot box based on this back room con . But the system will then crash and god knows what will come put of it.
Quite possibly then we all lose.
For health insurers (think India and Brazil, in particular) and bankers and other financial service offerers, they've been trained to look at the US as a gold mine of financially unsophisticated people whose savings are higher than they would be elsewhere.
Ripe for the takings.
In exchange they are expected to let US banks do the same for to their people.
Don't foreign banks and health insurance firms deserve a little bit of that captive action?
After all, its practically free money, waiting to be
stolen earned?
No, its a symptom of a total decline which will lead the world into a pit of destruction. Give them an inch they will take a mile. Of course, thats why they are using trade deals to wipe out every hint of compassion, like the compassion you describe, rstofer - telling gullible people what kinds of cons they should avoid.
Once you start doing that, it will never stop. before you know it, the whole scheme goes down in flames and
nobody gets filthy rich, except the poor who work hard for it. Nobody (important) should ever have to do
that. Damn you!
/sarcasm.