‘stop the
China FTA’ at the final hurdle, a vote in federal parliament.
The union’s main claim is that the FTA
locks out Australian workers by making it easier for Chinese companies
investing in Australia to import Chinese labour. In response, the Australian
Labor Party opposition leader, Bill Shorten, has committed the party to ‘fight’ to amend the agreement. Of course, to do so after it
has been signed would amount to reopening negotiations. This would be an
unprecedented step that would open up the possibility of China also seeking
changes to the agreement.
At the outset it’s useful to remember what
Australia does not give up.
The FTA doesn’t make it easier for Chinese
investors to buy Australian residential real estate, Australian rural land or
agribusinesses. There’s no change in the rules for Chinese government-owned
companies wanting to buy Australian assets either.
Private Chinese investors will be able to buy assets in
non-sensitive sectors with a value up to AU$1.1 billion (approximately US$804
million) without needing approval from the Foreign Investment Review Board
(FIRB). That’s up from the current value of AU$252 million (approximately
US$184 million).
But this is hardly a big concession.
Australia gave investors from the US, New Zealand and Chile the higher
threshold years ago. And more recently Japan and South Korea have been added to
the list. There will also be some small tariff cuts such as getting rid of a
5-per-cent duty on clothes made in China. But again, the same small tariff cuts
have already been given to Australia’s other big trading partners.
And then there’s what Australia gains.
China is offering to slash tariffs by up to
30 per cent on goods made in Australia. No wonder the National
Farmers Federation were effusive in their praise that the deal would
‘…provide billions of dollars in export value to Australian farmers’.
China is also giving Australian businesses
best-ever access to its rapidly growing services sector.
There’s also a most favoured nation clause
thrown in for good measure. This means if China strikes a better deal with
another country in the future then Australian producers will receive the same
benefits.
Now back to the objections.
Union anger is mostly directed at a
memorandum of understanding (MOU) on investment facilitation arrangements (IFAs). But IFAs only
set up the possibility of bringing in skilled labour on large scale
infrastructure projects in certain economic sectors. For example, IFAs do not
apply to residential real estate projects.
In June 2015 critics of the FTA claimed it was a fact that IFAs meant there was no need for
companies to prove they couldn’t find skilled Australian workers before
bringing them in from China.
But it’s right there in the MOU: ‘A labour
agreement will … set out the number, occupations and terms and conditions with
the terms of the IFA … including any requirements for labour market testing’.
So now they’ve switched to a different objection: ‘[T]he interpretation of what
constitutes sufficient labour market testing is entirely left up to the
department [of Immigration and Border Protection]’.
The key consideration is that it will be
the Australian government, answerable to the voting public, that will set the
bar on labour market testing, not the Chinese government or Chinese companies.
There’s another reason why Australian
workers will be favoured. The MOU adds: ‘All direct employers under an IFA and
workers granted visas under an approved IFA labour agreement will be required
to comply with applicable Australian laws, including workplace law, work safety
law and relevant Australian licensing, regulation and certification standards’.
That means if Australian workers are
available there’s nothing to be gained by bringing them in from China.
Some fear that employers may try to skirt
these rules. But in that case the solution is to enforce the rules that the
agreement clearly sets out, not seek to renegotiate the agreement itself.
Another union complaint is a side letter to the FTA that removes a mandatory
skills assessment for temporary workers from China in 10 professions, including
electricians. But this requirement was only introduced in 2009 and applied to
just 10 countries. Temporary workers from the world’s other 150
plus countries never had to worry. The skill level needed to get a visa won’t
change. And if the Australian authorities want further assessment, they reserve
the right to ask under the Australia–China FTA.
Finally, there are fears that an Investor State Dispute Settlement mechanism included in the
agreement could allow Chinese companies to sue the Australian government if it
introduced policy measures that damaged their commercial interests. But legal experts emphasise two points. First, the ISDS is
two-way: it acts to protect Australian companies in China just as it does
Chinese companies in Australia. Second, the protections covered by ISDS in the
Australia–China FTA are limited compared with other trade agreements and
only extend to ‘national treatment’. All this means is that policy measures
cannot discriminate between Australian and Chinese firms. For example, there’s
nothing stopping the Australian government from introducing a tax as long as
the tax applies to both Australian and Chinese companies.
Writing in The Australian
newspaper recently Rowan Callick was right to say that the cost of eroding the Australia–China FTA is too big. Even in the detail the
objections don’t stack up.
James Laurenceson is the deputy director of the Australia China Relations
Institute (ACRI) at the University of Technology, Sydney.
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