vorweihnachtliche Botschaft

Nachdem die glitzernden Buden auf dem Straßburger Weihnachtsmarkt aufgebaut sind, erklingt -nur wenige Straßen weiter- aus dem EU-Parlament eine vorweihnachtliche Botschaft.

Mit Jerzy Buzek traut sich ein prominentes Mitglied des EU-Parlaments, deutliche Worte auszusprechen:

“The European Union is the solution to the crisis, not its cause”

Herzlichen Dank, lieber Herr Buzek, dass wir nun total entspannt und mit voller Inbrunst den EU-Choral anstimmen dürfen:

„Oh Du fröhliche, oh Du selige freudenspendende Konzerndemokratie ..“
… verflixt, irgendwie reimt sich das jetzt auf Knie 😉

Also erstmal zurück auf „square one“ und die Original-Weihnachtslyrik studieren.

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Ihr Oeconomicus


Mers-Coronavirus: Ein weiterer Fledermausvirus

Menschen sterben an einem unbekannten Virus. Forscher und Behörden spitzen die Ohren, als im Juni 2012 der erste Fall eines Patienten in Saudi-Arabien bekannt wird. Virologen arbeiten auf Hochtouren, auch in Deutschland.
Es ist ein neues Coronavirus, ähnlich dem bereits bekannten gefährlichen Sars-Erreger. Die Forscher nennen es Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers), Nahost-Atemwegssyndrom. Klar ist: Das Virus ist offenbar nicht hochinfektiös, greift aber alle Zelltypen der Lunge an. Wie Sars scheint auch dieser Erreger von Fledermäusen auf den Menschen übergesprungen zu sein.
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In Saudi-Arabien waren die Mediziner ratlos
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Das Virus greift die Lungenbläschen an
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Erste Impfstoffe in der Pipeline
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Mers-Virus – Von der Fledermaus aufs Kamel?
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Die Forscher ergreifen dennoch Vorsichtsmaßnahmen:

Kommt jemand mit einer schweren Lungeninfektion ins Krankenhaus, werden wir sicher genau schauen, ob es das Mers-Coronavirus ist, und eventuelle Schutzmaßnahmen einleiten“

sagt Torsten Wolff vom Robert Koch-Institut. Die Behörde hat bereits alle Intensivstationen ausdrücklich darauf hingewiesen, sensibel auf solche Fälle zu reagieren.

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Inka Reichert – Planet Wissen

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follow-up, 03.09.2014

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MERS-Virus fähig zur Pandemie?
Schon mehr als 800 Menschen haben sich mit dem MERS-Virus infiziert. Die Gefahr einer Ansteckung haben nun Bonner Forscher genau untersucht.
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laborwelt.de

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follow-up, 15.05.2014

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Deadly MERS Camel Virus Crosses Ocean to U.S.
The virus took its time crossing the Atlantic. And when the first patient suffering from Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) finally did turn up in the U.S., he made his way, improbably, to Munster, Ind.
A week later a second appeared, flying from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the home of the Magic Kingdom—Orlando, Fla. Both men are doctors who work in Saudi hospitals, the best places in the world right now to avoid if you do not want to catch what is officially known as the MERS coronavirus (MERS-CoV).
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Scientific American

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Geheimoperation transatlantisches Freihandelsabkommen (update 31. Januar 2014)

Angriff auf Demokratie und Verbraucherschutz?

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Meistens sind die Türen geschlossen, wenn die EU-Kommission mit der US-Regierung über gentechnisch veränderte Lebensmittel oder bisher in der EU verbotene Chlorhühnchen verhandelt.
Ziel ist ein Freihandelsabkommen mit den USA. Dabei steht viel auf dem Spiel.
Deutsche und EU-Gerichte sollen entmachtet werden, um die Interessen der Industrie durchzudrücken. Sind demokratische Grundprinzipen in Gefahr?

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Dazu Kommentare von
Lori M. Wallach, Global Trade Watch, USA – Mute Schimpf, Friends of the Earth, Europe – Yannick Jadot, Europe Écologie, französischer Europaabgeordneter – Stuart E. Eizenstat, Ehem.US-Botschafter, Transatlantic Business Council – Olivier Hoedeman, Corporate Europe Obserervatory, Brüssel – Bill Warren, Rechtsanwalt, Friends of the Earth, USA

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List of Tafta-meetings with stakeholders – 1. Januar 2012 bis 19. April 2013
PDF – [7 Seiten]

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Recipe for Ruin: TTIP the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
John Hilary, Executive Director of War on Want, introduces TTIP, the free trade and investment agreement being negotiated between the EU and USA; talk given to Friends of Le Monde Diplomatique at Café Diplo, London, 4 November 2013.

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Background of the preferential trade agreement

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TPP – Wikileaks has released another bombshell
Wikileaks has released another bombshell – this time publishing a portion of text from the secretly negotiated Trans Pacific Partnership. Now that the text is out in the open – will lawmakers in Washington finally realize how devastating the TPP is to the American economy?

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ANONYMOUS – Trans Pacific Partnership exposed!
Anonymous Australia’s message to the world, about the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement, how it affects you and how the corporate elite will do whatever it takes to make profit, at the cost of our well being, health, safety, economy, rights and environment. share this video far and wide.

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korrespondierende Archiv-Beiträge

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Ergänzungen und follow-up

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Volltext des Verhandlungsmandats – US-Veröffentlichung

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EU-Kommission zu den Investitionsverhandlungen zwischen der EU und den USA

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Finanzdienstleistungen im geplanten EU-US-Handelsabkommen TTIP

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Anmerkung:
Das wird spannend, insbesondere im Zusammenhang mit den unterschiedlichen Bilanz-Richtlinien (US-GAAP vs IAS/IFRS)

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EU Commission: Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

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TAFTA Financial Fact Sheet:
Bankers’ Backdoor Plan to Roll Back Wall Street Reform

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Europäische Integration – EU-Monitor – DEUTSCHE BANK AG – DB Research Management
Atlantische Einheit im weltweiten Wettbewerb: T-TIP in Perspektive
Autor: Klaus Günter Deutsch
PDF – [25 Seiten]

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Fact sheet – EU Commission
(November 2013)
Investment Protection and Investor-to-State Dispute Settlement in EU agreements
PDF [10 pages]

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EU and US Insurers Support Including Financial Services in TTIP

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03.01.2014
Campact-Kampagne gegen das EU-US Handelsabkommen TTIP
Stellungnahme der EU-Kommission zum Campact online-Aufruf, TTIP zu stoppen

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21.01.2014 – Pressemitteilung der EU-Kommission
(Hervorhebungen und Links durch Oeconomicus)

Commission to consult European public on provisions in EU-US trade deal on investment and investor-state dispute settlement
EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht today announced his decision to consult the public on the investment provisions of a future EU-US trade deal, known as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). The decision follows unprecedented public interest in the talks. It also reflects the Commissioner’s determination to secure the right balance between protecting European investment interests and upholding governments’ right to regulate in the public interest. In early March, he will publish a proposed EU text for the investment part of the talks which will include sections on investment protection and on investor-to-state dispute settlement, or ISDS. This draft text will be accompanied by clear explanations for the non-expert. People across the EU will then have three months to comment.

EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said:
„Governments must always be free to regulate so they can protect people and the environment. But they must also find the right balance and treat investors fairly, so they can attract investment. International investment agreements like TTIP should ensure they do both. But some existing arrangements have caused problems in practice, allowing companies to exploit loopholes where the legal text has been vague. I know some people in Europe have genuine concerns about this part of the EU-US deal. Now I want them to have their say. I have been tasked by the EU Member States to fix the problems that exist in current investment arrangements and I’m determined to make the investment protection system more transparent and impartial, and to close these legal loopholes once and for all. TTIP will firmly uphold EU member states‘ right to regulate in the public interest.“

In June 2013 EU governments instructed the European Commission to negotiate a new EU-US trade and investment agreement, the TTIP, on their behalf. This included measures on the treatment of investors known as investment protection and investor-to-state dispute settlement (ISDS).

The Commission wants to use the opportunity to improve investment provisions already in place to protect investments by EU-based companies in the US, and vice versa. In practice this would mean referring explicitly in the deal to states‘ right to regulate in the public’s interest. It would also see new and improved rules, including a code of conduct, to ensure arbitrators are chosen fairly and act impartially, and to open up their proceedings to the public.

No other part of the negotiations is affected by this public consultation and the TTIP negotiations will continue as planned.

Since June 2013 the Commission has held three rounds of stakeholder consultations, both before and during talks on the agreement, to gather the views and wishes of the public and interested parties across Europe. The Commission has also done public consultations before the start of the TTIP negotiations.

Background

The EU is the world’s largest foreign direct investor and the biggest recipient of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the world. Investment is essential for growth, for jobs and for creating the wealth that pays for our public services, our schools, our hospitals and our pensions.

So the EU must ensure our companies are well protected when they invest in countries outside the EU, including the US. Most investments go ahead smoothly and benefit both the state where the investment is made and the investor. But sometimes investors face problems in the country in question. The government might seize the company’s property without compensating it. Or it might give local businesses an unfair advantage, or stop foreign companies from using the justice system when things go wrong.

For such cases, companies count on bilateral investment agreements. These offer them protection, including the chance to use another option – Investor-to-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) – if they haven’t been able to find an amicable solution with the government of the country concerned.

European Union (EU) countries already have some 1400 such agreements in place with countries outside the EU, including the United States. Some date back as far as the 1960s. These include investment protection provisions and ISDS. They are an important protection against these unfair actions by governments. And they can be necessary: European companies were behind every second investment case launched in 2012.

The EU’s international investment policy, including its policy with the US, seeks to retain the value of the current system for protecting international investors. But it also aims to make these rules clearer, more transparent and impartial than they are today. That means ensuring that non-discriminatory regulation in the public interest will not be subject to successful challenges.

So since 2010 the European Commission has been working on clarifying and improving the international investment protection system – the rules themselves, and the way they’re enforced. In future, all EU investment agreements, including the TTIP, will set out new rules, including a code of conduct, to ensure arbitrators are chosen fairly and act impartially. And they’ll open up arbitration proceedings to the public.

The EU-US negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) started in July 2013 and aim at removing trade barriers in a wide range of economic sectors to make it easier to buy and sell goods and services between the EU and the US. The third round of negotiations took place in Washington DC in December 2013 (press release) and the next round is scheduled for March 2014.

Further information

This Factsheet summarises the EU’s changes to existing investment protection rules and the ISDS system.
For more information on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP):
http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/in-focus/ttip/

Public consultations by the European Commission’s DG Trade
http://trade.ec.europa.eu/consultations/

Contacts :
John Clancy (+32 2 295 37 73)
Helene Banner (+32 2 295 24 07)

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TTIP – Das Märchen vom Jobmotor
Nach den ‚politischen Heilsversprechen‘ von EU und Bundesregierung soll das transatlantische Freihandelsabkommen mit den USA hunderttausende Arbeitsplätze schaffen und Europa aus der Wirtschaftskrise helfen. Allerdings: Die beeindruckenden Wachstums-Zahlen beruhen auf völlig unrealistischen Szenarien, wie etwa dem Beitritt der USA zur Europäischen Union. Kritiker sprechen von einer beispiellosen Werbekampagne, um die wachsende Sorge vor Demokratieverlust und dem Abbau von Verbraucherrechten zu überdecken. Genau darauf deutet auch ein geheimes Strategiepapier der EU hin, das MONITOR vorliegt.

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korrespondierende Presse-Meldungen:

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Freihandel: EU setzt Verhandlungen mit USA teilweise aus
Lukas Sustala – derStandard

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Sovereignty fears lead to EU-US trade rethink
Oliver Wright – The Independent