Abstract

BackgroundObligations arising from trade and investment agreements can affect how governments can regulate and organise health systems. The European Union has made explicit statements of safeguarding policy space for health systems. We assessed to what extent health systems were safeguarded in trade negotiations using the European Union (EU) negotiation proposals for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) and the negotiated agreement for the EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA).MethodsWe assessed if and to what extent the European Union policy assurances were upheld in trade negotiations. Our assessment was made using three process tracing informed tests. The tests examined: i) what was covered in negotiation proposals of services and investment chapters, ii) if treatment of health services differed from treatment of another category of services (audiovisual services) with similar EU Treaty considerations, and iii) if other means of general exceptions, declarations or emphases on right to regulate could have resulted in the same outcome.ResultsOur analysis shows that the European Union had sought to secure policy space for publicly funded health services for services chapter, but not for investment and investment protection chapters. In comparison to audiovisual services, exceptions for health services fall short from those on audiovisual services. There is little evidence that the same outcome could have been achieved using other avenues.ConclusionsThe European Union has not achieved its own assurances of protection of regulatory policy space for health services in trade negotiations. The European Union trade negotiation priorities need to change to ensure that its negotiation practices comply with its own assurances for health services and sustainable financing of health systems.

Highlights

  • Obligations arising from trade and investment agreements can affect how governments can regulate and organise health systems

  • In contrast to listing of services to be included to the agreement, the negotiations in the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) and the Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) have moved towards “North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)“– style of negotiations

  • In the CETA [36] negative listing of reservations in the annexes have been further divided to three categories of listing, with i) a list of services with “incompatible” regulation, which will be automatically included under the agreement obligations, if the law or regulations are changed, ii) the list which allows policy space for future regulation, which is not compatible with the trade agreement obligations, and iii) the third very short list including fully removed services

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Summary

Introduction

Obligations arising from trade and investment agreements can affect how governments can regulate and organise health systems. European Union formal policy stance on trade and investment is that [17]: “EU trade agreements do not and will not prevent governments, at any level, from providing, supporting or regulating services in areas such as water, education, health, and social services, nor will they prevent policy changes regarding the financing or organisation of these services”. This policy stance is from the key EU trade policy document in 2015 and echoes what was emphasised in a joint statement on public services by EU and US in 2015 for TTIP negotiations [18]

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