Pitch Engine
The Property Pack

.

Corporations prepare to sue over action to save lives as pandemic reveals trade flaws

  • Written by Patrcia Ranald, Honorary Research fellow, University of Sydney
Corporations prepare to sue over action to save lives as pandemic reveals trade flawsPedro Lastra/Unsplash

Global companies are positioning themselves to use little-known rules in trade agreements such as the Comprehensive Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) to claim millions of dollars in compensation for restrictions imposed during the pandemic.

They and other companies have successfully lobbied for rules in the CPTPP...

Read more: Corporations prepare to sue over action to save lives as pandemic reveals trade flaws

More Articles ...

  1. The attacks are misguided: in a time of crisis the Bureau of Statistics is serving us well
  2. Coronavirus contact-tracing apps: most of us won’t cooperate unless everyone does
  3. Coronavirus TV 'support' package leaves screen writers and directors even less certain than before
  4. What just happened to the price of oil?
  5. Three simple things Australia should do to secure access to treatments, vaccines, tests and devices during the coronavirus crisis
  6. COVID-19 has laid bare how much we value women's work, and how little we pay for it
  7. The coronavirus supplement is the biggest boost to Indigenous incomes since Whitlam. It should be made permanent
  8. Open letter from 222 Australian economists: don't sacrifice health for 'the economy'
  9. The charts that show coronavirus pushing up to a quarter of the workforce out of work
  10. Protecting lives and livelihoods: the data on why New Zealand should relax its coronavirus lockdown from Thursday
  11. Virgin Australia gets a lifeline, but will it be enough?
  12. Don't panic: Australia has truly excellent food security
  13. Vital Signs: APRA's extraordinary gift to banks under pressure to pay dividends
  14. Unlocking Australia: What can benefit-cost analysis tell us?
  15. How will the coronavirus recession compare with the worst in Australia's history?
  16. A temporary income tax hike is the bitter but equitable pill Australia should swallow
  17. The next employment challenge from coronavirus: how to help the young
  18. This could be the end of the line for cruise ships
  19. The last thing companies should be doing right now is paying dividends
  20. What should we do with 1 billion hours of time? Australia's COVID-19 opportunity
  21. Vital Signs: a lesson from game theory the coronavirus contrarians ignore
  22. 50 years of bold predictions about remote work: it isn't all about technology
  23. JobKeeper is quick, dirty and effective: there was no time to make it perfect
  24. Why temporary migrants need JobKeeper
  25. Open letter to the prime minister: extend coronavirus support to temporary workers
  26. Coronavirus support packages will reshape the future economy, and that presents an opportunity
  27. Look who's talking: Australia's telcos, banks and supermarkets granted exemption to cartel laws
  28. Automatic doors: the simple technology that could help stop coronavirus spreading
  29. It is necessary to worry about health, but pessimism about the economy will hurt us
  30. The government opens a coronavirus super loophole: it's legal to put your money in, take it out, and save on tax
  31. The coronavirus response calls into question the future of super
  32. Why closing our borders to foreign workers could see fruit and vegetable prices spike
  33. JobKeeper payment: how will it work, who will miss out and how to get it?
  34. Australia's $130 billion JobKeeper payment: what the experts think
  35. The key to the success of the $130 billion wage subsidy is retrospective paid work
  36. Modelling suggests going early and going hard will save lives and help the economy
  37. New OECD estimates suggest a 22% hit to Australia's economy
  38. Delivery workers are now essential. They deserve the rights of other employees
  39. Give people and businesses money now they can pay back later (if and when they can)
  40. Rushed coronavirus tenancy laws raise as many questions as they answer
  41. 'Whatever it takes' should now include a universal basic income
  42. The case for a rent holiday for businesses on the coronavirus economic frontline
  43. Which jobs are most at risk from the coronavirus shutdown? 
  44. Five principles to follow if your job is to lead your staff through the coronavirus crisis
  45. Coronavirus supplement: your guide to the Australian payments that will go to the extra million on welfare
  46. Working from home: what are your employer's responsibilities, and what are yours?
  47. We're running out of time to use Endgame C to drive coronavirus infections down to zero
  48. 6 strategies to juggle work and young kids at home: it's about flexibility and boundaries
  49. It'd be a mistake to shut financial markets: more than ever, we need them to work
  50. Scalable without limit: how the government plans to get coronavirus support into our hands quickly