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- <text id=94TT1615>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Diplomacy:Business 1st Freedom 2nd
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 78
- Business First, Freedom Second
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Clinton's Indonesia trip underscores how he--and U.S. firms--will try to balance trade and human rights
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by James Carney with Clinton, Tom Curry/New York and
- J.F.O. McAllister/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Only a week before Bill Clinton was due to arrive in Indonesia
- for a state visit, a court in the northern city of Medan sentenced
- labor leader Muchtar Pakpahan to three years in prison. Pakpahan
- is the sixth official of the Indonesian Prosperity Trade Union
- to be convicted in connection with workers' riots that wrecked
- several factories and blocks of shops in Medan earlier this
- year. Sixteen of his colleagues are still on trial in what looks
- to many like an attempt to bust a union that the authoritarian
- Indonesian government views as dangerously independent. U.S.
- officials "deplored" Pakpahan's sentence and said Clinton would
- discuss the case and other "problems in the human-rights area,"
- including the closure of three influential publications, with
- Indonesia's President Suharto this week.
- </p>
- <p> The Medan court's timing probably was not coincidental, and
- it highlights the difficult balance Clinton is determined to
- maintain on his trip to Asia, which centers on a summit meeting
- in Bogor, Indonesia, of the 18-nation Asia-Pacific Economic
- Cooperation group. Clinton's commerce-oriented policy pits his
- drive for good relations and ever increasing trade with the
- nations of Asia against his avowed concerns for human rights.
- As a candidate, he jabbed at George Bush's China policy, saying
- the U.S. has "a higher purpose than to coddle dictators and
- stand aside from the global movement toward democracy." Last
- May he effectively amended that, detaching the issue of human
- rights from the annual review of free trade with China. The
- best way for the U.S. to advance freedom in China, he said,
- was through efforts "to intensify and broaden its relations"
- with Beijing.
- </p>
- <p> Before taking off last week for Manila en route to Indonesia,
- Clinton again expressed his confidence that he could have it
- both ways. "I don't think we have to choose," he said, "between
- increasing trade and fostering human rights and open societies."
- He would be frank about differences on these issues "as well
- as our potential partnerships with the Chinese, with the Indonesians
- and with others," he said.
- </p>
- <p> The diplomatic discussions in Bogor are not the only framework
- for the debate on trade and human rights. It has spread into
- the boardrooms of major U.S. corporations, onto factory floors
- in Asian countries and back to the counters at American shopping
- malls. International human-rights organizations are pressing
- multinational corporations to speak up for their workers abroad,
- and executives are considering codes of good labor conduct.
- Many Americans, now accustomed to boycotting lettuce, grapes
- and tuna fish for humanitarian and ecological reasons, are shifting
- their scrutiny to the conditions under which their running shoes
- and their kids' toys are produced. Those conditions often include
- a sweatshop pace, low wages, long working hours and little freedom
- for workers to organize or speak their mind.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton seemed to gloss over such concerns last May when he
- decided that China should retain its most-favored-nation trading
- status despite its intransigence on human-rights issues. In
- Asia, apparently, the business of America is business. Tony
- Lake, the President's National Security Adviser, is euphoric
- about the future for U.S. trade to be fashioned by the meeting
- in Indonesia, by a congressional vote on the new 123-nation
- world-trade agreement scheduled for next month, and by a Western
- Hemisphere summit in Miami in December. Taken together, he says,
- they will "shape the economic architecture of the next century."
- </p>
- <p> While designing this economic architecture, Clinton has promised,
- he will work with American business leaders on a voluntary set
- of principles for their activities in China and, by extension,
- other authoritarian states in Asia. Human-rights advocates thought
- they would hear the details before the President began this
- trip to Asia, but it did not happen. Human rights supporters
- and their sympathizers in the Administration, mostly at the
- State Department, have been pushed aside by the trade-first
- advocates. "Trade does take a priority," concedes one of the
- White House officials involved. "It is followed closely by support
- for democracy, followed by economic and political reform where
- possible, and then human rights."
- </p>
- <p> To his credit, Clinton did not simply let his pledge about a
- code of business principles slip away. In June the White House
- called a meeting of interested groups and collected about 30
- company codes for discussion. Bowman Cutter, the deputy head
- of the National Economic Council, who chaired the session, stressed
- that the principles were to be voluntary and developed from
- the bottom up, drawing on the best experience of businesses,
- and not by bureaucratic fiat.
- </p>
- <p> After that, the effort stalled. Most business executives dislike
- codes in any form because they fear voluntary rules will later
- turn into legislation, as was the case with South Africa and
- the Sullivan Principles, which required U.S. firms operating
- there to ban apartheid in the workplace and provide a range
- of benefits for workers. Businessmen with interests in China
- asked why they were being singled out--they were not violating
- anyone's rights--and opposed "country specific" codes.
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton's departure date for Indonesia approached, human-rights
- groups began pressing the White House for a major statement
- or the unveiling of a set of business principles. Commerce Secretary
- Ron Brown circulated the draft of a voluntary code to the chief
- executives of three major U.S. corporations--Kodak, Chrysler
- and TRW--for preliminary approval. Not only did those three
- balk, but several business groups lobbied the White House, arguing
- that a voluntary code would be only the first step toward regulation
- and also pointing out that the fuss could overshadow next month's
- congressional vote on the new trade pact negotiated under the
- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. The result: the principles
- have been deferred, and Clinton will not preach a human-rights
- sermon in Bogor. As a sort of welcome present, Indonesian Manpower
- Minister Abdul Latief said last Friday that his government would
- overhaul and liberalize its labor laws.
- </p>
- <p> Even without White House guidance from the top, some corporations
- are feeling enough pressure from below, sparked by advocacy
- groups, to put codes of their own into effect. Reebok's guidelines
- for its suppliers in Indonesia and elsewhere support the right
- of workers to organize and bargain collectively. American employees
- of Nike conduct weekly inspections of suppliers' factories in
- Indonesia to check on working conditions. Such measures are
- not foolproof, but they represent a major effort to make a difference.
- Levi Strauss dealt with the question of labor rights by pulling
- out of China altogether in 1992; Timberland did likewise this
- year. But many U.S. corporations doing business in Asia have
- not even thought about the need for a code.
- </p>
- <p> The issues involved are not easy to resolve. In most of Asia,
- factory workers have traditionally put in long hours for low
- wages and that, in fact, is why American enterprises have moved
- in. There is no consensus on what a fair wage might be (base
- pay runs as low as $1.75 a day in Indonesia), nor on the degree
- to which U.S. firms should challenge their host governments
- or support their workers in seeking political freedoms and the
- right to form unions. "Wages are only a small part of it," says
- a trade unionist in Jakarta. "What's important is that the workers
- have their dignity, and they'll only have that if they have
- the right to organize." The challenge is toughest in China,
- where the only legal organizer is the Communist Party, and workers
- can land in jail simply for complaining. "We can't have a code
- that requires American companies to break host country laws,"
- insists a business lobbyist in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> This is not good enough for human-rights advocates in the U.S.
- Deborah Leipziger, of the Council on Economic Priorities in
- New York City, rejects the argument often heard in Asia that
- Americans are trying to impose Western standards in order to
- make Asian products less competitive. "I don't buy it," she
- says, "because there are universal standards of human rights."
- Child labor should be banned, and there should be an international
- standard for calculating fair wages, she says. More specifically,
- Sidney Jones of Human Rights Watch/Asia insists American executives
- ought to protest to the Indonesian government about the sentencing
- of Pakpahan and other union leaders.
- </p>
- <p> The most important question is how to make Asian governments
- more responsive. To this the Administration has an answer: engagement
- over the long term. "We'll stay engaged," says a State Department
- official, "and keep articulating our view of what would represent
- progress for us." A White House official argues that economic
- growth and prosperity pave the way for better social and political
- conditions. "Coming into the mainstream ((of nations)) and shifting
- to markets," he says, "does in fact create trends that favor
- human rights."
- </p>
- <p> Behind the diplo-speak are the bargaining levers available to
- superpowers. The Chinese government is almost desperately trying
- to arrange a full-dress visit by Clinton to Beijing and is quietly
- being told it will have to pay something for it. The U.S. message
- is that Clinton cannot make the trip if it might look like a
- failure, and it cannot succeed unless China improves its human-rights
- performance. This approach has two virtues: it forces the two
- governments to discuss the issue directly, and it just might
- work.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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