Is it necessary to create a law of free competition?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5377/entorno.v0i31.7411Keywords:
Commercial development, Free competition, United States of America, El SalvadorAbstract
When our Legislative Assembly promises to publish the law of free competition, it contradicts laws and decrees previously approved. Our Government is in favor of "privatizations", and privatizations can take place in Europe, the United States or Japan.
The obscurity of the TLCs with the USA is not simply the lack of transparency in these treaties (the USA is still modifying the final treaty, of which there are three different copies in the Legislative Assembly), what will allow us to export and what others will not; The most fearsome of these treaties are the "Singapore issues": the "investments", which is an update of the Multilateral Investment Agreement (AMI) or the granting of equal treatment to foreign investments than to the national ones, the privatization of public services (case of telecommunications in Costa Rica), intellectual property rights, the full opening of all markets, together with massive subsidies to their agricultural products, plus the advantages of transgenic products. This issue appears in the comment quoted: An ALCA at two speeds.
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