Sure.
The first example I used was of course the instance of actually creating a mechanism to apply meaningful sanctions against Panama and transactions with Panama if Panama continues to refuse to clean up its act.
Under the FTA, that would be seen as a restriction on transfers, which then the Panamanian government or a company incorporated in Panama, which could include a Canadian company that had a Panamanian subsidiary, attacking then a Canadian regulation.... That's one of the examples.
Another example that is also common to the chapter 11 language from NAFTA is the minimum standard of treatment from article 9.06 of the Panama deal, which accords a customary international law minimum standard for the treatment of aliens. This sounds fine, but investor-state tribunals have been willing to consider the decisions of other investor-state tribunals when they articulate what the content of that standard means.
So you have runaway tribunals that are deciding that a regulation that a company was not expecting to come down the pipe could be a surprise and could interfere with the investor's expectations. Then you have other tribunals citing that decision as an example of the practice of governments. This is a very broad standard that could paralyze a wide range of regulatory actions, and it's one concern.
Another aspect of the agreement is article 9.15, which has a provision that allows Canada to deny the benefits of the agreement to a company that does not have substantial business presence in Panama. So a Panama-registered firm attacks a Canadian public interest regulation, and Canada has the ability to say that company does not have substantial business interest in Panama—it's a pure shell company—and we don't have to accord it the FTA treatment. However, the definition of substantial business activities has been interpreted in a very minimal way in past tribunals. So you've had investor-state tribunals decide that having as few as two employees and a bit of a paper trail in the country is enough to constitute a substantial business presence.
There are a lot of rules here. It's not a question of being for trade or against trade, or for trade agreements or against trade agreements. But there are provisions in this text--some of which are based on the NAFTA chapter 11 model--that could use some improving. I think that would go a long way towards alleviating some of the tax haven concerns that perhaps constituents are raising.