President Obama: “Spirit of the OECD Can Guide Us” on Climate Change

L-R: President Barack Obama and OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria (Photo credit: OECD)
L-R: President Barack Obama and OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria (Photo credit: OECD)

President Barack Obama visited the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on December 1 during his visit to Paris for the United Nations climate talks (COP21). Obama acknowledged the OECD’s position as a key actor in the global economy, and showed appreciation for the organization’s international comparative analysis, including work on taxes, gender and anti-corruption.

During a press conference at OECD headquarters, just seven miles from where climate negotiations took place at Le Bourget, Obama delivered a powerful message on the need to reach an ambitious agreement at COP21, and he expressed the United States’s support on that score. Obama then signed the livre d’or of the OECD with the following statement:

To the leaders and staff of the OECD – as the world gathers to meet the challenges of climate change, the spirit of the OECD can guide us. 

May our nations come together in cooperation and peace to protect our planet and improve the lives of our people.”

– Barack Obama

In addition to Obama, several other heads of state came through the OECD during  COP21, in which many directorates held well-attended side events at the OECD’s dedicated space.

 

Curbing Corruption and Providing a Level Playing Field for International Business

Eva Hampl (USCIB)

Corruption is a major obstacle to economic and social development around the world and adds considerable risk to doing business globally. On the occasion of the International Anti-Corruption Day this week, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) organized a roundtable with the OECD Working Group on Bribery, calling for close private sector involvement in an ambitious OECD strategy to fight corruption and bribery.

“BIAC considers the OECD a key organization in the fight against bribery and corruption”, said Klaus Moosmayer of Siemens, chair of the BIAC Task Force on Anti-Corruption/Bribery. “Close public-private cooperation is essential to effectively curb corruption and provide a real level playing field for international business.”

The roundtable focused on two major topics where in BIAC’s opinion the OECD can play a key role:

(1) Addressing the demand side of bribery to help establish the necessary confidence for the business community, recognizing that solicitation poses a serious challenge for firms and discourages them from investing in countries where bribe demands are frequent, and

(2) Helping governments put in place a framework that incentivizes companies to build robust compliance programs and to self-report compliance breaches. If companies can be given legal certainty of not being punished for their cooperation, this can lead to major improvements in the fight against corruption.

Eva Hampl, USCIB’s director for investment, trade and financial services participated in the roundtable and spoke about the need to increase transparency and encourage companies to self-report instances of bribery.

BIAC calls upon the OECD and its members to forcefully engage themselves and foster international cooperation in these areas, working closely with the private sector.

Washington Update: October – November 2015

During the months of October and November 2015, USCIB staff testified before the U.S. government on China, addressed the OECD on the future of trade, presented to the G20 on investment, briefed Caroline Atkinson in the White House on B20 recommendations, chaired programs at the IGF in Brazil, arranged meetings with Hill staff on customs reauthorization legislation, filed a submission with USTR for the National Trade Estimate, met with U.S. Ambassador to the OECD Daniel Yohannes, and much more.

Download the Washington Update

USCIB Congratulates PepsiCo on Winning Transparency International-USA’s Coveted Corporate Leadership Award

TI_awardFor the fourth time in five years, a USCIB member company has won the coveted Corporate Leadership Award from the U.S. chapter of Transparency International, the global anti-corruption organization.

PepsiCo was presented the award at the December 3 Integrity Award Dinner in Washington, D.C.  PepsiCo General Counsel and Senior Vice President for Government Affairs Tony West accepted the award. PepsiCo was honored for its strong commitment to creating an ethical culture and upholding high standards of corporate citizenship, integrity, transparency, and accountability.

TI-USA also presented its integrity award to former President Jimmy Carter.  Ambassador Stuart Eizenstat of USCIB-member law firm Covington & Burling accepted the award on behalf of President Carter.

USCIB Vice President Shaun Donnelly, a member of TI-USA’s policy advisory board, represented USCIB at the award dinner.

USCIB, Bloomberg Hold Conference on TPP & New Trade Rules in the 21st Century

L-R: Scott Miller (CSIS) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB)
L-R: Scott Miller (CSIS) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB)

With the release of the full text of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement last month, companies and business groups are poring over the text to assess the potential impact of the 12-nation pact – one of the most ambitious and potentially transformative trade agreements in decades. On December 2, USCIB partnered with Bloomberg BNA to organize a day-long event at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York titled “The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Interpreting New Rules for Trade in the 21st Century.”

Architects of the TPP, business representatives and think tank scholars gathered for panel discussions about whether TPP delivers on its promise to open markets, how the agreement will promote digital trade and innovation, how TPP will create a more level field for investment, and whether the agreement will address non-tariff barriers. Shaun Donnelly, USCIB’s vice president for investment and financial services, spoke on the investment panel.

Other partners in organizing the event included Covington & Burling, the National Foreign Trade Council and the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Market Access

“TPP is an exportation of American commercial values and U.S. values with respect to labor and the environment,” said Gary Hufbauer, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. The agreement will open many markets for U.S. products that weren’t accessible in the past. TPP is also forward-looking, in that the benefits that accrue to the U.S economy due to trade liberalization will continue indefinitely, and the agreement opens the door to further liberalization and to the possibility of new countries joining in the future.

For many of the other 11 members of the agreement, TPP serves as an impetus for domestic economic reforms and further market openings noted John Veroneau, former deputy U.S. Trade Representative and now a partner at Covington & Burling. Panelists also noted that because that multilateral trade talks at the World Trade Organization are stalled, plurilateral agreements like TPP are the next best option for pushing forward economic liberalization and establishing new global rules for trade.

Although certain industries have some concerns about the agreement, such as limited pharmaceutical patent protection and carving out the financial services sector from the ban on local data storage restrictions, the business community as a whole appears supportive of the agreement. Many business groups including USCIB continue to review it.

Most importantly, panelists said TPP will export American rule-o- law to the Asia-Pacific region, making it easier and less risky for companies to do businesses in countries with vastly differing levels of economic development. Expanded free trade will also benefit low-income consumers, since prices on goods such as clothing and food will fall once TPP takes effect.

“Using TPP to strengthen the rule-of-law in other countries is more important, in the long term, than tariff reductions,” concluded Veroneau.

Digital Trade and Innovation

L-R: Dorothy Dwoskin (Microsoft) and Ed Brzytwa (ITI)
L-R: Dorothy Dwoskin (Microsoft) and Ed Brzytwa (ITI)

TPP is the first trade agreement that explicitly recognizes the importance of e-commerce for the global economy. As such, the agreement includes many provisions that will be beneficial to all businesses, such as IP protections, criminal penalties for trade secret theft, forbidding restrictions on cross-border data flows, and preventing localization requirements on data processing and storage centers.

“TPP’s IP chapter speaks to how we see the world,” said USCIB member Ed Brzytwa (Information Technology Industry Council). “All companies rely on cross-border data flows.” The agreement states that all parties must allow cross-border data transmissions.

Panelists also noted that TPP offers a roadmap to developing countries such as Vietnam that want to become digital economies.

In terms of the agreement’s benefits to business in the digital trade space, panelists said that TPP affirms IP principles, protection of trade secrets, and strengthens IP law. TPP is setting the new trade rules that will influence other trade agreements, and the agreement contains all the provisions that businesses like to see: transparency, due process, and predictability. Finally, TPP combats digital protectionism.

“TPP is a club that other countries in Asia can’t afford not to be in,” said USCIB member Dorothy Dwoskin (Microsoft).

USCIB member Gina Vetere (Covington & Burling) emphasized the importance of strong intellectual property provisions in TPP to protect and incentivize American innovation and jobs.

Investment Policy

Investment provisions in trade agreements have become top-of-mind for many companies in recent years, because in order to access foreign markets and succeed in the United States, businesses must invest heavily abroad. As a result, much attention has been focused on investment agreements in general and specific provisions of the TPP agreement such as Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), which offers private investors a neutral, fair arbitral option for settling investment disputes with foreign governments.

Panelists noted that as a whole, TPP protects U.S. investors. One area of concern brought up by USCIB’s Donnelly is the agreement’s carve-out of the tobacco sector from access to the ISDS arbitration provisions, which establishes the unfortunate precedent of governments politicizing access to key provisions of a trade agreement.

“It’s a slippery-slope problem,” said Donnelly. “Now countries have carte blanche to discriminate against or do whatever they want with certain sectors they deem to be bad.”

Overall though, panelists agreed that the business community is looking forward to the agreement’s approval and entry into force. Business seeks clear, enforceable rules that are stable and predictable, and TPP helps establish a friendly environment for investment among the 12 member countries. And despite some public criticism of ISDS, the TPP negotiators have been responsive to concerns about transparency in the arbitration process, and provisions have been included in the agreement that makes the ISDS process open to public scrutiny.

On investment, TPP is attractive to business because it opens up more sectors to foreign investment, and helps makes those investments less risky. Proof of the agreement’s appeal lies in the fact that several other countries are already eager to try to join, including the Philippines, Taiwan (Province of China) and South Korea.

“TPP is magnetic,” said Scott Miller, senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “Many countries want to join.”

Cutting Red Tape

Although tariffs are problematic, the largest barriers to trade in the 21st century are non-tariff barriers, or red tape of any stripe. These include technical barriers to trade such as in-country testing requirements for products, localization requirements and burdensome customs procedures.

Ed Gresser, director of policy planning and acting assistant U.S. Trade Representative for trade policy and economics, described TPP as an agreement that is “large, comprehensive, and forward-looking.” As a trade agreement among 12 Pacific-Rim countries, TPP is larger than all other free trade agreements combined. The agreement is comprehensive because it addresses specific concerns of individual industries, and it seeks to streamline the standard-setting process to eliminate technical barriers to trade. And TPP is future-looking because it takes the digital economy into account by preventing restrictions on cross-border data-flows, and because the agreement will be open to new members joining.

TPP addresses many non-tariff barriers, with provisions that harmonize standard-setting, eliminate localization barriers, simplify customs documents, and requires all parties to allow electronic payment across borders.

A key take-away from the event’s panels was that TPP is a critical component of the United States’ pivot to Asia, as the agreement creates new standards for global trade based on American values.

“TPP will export our system of values and laws,” said Donnelly.

The event program and a full list of speakers are available on Bloomberg BNA’s website

Business Groups Urge Progress on Environmental Goods Agreement

Solar-workers_3As negotiations on an ambitious international climate agreement are underway in Paris this week, on December 1, the Coalition for Green Trade – of which USCIB is a co-chair – published a global industry letter calling for swift progress on the World Trade Organization’s Environmental Goods Agreement (EGA) ahead of the 10th WTO Ministerial Conference in Nairobi, Kenya later this month.

The EGA would eliminate tariffs on environmental goods and services, such as wind turbines, water treatment filters, and solar water heaters. Liberalizing trade on environmental goods would improve access to the technologies necessary for green growth. Negotiations on the EGA began in July 2014 among 13 economies and the European Union. Since then three more countries joined the agreement – Iceland, Israel and Turkey.

“Industries across the globe strongly endorse efforts to negotiate an EGA that is commercially significant, negotiated in a timely fashion, implementable and adequately flexible to accommodate and adjust to innovation,” stated the letter, signed by nearly 60 business organizations. “To this end, we call on negotiators to make substantial progress towards an ambitious outcome by the 10th Ministerial Conference of the WTO to be held in Nairobi, Kenya from 15 to 18 December 2015.”

The letter comes as trade officials gather in Geneva this week to negotiate an outcome ahead of the upcoming WTO ministerial.”  As negotiations move forward, USCIB and other associations will continue to an ambitious, high-standard, and forward-looking agreement.

 

Global Business Calls on G20 to Deliver on Growth and Employment

g20Business has called on world leaders gathering in Antalya, Turkey for the 2015 G20 Summit to commit to a four-point agenda to revitalize GDP growth and kick-start job creation across the world’s largest economies. USCIB members contributed to ongoing work by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the International Organization of Employers (IOE) and the Business & Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) to inform the G20 process.

World leaders arrive in Antalya with the global economy at an apparent crossroads: GDP growth remains sluggish and youth unemployment stands at a record global average of over 13 percent. Worryingly, trade flows, which have historically been an important driver of growth and job creation, recorded an unanticipated 6 percent drop through the first half of this year.

Against this backdrop, CEOs from the ICC-led B20 International Business Advisory Council have outlined four key areas for urgent action:

  1. Ratify and implement the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA)
  2. Take concrete actions to create more opportunities for women and young people in the labor market
  3. Establish country-specific infrastructure strategies to boost investment in much needed infrastructure projects worldwide
  4. Improve SME access to finance

ICC has responded to the release of the G20 Leaders’ communiqué at the conclusion of the summit. Read more on the ICC’s website.

Addressing the G20 heads of state and government on Sunday BIAC Chairman Phil O’ Reilly called for structural reforms for dynamic and inclusive labor markets.

O’Reilly underlined the “pressing need” for the G20 heads of state and government to adopt predictable and productivity-enhancing structural policies, both in product and labor markets.

“What we are really talking about are policies that promote open and competitive markets for investment and trade, access to finance, a predictable regulatory environment, flexible labor markets and measures to support innovation and entrepreneurship,” said O’Reilly. He noted overriding need for business confidence to be strengthened in order for investment to flow.

With a focus on policies for job creation, O’Reilly identified the key areas the G20 Leaders had to address to stimulate private sector employment. Measures included removing barriers to starting, operating and growing a business; creating easy-to-understand, employment-friendly labor laws; promoting a variety of forms of employment to allow maximum opportunities for hiring; decreasing the burden of non-wage labor costs and creating an attractive regulatory framework for apprenticeship systems.

As the world looks ahead to the G20 presidency transferring to China for 2016, there was a clear message from the B20 that the Leaders could not take a business as usual approach to employment policy: “A sense of urgency must now underpin the implementation of the previous commitments of G20 governments,” O’Reilly concluded.

USCIB Weighs in on Future of Trade at OECD Global Trade Forum

Mulligan_trade_forum_copy
L-R: Joakim Reiter (UNCTAD) and Rob Mulligan (USCIB)

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) held its global trade forum on November 3 in Paris, convening representatives from government, business and the OECD for a discussion on the prospects of future trade flows and the impact of government policy on economic growth.

Rob Mulligan, USCIB’s senior vice president for policy and government affairs, spoke on a panel at the global trade forum about alternative approaches to trade policies. He and other panelists discussed which polices will ensure that trade and investment continue to lead to growth and jobs. Other speakers on Mulligan’s panel included Ambassador Jonathan Fried, Canada’s representative to the World Trade Organization and Joakim Reiter, deputy secretary general of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).

The day-long trade forum sought to take stock of changing global trade patterns and determine what can be done about the recent slowdown in trade growth. At the multilateral level, WTO negotiations remain stalled, while countries focus on regional and plurilateral initiatives to open markets among a smaller number of interested economies. The advent of the major emerging economies, as well as global value chains which have fragmented production around the world, have also contributed to dramatic shifts in trade patterns in recent decades.

Speaking on behalf of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD and of USCIB member companies, Mulligan gave a business perspective on the future of trade.

“It is critical for governments to keep in mind the need for businesses to be adjusting, and often very quickly, in order to stay competitive and grow,” Mulligan said. “Government policies can have a significant impact on the moves by business positively or negatively.”

He explained that international companies have built global value chains to establish a framework for accessing foreign markets in a flexible and cost-efficient way. When constructing these global networks, companies consider a range of factors such as the potential market for their products, rule of law, strong infrastructure, skilled workforce and localization rules, and it is important for governments to understand how these factors drive the way companies pursue global markets.

Mulligan suggested that the same principles that the business community has advocated in the past will still apply in the future. Government should avoid unnecessary regulation, and when it is necessary, it should be designed as the least trade-restrictive approach that accomplishes the policy objective. He also stressed that governments should coordinate with each other to ensure that regulations are consistent across countries, as coherent regulatory regimes make it easier for companies to grow and create jobs.

Washington Update: August – September 2015

During the months of August and September 2015, USCIB arranged meetings with a wide range of U.S. and international officials, including Daniel Bahar, deputy AUSTR for investment; Christopher Mondini, vice president, stakeholder engagement, ICANN; Linda Kromjong, secretary general of the International Organization of Employers (IOE); and Tony Pipa, U.S. Department of State special coordinator for the 2030 Development Agenda.

USCIB also submitted comments to USTR on China’s WTO Commitments; joined industry letters on China’s protectionist technology policies and proposed changes to the U.S. Model Income Tax Treaty; posted a blog on investment in the TPP; and much more.

Download the Washington Update.

 

Washington Update: June – July 2015

During the months of June and July 2015, USCIB hosted the tenth annual OECD International Tax Conference, with over 300 participants; held committee meetings with high-level individuals such as Angela Ellard, Chief Trade Counsel for the House Ways and Means Committee, Theresa Swinehart, ICANN Senior Advisor to the President on Global Strategy, Maria Luisa Boyce, U.S. CBP, and Guillermo Luz, COO of the APEC 2015 CEO Summit; hosted a briefing for members on U.S.-China and OECD-China engagement; sent letters to Congress urging support of TPA; advocated for strong investment protections in several panels, presentations and media interviews; and much more.

Download the Washington Update