IP Protection Key to Russias Economic Development and Growth, ICC BASCAP Warns Leaders

4395_image002The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) told business leaders and government officials – including Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev – gathered in Moscow for the International Forum on Anti-counterfeiting 2012 that efforts to stabilize the economy and stimulate economic growth must include intellectual property rights (IPR) protection in order to drive innovation, development and jobs.

“This conference comes at an important time as Russia joins the World Trade Organization (WTO) and takes on direct participation in the WTO Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS),” wrote ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier in an open letter to the Forum participants. “Russia’s adoption of TRIPs will be a significant boost to the fight against counterfeiting – here in the Russian Federation and worldwide.”

Representing ICC’s Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting and Piracy (BASCAP) initiative at the Forum, BASCAP Director Jeffrey Hardy presented the findings from the BASCAP report “Promoting and Protecting Intellectual Property Rights in the Russian Federation”.  The report sets out BASCAP’s recommendations for policy and legislative changes needed to bring Russia’s IP regime and IP enforcement efforts up to international standards.

Just 20 years ago, Russia was one of the worst IPR infringers in the world, and even with some recent reforms, counterfeiting and piracy in Russia still amounts to a staggering 24% of key retail sales, equal to nearly a trillion rubles, according to the report.

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

BASCAP – Promoting and Protecting Intellectual Property in the Russian Federation

New Portal Showcases Benefits of Open Markets for FDI

4394_image001New York, N.Y., October 16, 2012 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) today joined with six other business associations to launch a new online information clearinghouse, Investment Policy Central, highlighting the importance of an open climate for foreign direct investment in driving U.S. economic growth, trade and jobs.

“USCIB has long been a leading voice for open investment policies, on both inward and outward FDI flows,” stated USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson. “We are excited about this new website as way to spread our message, and those policies, more widely.”

Investment Policy Central is now live at www.investmentpolicycentral.com.

The business groups said Investment Policy Central will serve as a center of excellence for the most accurate, up-to-date information on the benefits of an open international investment climate. The site presents facts and figures on investment, highlights the benefits of global investment, debunks common investment myths and provides links to a wide range of resources on investment policy.

Investment Policy Central will feature timely, relevant content from experts on investment policy. Site organizers said they would welcome suggestions and input from companies, associations, organizations, think tanks, academics and other individuals interested in promoting an open international investment climate.

One of USCIB’s initial contributions to the site is an overview of recently updated guidelines for international investment from the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the worldwide business body that is part of USCIB’s global network. The ICC guidelines elaborate a number of steps both governments and companies can take to ensure maximum benefits from international investment.

“USCIB will continue to lead a strong advocacy and education effort on behalf of open investment policies,” Robinson said. “Our message is simple: FDI, both inward and outward, is good for the U.S. economy, for our competitiveness in today’s global marketplace, for U.S. companies and for U.S. jobs.”

The United States is the world’s leading investor nation as well as the largest host country for foreign direct investment. Overall, global inward investment flows now approach $1.2 trillion, and sales of affiliates worldwide are just under $30 trillion, far in excess of world trade flows.

In addition to USCIB, the partner associations in the Investment Policy Central initiative include the Coalition of Services Industries, Emergency Committee for American Trade, National Center for APEC, National Foreign Trade Council, Organization for International Investment and U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence.  Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More at www.uscib.org.

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

Barbara Wanner Named to Lead ICT Policy at United States Council for International Business

Barbara Wanner

New York, N.Y., October 9, 2012Barbara Wanner has been named vice president for information, communications and technology (ICT) at the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), a pro-trade association encompassing America’s top global companies.

Wanner, who comes to USCIB from the Coalition of Services Industries, where she was director of the Global Services Summit and played a leading role on ICT policy, joined USCIB’s Washington, D.C. office on October 1.

“Barbara Wanner is an outstanding addition to USCIB’s policy team,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson. “She brings over thirty years of experience in trade and economic policy, as well as strong relationships with policy makers and a deep understanding of the business advocacy process.”

Founded in 1945, USCIB works to advance U.S. industry positions around the world, utilizing a unique network of international business groups – including the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD – with official standing in the United Nations, the OECD and many other inter-governmental bodies. It has long championed policies to expand information flows and the global Internet, promote information security, and expand market access for telecommunications and other information services.

As the lead staff member supporting USCIB’s Information, Communications and Technology Committee, Wanner will work closely with a diverse member base led by the committee’s chair, David Gross (Wiley Rein), and its vice chairs, Joseph Alhadeff (Oracle) and Leslie Martinkovics (Verizon). Important upcoming policy initiatives falling under her and the committee’s remit include the UN’s Internet Governance Forum and this December’s World Conference on International Telecommunications.

In addition to her work with the Coalition of Services Industries, Wanner has held positions at the U.S. Asia Pacific Council of the East-West Center, the International Electronics Manufacturers and Consumers of America, the Japan Economic Institute, and on Capitol Hill. She holds a master’s degree from Columbia University and a bachelor’s degree from Bucknell University.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence.  Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More at www.uscib.org.

Contact:
Jonathan Huneke, USCIB
(212) 703-5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

More on USCIB’s Information, Communications and Technology Committee

USCIB 2012 Leadership Award Dinner

leadership_award_dinner_2012

The Waldorf-Astoria, New York City

Reception 6-7 p.m., followed by dinner 7-9 p.m. Business attire.
**Please beware that traffic conditions in and around The Waldorf-Astoria will be heavy that evening due to the Rockefeller tree lighting ceremony.

Click here for sponsorship information

BIAC_50th_logo
leadership_award_2012
The International Leadership Award
Katty_Kay
Katty Kay

Join USCIB Chairman Harold (Terry) McGraw III and hundreds of USCIB’s members and friends at our 2012 International Leadership Award Dinner. This annual gala event brings together industry leaders, government officials and diplomats to celebrate international cooperation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.

This year we honor BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, on its 50th anniversary in recognition of its work to improve the global framework in which American business competes. BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter and Secretary General Tadahiro Asami will accept the award on behalf of BIAC’s worldwide membership.

Our keynote speaker is Katty Kay, lead anchor of BBC World News America, who will discuss business and leadership at a time of profound global change. Kay has served as the BBC’s Washington correspondent, and has reported from Zimbabwe, South Africa, London and Tokyo. Based in Washington, Kay covers the full gamut of American and global affairs. She is a frequent guest commentator on NBC’s Meet the Press and co-authored the New York Times best-seller Womenomics: Write Your Own Rules for Success.

Click here to download the sponsorship information packet. Please contact Abby Shapiro (ashapiro@uscib.org), SVP for Business Development, to discuss sponsorship or any other aspect of the event.

2012 Annual Dinner Sponsors

 

Leadership Partners:

Chevron
Deloitte
ExxonMobil
Philip Morris
McGraw-Hill

 

 

Dinner Partners:

Dow
Oracle
 

 

Program Partners:

AT&T

Coca-Cola

DuPont
FleishmanHillard
News_Corporation
Poongsan

Roanoke

Verizon

Media Partner:

 

CNN

 

Supporting Organizations:

U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Manhattan Chamber of Commerce

 

Highlights from the 2011 International Leadership Award Dinner

Click below to view video clips from 2011’s International Leadership Award Dinner, which honored Andrew N. Liveris, Chairman and CEO of The Dow Chemical Company. Former President Bill Clinton was among those paying tribute to Liveris, who in his acceptance remarks offered his views on how we can lay a path for future innovation and growth in overseas markets, and work together to rejuvenate American manufacturing.


Video tribute to Andrew Liveris


Remarks by President Clinton

Click here to read Mr. Liveris’s prepared remarks. Click here to read the post-event press release.

Updated Framework Helps Industry Navigate Responsible Food and Beverage Marketing

food scaleThe International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) today released a revised Framework for Responsible Food and Beverage Marketing Communications, intended to provide an updated and relevant self-regulatory tool at a time when pressure on industry is increasing, particularly with respect to marketing to children and growing concerns regarding obesity.

The framework presents a standard, uniformed approach to encourage responsible food and beverage communication and has been used as a foundation for aligning industry efforts and self-regulatory commitments in response to the World Health Organization’s agenda on reducing obesity. The framework requires that responsible food and beverage marketing should be legal, decent, honest and truthful, and clarifies that marketing communications must not undermine the importance of healthy lifestyles. Responsible marketing can help consumers make appropriate choices about products and to understand the role of nutrition, diet and physical activity in healthy lifestyles.

Prepared by the ICC Commission on Marketing and Advertising, the framework has been revised to align with the relevant revisions of the Consolidated ICC Code on Marketing and Advertising Communication Practices (ICC Code). It sets out business positions regarding: the role of commercial communication in our information-focused society, responsible marketing to children, and the importance of marketing to a competitive economy and consumer choice, while offering practical guidance on applying the general code principles specifically to food and beverage marketing.

“The ICC framework was first developed in 2004 at industry’s request and has subsequently been updated twice to keep current with the changes to the general ICC marketing code,” said Brent Sanders (Microsoft), chair of USCIB’s Marketing and Advertising Committee and chair of the ICC Commission on Marketing and Advertising. “It provides a tool industry can apply through effective self-regulation within a legal framework that protects consumers from false and misleading claims.”

USCIB hosted the ICC Seminar on Consumer Savvy Marketing held in New York City June 7, which brought together top consumer protection and advertising self-regulation experts from the United States and around the world. The seminar showcased the importance of self-regulation work, where ICC has been a major rule-setter in international advertising self-regulation since 1937. The revised Consolidated ICC Code of Advertising and Marketing Communication Practice was launched in 2011.

ICC Framework for Responsible Food and Beverage Marketing Communications


Consolidated ICC Code of Advertising and Marketing Communications

Staff Contact: Jonathan Huneke

More on USCIB’s Marketing and Advertising Committee

Business Strongly Supports Bill to Raise Customs Duty Threshold

stop sign military customsNew York, N.Y., September 24, 2012 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) has joined 27 companies and business associations in applauding a new bill in the U.S. Senate that would raise the minimum value at which customs duties are imposed on imported goods, calling it a major step forward that would facilitate trade, and a boon to both large and small companies.

The bill, S. 3597, was introduced on September 20 by Senators John Thune (R. – S.D.) and Ron Wyden (D. – Or.).  It would raise the “de minimis” value, which is the monetary value below which shipments entering the United States are free from tariffs, taxes or formal customs procedures, to $800 from the current level of $200.

“Raising de miminis levels helps foster trade, and the jobs that come with it,” stated USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson. “This bill clearly deserves strong support on its own merits, but we are especially pleased at the timing. It will reinforce efforts to raise de minimis levels overseas, something we are actively pursuing through the APEC forum and other channels.” He noted that de minimis levels abroad were sometimes even lower than the current U.S. level.

In their statement, the business groups noted that, in addition to promoting faster border clearance for low-value shipments, a higher de minimis level would allow customs officers-ud-736-UD-736 to focus enforcement efforts on urgent priorities like ensuring product safety and protecting intellectual property. It would also benefit small businesses by reducing the burden associated with importing low-value goods as well as international retail returns. Furthermore, the legislation would have no impact on security, since all shipments entering the United States undergo a security review regardless of value.

The U.S. de minimis level has been held at $200 for nearly 20 years, while the Consumer Price Index has risen some 60 percent over that same period. A companion bill in the House of Representatives, introduced by Rep. Aaron Schock (R. – Ill.), has garnered the support of 142 other legislators from both sides of the aisle.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence.  Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:
Jonathan Huneke, VP communications, USCIB
(212) 703-5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

More on USCIB’s Customs and Trade Facilitation Committee

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

World Economic Recovery Suffers Fresh Setbacks, ICC/Ifo Survey Shows

Results of the ICC-Ifo World Economic Survey, reveal declining optimism over global economic recovery as fear continues to spread about the unsolved debt crisis in Europe.

The Survey, which received responses from 1,079 experts in 123 countries, showed that the world economic climate indicator fell to 85.1 in Q3 2012 after two successive increases. These results are significantly below the long-term average of 96.7 (1996-2011) for the Survey, conducted by the Munich-based Ifo Institute for Economic Research and the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC).

These findings imply a setback in the recovery of the world economy due to unfavorable assessments of the current economic climate and a less positive six-month outlook than in previous quarters, particularly in Europe.

The climate indicator for Europe sunk to 88.9 for the current quarter, down 20 points from its long-term average of 109.0.

“Political decisions are urgently needed in order to counter this widespread negative outlook and to boost investor confidence, starting with resolving the debt crisis in Europe,” said ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier.

While the experts downgraded their evaluation of the economic climate from previous quarters – standing at 82.4 and 95.0 in Q1 and Q2 of this year respectively – they implied that the global economy is still in recovery and has not fallen back into recession.

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

ICC Global Network Reaches Albania and Kenya

The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC’s) global network of national committees is set to expand with the addition of ICC Albania and ICC Kenya.  Located in more than 90 countries worldwide, national committees work with ICC members in their countries to voice the interests of business to national governments and provide input to ICC’s policy work.

“ICC Albania and ICC Kenya are important additions to the ICC global network and will help us, as the world business organization, to promote entrepreneurship, international trade and investment, and the market economy in the respective regions,” said ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier.

ICC national committees and groups form the global network that makes ICC unique among business organizations. The inauguration of offices in Albania and Kenya highlights the growing importance of these countries in the global economy.

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

Business Cheers as Senate Panel Green-Lights Russia Trade Bill

capitolNew York, N.Y., July 19, 2012 The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) welcomed the Senate Finance Committee’s approval of legislation to establish permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) with Russia.

“This is a critical first step in securing U.S. access to an important emerging market,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson.  “As Russia joins the World Trade Organization, it is opening up many new opportunities for foreign trade and investment, but the U.S. will miss out on these and be at a disadvantage versus our competitors if we do not adopt PNTR.  We urge swift consideration by the full Senate, and passage by both houses of Congress before the August recess.”

Russia’s upper house of parliament has voted to ratify entry into the WTO.  The country will become the WTO’s 156th member 30 days after Russian President Vladimir Putin approves the measure, and will begin cutting import tariffs and opening up large sectors of its economy to foreign investment.  Passage of PNTR is required to lift trade restrictions on Russia under the 1970s-era Jackson-Vanik amendment, which have been deemed to violate WTO rules.

Robinson noted that Russia is also taking steps to join the 34-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which would entail additional steps to open Russia to foreign trade and investment.  Through its membership in BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, USCIB is working to advise the OECD and its member governments on appropriate terms for Russian entry into the organization, and is assessing the potential impact for U.S. business.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence.  Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP communications, USCIB
(212) 703-5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

More on USCIB’s Emerging Markets Committee

The Big Idea: It’s Time to Stop Investment Protectionism

New ICC investment guidelines help chart a path to reviving FDI as an engine of global growth.

By James Bacchus, Victor K. Fung, Harold McGraw III, Gérard Worms

go away language globeGérard Worms, Harold McGraw III and Victor Fung are respectively chairman, vice chairman and honorary chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce, the world business organization for which USCIB serves as the American affiliate. James Bacchus chaired the drafting group that revised the ICC Guidelines for International Investment.

It is time for a much-needed reminder of the tremendous potential that investment liberalization can unleash on the ailing global economy, and for the G20 to create a more stable and predictable climate for cross-border investment.

Although international investment is rising again after plummeting from the record levels registered just before the global financial crisis began, global foreign direct investment (FDI) remains 15 percent below pre-crisis levels. Rising, too, are restrictions on FDI through various forms of investment protectionism that are clouding the future for global economic growth.

To help counter this rising threat of investment protectionism, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has released revised guidelines to help increase cross-border investment flows and thus stimulate economic growth and prosperity across the globe. Like the recent EU-U.S. statement endorsing investment’s key role in the global economy, we hope that G20 leaders recognize FDI’s role in promoting growth and standing strong against the temptations of protectionism.

Boosting FDI in today’s global economy is a pressing concern to developed and developing countries alike. The new world of international investment no longer holds to the weary “North-South” stereotype. More than half of all inbound FDI today – 52 percent – goes to developing and transitional economies. Outbound FDI from developing and transitional economies is also increasing rapidly – $388 billion in 2010, up 21 percent from 2009.

Yet the business confidence needed to boost investment flows worldwide is constrained by significant uncertainties ranging from excessive sovereign debt and macro-economic imbalances to the increasing influence of state-owned enterprises and sovereign wealth funds, as well as the growing trend of “re-regulating” international investment.

In 2000, only two percent of all government investment measures taken worldwide imposed new restrictions on international investment. In 2010, that proportion had risen to nearly one-third – 32 percent. UNCTAD has warned that this “maintains the long-term trend of investment policy becoming increasingly restrictive rather than liberalizing.”

ICC Guidelines for International InvestmentOther stereotypes of the past no longer apply either. Most of the new measures limiting international investment are being used not by developing countries but by developed ones. This is particularly the case in the financial and natural resources sectors, and reveals a disturbing and shortsighted trend away from free markets towards increasing discrimination in favor of “national champions” and local companies in “strategic industries.”

The new ICC guidelines, which draw on the collective experience and specific suggestions of businesses throughout the world, reaffirm business’s belief in what the G20 has described in its action plan for jobs and growth as the role of investment “to unlock new sources of growth.” The guidelines reiterate the basic obligations of investors, investing countries, and host countries with respect to such traditional concerns as fair and equitable treatment of investment and protection against expropriation without just compensation.

But the guidelines also go far beyond the previous version to address several “new” investment issues that have emerged since 1972, during four decades of expanding globalization.

They emphasize the global need for the free flow of capital to spur investment and of services to support investment, as well as the need for transparency and due process in the governance of investment. They also state that host countries should respect international rules related to foreign investment such as local content, equity caps, technology transfer, domestic sales limitations, and the mandatory use of indigenous technology.

The guidelines outline the protection of intellectual property rights, the prohibition of discrimination in government procurement, and anti-corruption. They contain language which specifically addresses corporate responsibility, strengthening previous provisions on labor rights, setting out new obligations on human rights, and incorporating new obligations related to environmental protection and sustainable economic growth.

ICC has taken into account that governments are increasingly deploying FDI through state-owned enterprises and sovereign wealth funds. The new guidelines address the role of the state by setting out, for the first time, the principle of fostering competitive neutrality in cross-border investment. They also underscore the need to establish an effective means of upholding the rule of law relating to international investment, including through investor-state dispute settlement.

Resisting investment protectionism is essential to promoting economic growth. The G20 should establish appropriate rules, drawing on guidelines from international business, so that the global economy creates more opportunity, prosperity and hope for workers and entrepreneurs alike.

This essay appeared in the Summer 2012 issue of International Business, USCIB’s quarterly journal. It is part of our regular series of thought-leadership columns. To submit a column or suggest a topic, please contact Jonathan Huneke (jhuneke@uscib.org).

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