USCIB Urges G7 Leaders to Advance Data Free Flows With Trust

USCIB co-signed a letter to G7 leaders urging them to explore concrete approaches to advancing Data Free Flows with Trust (DFFT). Japan promoted the DFFT concept when it hosted the G20 process a few years ago and the OECD also is taking this on. The letter was signed by 35 other global industry and non-governmental organizations.

According to the signed organizations, including USCIB, the DFFT strengthens the ability to transfer data across transnational digital networks while building digital trust. The organizations signing the letter emphasized the ability to access and transmit information across transnational digital networks as supportive of governmental policy objectives, including those relating to cybersecurity, digital transformation, environmental sustainability, financial inclusion, health, innovation, privacy, and trade.

According to USCIB Vice President for ICT Policy Barbara Wanner, such concrete approaches to advancing the DFFT include aligning data transfer policies across economies and with international standards, promoting and strengthening cross-border data interoperability mechanisms, analyzing the importance of data transfers in key sectors, as well as collectively supporting the OECD Declaration on Government Access to Personal Data Held by Private Sector Entities.

USCIB Discusses OECD Country Program for Ukraine Reconstruction and Redevelopment

Left to right: Rick Johnston, Alice Slayton Clark, Bill Tompson, Will Davis

USCIB Trade and Investment Committee Chair and Chair of BIAC Rick Johnston (Citi) and USCIB Vice President for International Investment and Trade Policy Alice Slayton Clark met last week with Bill Tompson, head of the OECD Eurasia Division and Will Davis, head of the OECD Washington Center, to discuss the OECD Country Program for Ukraine to help with reconstruction and redevelopment.

Following the OECD Council’s recognition of Ukraine as a prospective member, OECD is working in close consultation with the government of Ukraine on a four-year Country Program that will enable Ukraine to access OECD expertise and build capacity to respond to domestic policy priorities while also supporting recovery and reconstruction efforts. Financing of the Country Program, estimated to be 16 million EUR over four years, will be secured through grants from OECD members and donors. The Multi-Agency Donor Co-ordination Platform for Ukraine is co-chaired by the United States, the EU, and Ukraine and will help with coordinating fundraising efforts.

“The OECD Country Program will offer Ukraine important information at a time when it seeks to reform its economy and governance structures to attract and sustain the critical international trade and investment needed to recover and prosper after the war, said Clark. “The Program will provide Ukraine with critical knowledge about international best practices, increased participation in selected OECD bodies, tailor-made reviews and peer learning from an enhanced network of international experts and peers, and importantly, stronger links with the OECD community.”

The Country Program for Ukraine will be reviewed and transmitted to OECD Council at the next OECD Ministerial Council (MCM) meeting that will take place June 7-8.

Country Programs provide a structured and strategic form of engagement and cooperation with selected partner countries that, while not formally linked to the OECD accession process, have proven a willingness and ability to meet OECD standards and practices. They are a recently established OECD global relations tool.

UNCITRAL Reaches Agreements on Code of Conduct for Arbitrators

The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law’s (UNCITRAL) Working Group III (WG III) reached agreement on a code of conduct for arbitrators during meetings at the United Nations headquarters in New York late last month. While the code of conduct imposes some limits on roles arbitrators can take in investment disputes proceedings, USCIB successfully advocated for narrower restrictions.

WG III was set up by the United Nations in 2017 to identify concerns and explore reforms relating to the operation of the Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system. According to USCIB Vice President for International Investment and Trade Policy Alice Slayton Clark, this is the first time that agreement has been reached on text in over five years of WG III deliberations.

The agreement imposes temporary bans under certain scenarios on so-called “double hatting,” where an arbitrator can also serve as counsel in ISDS cases. Arbitrators would be subject to “cooling-off periods,” which vary from one to three years, depending on whether the two cases involve same measures, same or related parties, or same provisions in the same treaty. Delegates agreed to longer cooling-off periods for same measures and related parties, but shorter periods for same treaty, an important “win” for investors since it is not uncommon for multiple cases to arise under the same treaty and, in those cases, investors want to have maximum options in terms of their choice of arbitrator and counsel.

“USCIB has participated in WGIII discussions as a non-governmental organization since the start, advocating for balanced reforms that improve ISDS for both states and investors,” said Clark. USCIB member Lauren Mandell of WilmerHale has worked diligently with USCIB staff to promote member interests at UNCITRAL throughout this process.

In addition to the code of conduct for arbitrators, WG III also agreed on ethics rules for judges sitting on a permanent multilateral investment court, a structure that does not exist and that USCIB does not support. Because there is no agreement that there will even be a multilateral court, the final code has numerous caveats, with the European Union, the lead proponent of the court, acknowledging that the code may need to change based on the actual design of the court.

Lastly, WG III agreed to a set of technical provisions to encourage, rather than require, parties to mediate disputes as an “offramp” before parties turn to ISDS. Mediation may not be appropriate in a given dispute and could waste time and money when the other side is not seriously interested in the process.

The UNCITRAL Commission will finalize and endorse the three documents at its annual meeting in July.

USCIB Advocates for Implementable, Workable OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises

During the meeting of the OECD Responsible Business Conduct (RBC) Working Party in Paris last week, USCIB’s Corporate Responsibility and Labor Affairs team – Director Ewa Staworzynska and Policy Manager Jose Arroyo – attended the sessions as part of Business at OECD (BIAC) delegation for the ongoing update of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (Guidelines).

The Guidelines are a set of recommendations from governments to businesses for ensuring responsible business conduct.

According to Arroyo, the BIAC delegation conveyed to OECD governments relevant points to make sure the Guidelines are implementable and workable for business while maintaining a high bar for responsible business conduct.

“USCIB and BIAC were able to get support in the room from several governments as we continue to address key issues that remain to be resolved,” said Arroyo.

“A common line of reasoning is that the Guidelines are voluntary and, therefore, can go well beyond what is asked of business in legislation. However, we insisted that if the Guidelines are increasingly referenced in new law bills, and should these bills pass, there may be substantial practical challenges for business.”

USCIB and BIAC advocated for new language that clarify the intent of the Guidelines, meaning they are not designed to be applied in hard law. Ultimately, governments will have the last word on the issue, according to Arroyo. Other challenges discussed were the downstream due diligence approach and substantial changes in the Environment Chapter.

USCIB, as the U.S. affiliate to BIAC, has been the only U.S. business association on the ground for all the OECD RBC Working Party meetings.

“We are in the home stretch of the update, and we thank all USCIB members who provided their expertise, inputs, questions and concerns to secure a workable, implementable document,” said Arroyo.

The Guidelines are expected to be approved by the OECD in June and USCIB will continue to advocate for the business community for a workable outcome while promoting the highest standards of responsible business conduct.

Rick Minor Announces Appointment of ‘USCIB Big Four International Tax Policy Board’ 

Rick Minor, USCIB’s VP and International Tax Counsel, is pleased to announce the creation and appointment of the USCIB Big Four International Tax Policy Board. The four original board members include Barbara Angus (EY), Pat Brown (PwC), Danielle Rolfes (KPMG) and Bob Stack (Deloitte).   

“These four Board members all belong to a very small and distinguished group of tax practitioners who have served at the highest policy levels in private practice and public service,” said Minor. “The Board is expected to enhance the value of the tax committee structure and to complement the ten-member Tax Leadership Team in insuring USCIB remains on the cutting edge of international tax policy advocacy and programming.”

The Board will meet regularly with Minor and the Chair of the USCIB Tax Committee, John Stowell, head of global tax and international financial reporting at The Walt Disney Company, and quarterly with the USCIB Tax Leadership Team.   

Here are the abbreviated bios of the original Board Members: 

Barbara Angus, Principal and Global Tax Policy Leader, Ernst & Young LLP 

Barbara M. Angus is a Principal with Ernst & Young LLP and is EY’s Global Tax Policy Leader.  In addition to her 25 years of private-sector experience in international tax matters, she also has had tax policy roles on Capitol Hill and at the U.S. Treasury Department, including most recently serving as Chief Tax Counsel for the House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means during the development and enactment of the 2017 tax reform legislation. Angus received the Pillar of Excellence Award from the Tax Council Policy Institute in 2022 and the Distinguished Service Award from the Tax Foundation in 2018. She is a graduate of Dartmouth College, Harvard Law School and the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. 

Pat Brown, Washington National Tax Services Co-Leader, PwC U.S. 

At PwC, Brown advises clients on all aspects of international and domestic tax policy. Prior to joining PwC, Brown was vice president and counsel, tax for GE Power and GE Renewables and a GE corporate officer. Brown joined GE in 2002 from the U.S. Treasury Department, where he served as attorney advisor and associate international tax counsel from 1998-2002. During his time at Treasury, Brown focused primarily on international tax analysis, negotiation of tax treaties, and representing the U.S. government at meetings of the OECD on various tax issues. Prior to joining the Treasury Department, Brown was an associate at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York. Brown received a BS in Mechanical Engineering, with highest distinction, from the University of Virginia in 1991 and a JD from Georgetown University, magna cum laude, in 1995. 

Danielle Rolfes, Co-Leader, Washington National Tax – International Tax, KPMG LLP 

Rolfes co-leads the international tax group within KPMG’s Washington National Tax office. She joined KPMG in 2017, following her tenure as the international tax counsel at the U.S. Department of the Treasury.  Rolfes advises clients on issues related to international tax policy, tax treaties, the character and source of income, subpart F, foreign tax credits, and the regimes for Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income, the Foreign-Derived Intangible Income and the Base Erosion Anti-Abuse Tax. Rolfes is a frequent speaker and writer on a variety of international tax topics. In addition to numerous articles, she is the author of An Analysis of FIN 48 – Accounting for Uncertain Income Tax Positions (Matthew Bender, 3d ed. 2009). 

Bob Stack, Managing Director, Deloitte Tax LLP 

Stack joined Deloitte Tax from the U.S. Department of the Treasury, where he was the deputy assistant secretary for international tax affairs in the Office of Tax Policy in the Obama administration. At Treasury, he worked directly with the assistant secretary of tax policy and the international tax counsel in developing and implementing all aspects of U.S. international tax policy, including treaties, regulations and legislative proposals and served as the U.S. representative at the OECD during this time on the BEPS projects.  Stack earned his Bachelor of Arts in English education from State University of New York at Albany and his Master of Arts in French language and literature from New York University. He went on to obtain his Master of Science in foreign service from Georgetown University and a Juris Doctor from Georgetown University Law Center, where he was editor-in-chief of the Georgetown Law Journal. 

USCIB Contributes to OECD Meetings on Countering Illicit Trade in E-Commerce

USCIB Senior Director for Customs and Trade Facilitation Megan Giblin was in Paris earlier this month attending the second workshop of the OECD Task Force on Countering Illicit Trade E-Commerce Expert Group and the 11th Plenary of the OECD Task Force on Countering Illicit Trade (TF-CIT). Giblin attended these meetings as part of a Business at OECD (BIAC) private sector delegation, which also included experts affiliated with or participants from many USCIB member companies including, among others, Abbott, Amazon, BAT, eBay, HanesBrands, Lego, PMI and Walmart.

According to Giblin, a previous meeting of this expert group, held in December 2022, saw agreement that there was scope to develop future government and industry guidelines to curb illicit trade in counterfeits abusing e-commerce platforms. This second E-Commerce Experts Groupworkshop followed-up on that agreement whereby experts, including members of the private sector, provided their views on the proposed draft guideline text. The next meeting of the OECD E-Commerce Experts Group will be held in Sofia, Bulgaria, followed by a meeting to be held in Washington, DC, later this year.

The E-Commerce Experts Working Group was followed by the OECD TF-CIT plenary meeting, where the Business at OECD (BIAC) delegation was led by Executive Director Hanni Rosenbaum, the BIAC Anti Illicit Trade Committee (AITEG), Chair, David M. Luna, and.  Policy Manager Jacobo Ramos Folch. This TFCIT meeting spanned 2-days and covered many critical topics, including: a look back at the Task Force over the past 10 years; Free Trade Zone Certification Scheme Roll-Out; and the above-mentioned E-Commerce project.

During the Task Force meeting, Luna, a former U.S. diplomat, highlighted the importance of strong public-private partnerships and emphasized the commitment of the business community to work with the OECD to counter the harms caused by illicit goods that have severe negative effects on global prosperity, trade, economic recovery, supply chains and public health and safety. 

“BIAC has worked in partnership with the OECD to advance important work in this area, including on illicit trade in the context of free trade zones, electronic commerce and high-risk sectors,” said Giblin.

In her closing remarks, Ms. Hanni Rosenbaum emphasized the importance of active public-private partnerships and BIAC’s continued commitment to support this important OECD policy work programme, especially as it transitions to the Trade Committee.

USCIB Team Hosts MTN Roundtable on Solidarity in Doha During LDC5 

USCIB was on the ground in Doha for the 5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5) and to participate in the LDC5 Private Sector Forum (PSF).  USCIB’s Moving the Needle (MTN) Initiative organized a March 8 LDC5 side event in the form of a roundtable on the private sector’s role for solidarity solutions, in partnership with the International Organization of Employers (IOE). 

LDC5, held from March 5-9, focused on accelerating the graduation of LDCs out of the LDC category of the world’s poorest countries. The forty-six LDC countries account for 13% of the world population but only 1.3% of global GDP and less than 1% of global trade and foreign direct investment (FDI).   

The LDC5 Private Sector Forum, co-organized by the United Nations with Microsoft and a business advisory group, emphasized actions and partnerships for LDCs to support the delivery of the new Doha Program of Action and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The Forum highlighted important sectors for LDCs, such as agriculture, energy, connectivity and finance and the need to create enabling environments for LDCs to benefit from trade, investment and capacity building. 

USCIB Board Member Chris Sharrock, Microsoft vice president for UN Affairs and International Organizations, opened the MTN Roundtable, stating that “Business plays a key role in delivering inclusive growth, creating opportunities and sustainable development around the world, especially for the 880 million people living across the LDCs.”  He went on to emphasize the necessity of partnerships that are effective, tailored to local needs and goals and that mobilize private sector knowledge and tools.   

The MTN Roundtable featured speakers from USAID, the International Labor Organization (ILO), the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and UNIDO, as well as leading IOE employers federation representatives from the DRC, Mali and Zambia.  

USCIB Senior Vice President for Policy and Global Strategy Norine Kennedy, Policy Manager for Environment and Sustainable Development Agnes Vinblad and USCIB MTN Initiative consultant Lea Felluss were in Doha to advance U.S. business views and contributions to the sustainable and resilient graduation of LDCs as essential to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.  

According to Kennedy, “Simply put, solidarity means we cannot deliver the SDGs while leaving the LDCs behind.” 

Wanner Reports ICANN Progress Toward Launching New Domain Names 

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) held its Community Forum in Cancun, March 11-16, to discuss the pending launch of a new round of top-level domain names, governance issues related to the selection of a new ICANN President and CEO as well as combatting Domain Name System (DNS) abuse. USCIB Vice President for ICT Policy Barbara Wanner was on the ground, joining over 1100 attendees across 164 countries and territories.

According to Wanner, the key outcome of the meeting was the progress made toward launching a new round of top-level domain names through a process referred to as the New Generic Top-Level Domain (gTLD) Subsequent Procedures (SubPro).

ICANN community members described pent-up demand for a new round of gTLDs; the last round was in 2012. Proponents maintain that the availability of new gTLDs will offer more choice and will make the DNS accessible to more people around the world, especially those who use languages and scripts not based on English or ASCII.

Briefing the GNSO Council, Board Member Becky Burr outlined four areas of information that ICANN needs to prepare a timeline and launch plan before a specific date for the new round can be announced. These are outlined in the Board resolution approved on March 16.

Wanner, in her capacity as an industry representative, will continue to monitor and update USCIB members on the status of the launch of these gTLDs as well as the development of other issue areas discussed at ICANN. These include future governance of the organization as well as implementation of a system to enable legitimate requests to nonpublic gTLD registration data, now called the Registration Data Request Service.

 

USCIB Advocates for the WTO Moratorium on Customs Duties at the OECD   

USCIB argued for a permanent extension of the WTO moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions during a March 9 meeting of the OECD Working Party of the Trade Committee.   

The OECD plans to publish a paper this fall to inform the debate at the WTO on extending the e-commerce moratorium set to expire at the next WTO ministerial conference (MC13) in February 2024. Speaking on behalf of Business at OECD (BIAC), Vice President for International Investment and Trade Policy Alice Slayton Clark lauded OECD efforts to provide evidence-based data, facts and insight relating to the direct and collateral costs of expiration and urged the OECD to address head-on the issues raised by opponents, including alternative revenue sources for countries struggling with budget shortfalls linked to the pandemic.   

The intervention condemned recent actions by the Government of Indonesia that violate the spirit of the moratorium, creating a domestic tariff classification for, and applying customs formalities, to digital downloads. “While Indonesia is not currently assessing duties on these downloads, the new administrative requirements are burdensome, disruptive to commerce, create a trade barrier and deter investment, with unbudgeted and onerous costs particularly for Indonesian small businesses,” Clark asserted.  

Clark urged the OECD to finalize and publish its paper as soon as possible to have the maximum influence on Indonesia and others at the WTO who remain non-aligned or unconvinced about the benefits of a permanent moratorium. She suggested the OECD share early findings from the paper at WTO e-commerce workshops and other discussions this spring. Finally, she encouraged all OECD members to take leadership positions at the WTO, particularly with non-aligned and opposing countries, to promote continuation of the moratorium.   

“Allowing the moratorium to expire would be a historic setback for the WTO, representing an unprecedented termination of a multilateral agreement in place nearly since the WTO’s inception – an agreement that has allowed the digital economy to take root and grow. It risks destabilizing the very fabric of a multilateral trading system already under intense strain,” she concluded.  

   

USCIB Fosters Relationship With Chinese Counterpart CCPIT/CCOIC 

Left to right: Declan Daly, Zhao Jianying, Peter Robinson

The head of the U.S. Representative Office of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Mme. Zhao Jianying, visited USCIB’s New York offices on March 8 to discuss areas of mutual interest and to foster the close working relationship between CCPIT and USCIB, which now spans over three decades.  

 Zhao Jianying, who became head of the CCPIT Representative Office last year, met with USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson and COO Declan Daly. CCPIT is the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade and its affiliate, the China Council of International Commerce (CCOIC) is USCIB’s counterpart National Committee in the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) 

Additionally, CCPIT/CCOIC is USCIB’s Chinese counterpart in the ATA Carnet system. ATA Carnet is a custom document for temporary imports and is honored in over 80 customs countries and territories worldwide and can be used for multiple trips during a one-year period.   

According to Robinson, USCIB helped ICC bring CCPIT/CCOIC into the ATA Carnet system in the 1990’s and the two organizations have been working together since. 

Although the economic relationship between the United States and China has been tense for the past several years, USCIB’s working relationship with our Chinese counterpart CCPIT/CCOIC remains robust,” said Robinson. “We appreciated meeting Mme. Zhao and we look forward to fostering our relationship with her and the rest of her team.”