OECD: Increase Private Investment in Developing Markets

Global_Development_ChartThe United Nations estimates that the world will have to contribute over $4 trillion annually to finance the Sustainable Development Goals. It is clear that official development assistance from public coffers will not be enough to meet this daunting financing challenge. Private investment will not only be welcome, but indispensable for moving from “billions to trillions” in development finance.

Recognizing the much-needed role of business in this effort, OECD governments agreed last week at the High-Level Meeting of the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) to enable greater private-sector investment in developing markets.

“The successful implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals will hinge to a large extent on the mobilization of private investment,” commented Marie Gad, vice chair of the BIAC Development Committee. “And to make that happen, the DAC is breaking new ground to create an enabling environment and help mitigate the risks facing foreign and domestic businesses investing in developing markets.”

Key elements agreed by OECD DAC member governments include:

  • A new OECD DAC work program to focus on good practices for providing concessional public international finance (such as loans, guarantees, equity holdings, and mezzanine finance) to investment projects in developing economies in order to attract international private capital.
  • A set of principles for the measurement of official development assistance designed to reflect the effort of donors in providing the right incentives and removing disincentives for instruments that engage private-sector investment.
  • A new measure that will track the Total Official Support for Sustainable Development (TOSSD), which will be agreed by October 2016, after which initial data collection will get underway in 2017, leading to a report to the UN 2030 Development Agenda implementation review in 2019. TOSSD will measure – and help encourage – private-sector financial flows generated through donors’ actions.
  • DAC engagement in the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation will seek to expand the application of the OECD’s Policy Framework for Investment, as well as other OECD tools and analyses, aimed at strengthening the enabling environment for businesses in developing economies.

A number of steps now taken by the DAC correspond with a paper by the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD released in 2014 “Private Sector Perspectives on Private Sector Financing for Sustainable Development.

Read the Communiqué of the OECD DAC High Level Meeting

Businesses Celebrate American Heart Month

heart_cardio_resized_ssby Helen Medina

February marks American Heart Month, a great time to commit to a healthy lifestyle and make small changes that can lead to a lifetime of heart health. According to the American Heart Association, nearly 801,000 people in the U.S. died from heart disease, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases in 2013. That’s about one of every three deaths. The direct and indirect costs of cardiovascular diseases and stroke total more than $316.6 billion, including health expenditures and lost productivity. 

As innovators and employers, companies are only as strong as the communities that they work in and serve, and they are committed to offering and developing essential medicines and technological solutions for consumers.

USCIB’s members understand the importance of health and wellness, both for their employees and for the wider communities in which they operate, because healthy, happy employees are more productive. Many U.S. companies are innovators when it comes to promoting heart health, in addition to supporting a holistic approach to health and wellness. As innovators and employers, companies are only as strong as the communities that they work in and serve, and they are committed to offering and developing essential medicines and technological solutions for consumers. Additionally, companies are forging innovative public-private partnerships that educate and encourage populations to develop and maintain healthy lifestyles, while also investing in new technologies and innovations that fight diseases.

Given the importance of a healthy lifestyle and the private sector’s role in helping achieve this, USCIB has been working with the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) to organize a Forum on Innovation in Health and Well-Being from May 3-4. This forum will inform discussions for OECD Health Ministers when they meet in 2017 to discuss the next generation of health reforms.

The BIAC Forum will provide an opportunity to:

  • Exchange solutions and policy recommendations with high-level representatives from the business community, governments and leading voices in the field.
  • Learn more about the innovations and on-the-ground partnerships private sector is undertaking.
  • Explore how healthy populations can be a strong pillar for increased economic productivity and societal well-being.

Please stay tuned as we continue developing the program for this Forum. Due to limited space, the event is by invitation only.

Read last month’s USCIB Health Blog entry, We’ve All Got to Work Together on Global Health Challenges

No Sustainable Development Without Investment

Globe with Money UnderneathEarlier this month, the OECD hosted a day-long workshop in Paris entitled “Making Investment Work for the Sustainable Development Goals,” on the implementation of the Policy Framework for Investment (PFI).  The OECD published a 2015 revision of this document, which was originally drafted in 2006, in response to a call for the importance of investment in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The many business and government voices on the various panels of the PFI workshop included comments by Ambassador Lisa Kubiske, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Finance and Development, who spoke on coping with the challenges of implementation through partnerships, including collaboration between private and government actors, which is vital for the successful implementation of the PFI.

Representing U.S. business at the session as part of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, I spoke on the importance of retaining a focus on core investment issues.  USCIB agrees that investment is essential to realize the SDGs.  Indeed domestic and international investment are vital for global economic growth and development. Investment, however, must be seen as more than the mere means to the end of the SDGs.  To be able to fulfill its role as the creator of economic growth and development, we cannot forget what is required in order for investment to flourish.

Read the full blog post at Investment Policy Central.

The OECD’s Tax Agenda: Building a Coherent and Predictable Tax Regime

taxes-portFor global business, the leading role of the OECD in international tax policy is of great importance and value. With the G20 mandate for the project on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS), the reach of OECD tax work and policy guidance has increased considerably. All OECD/G20 countries, along with Latvia and Colombia, have pledged to follow the BEPS minimum standards, but any country could join the efforts to address BEPS. For this, the inclusive framework for the monitoring and implementation of BEPS will be essential.

At the same time, the OECD has developed Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement on Country-by-Country reporting. This agreement, signed on January 27 by 31 countries, including four non-OECD/G20 countries, is a first major step in the BEPS implementation and should facilitate a more coherent and predictable tax regime for investors. Through the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, the business community will be actively involved in the further implementation process of BEPS.

But the OECD work on taxation is not only about BEPS. There are multiple streams of work with great significance for business, including International Guidelines on VAT/GST, the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes with currently 130 parties undertaking peer reviews, as well as tax and development.

To better understand the complexities of the OECD work and role in international taxation, BIAC has prepared a brief on the Tax Agenda of the OECD. We hope this brief will provide good guidance even to members who do not participate in this work on an expert level.

With valuable support and input from our members, USCIB and BIAC will continue to offer structured advice to the OECD to help develop a more coherent international tax regime that will support – and not hinder – cross border trade and investment, and growth. USCIB is the U.S. affiliate of BIAC.

Visit USCIB’s Membership page for more information on how to become a member and get involved in our Taxation Committee, which promotes sound and consistent international tax policy and advocates against government actions that result in double taxation. USCIB co-organizes an annual tax conference with BIAC and the OECD in Washington, D.C. This year’s OECD International Tax Conference will take place on June 6 and 7.

Let’s Get Realistic About a Multilateral Investment Agreement

Originally published on the OECD Insights website.

UN_Vienna_flagsShaun Donnelly, retired U.S. diplomat and trade negotiator, now Vice President for Investment Policy at the U.S. Council for International Business (USCIB).  He is a regular participant in the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) and  OECD Investment work.

I found some very interesting questions and even a few answers in the recent “OECD Insights” blog post on international investment agreements by Professor Jan Wouters from the University of Leuven.  But it seems to me that Professor Wouters’ prescriptions may fit better in a university classroom or a theoretical computer model than in real world of government-to-government diplomatic investment negotiations or in a corporate headquarters making real-world cross-border investment decisions.  As a former U.S. Government trade and investment negotiator and now in the private sector advising/assisting member companies of the U.S. Council for International Business (USCIB), as well as an active participant over the past three years in the investment policy work the OECD and its Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC), I’d like to offer an alternative perspective on some of the international investment issues the professor addresses.

I’m tempted to challenge several of the assumptions that seem to underlie Dr. Wouters’ analysis and prescriptions.  His assertion that multilateralism is an inherently superior venue for all investment issues seems a little naïve to me as a practitioner.  Everyone accepts the theoretical point that in a textbook or the laboratory, multilateral can be the optimal approach – one set of comprehensive, high-standard rules applying to all countries and, by extension, to all investors – a WTO for investment if you will.

The reality is that diplomatic negotiations, investment projects, and job creation take place in the real world, driven by real people representing concrete, real-world interests.  In that real world, governments have a wide range of views on what should or shouldn’t be in an investment agreement. How strong are the protections accorded to investors? Does the agreement include (as U.S. government investment agreements typically do) market opening or “pre-establishment” provisions? Do investors have access to a credible, neutral arbitration process to resolve disputes with host governments?  These are key issues for any government or investor.

Unfortunately, not all players in the investment policy world would share all my views, or those of Dr. Wouters.  Governments vary widely on their policy and political approaches to international investment and, more specifically, to international investment agreements.  Many have views generally in line with those of the U.S. government, sharing a commitment to high-standard international investment agreements.  But some other governments only seem willing to accept much lower standards of investment protection; still other governments are hostile to any international investment agreements.

Some OECD veterans like me recall that some 20 years ago, the then-25 OECD members made a serious attempt to negotiate a Multilateral Agreement on Investment or “MAI.”  Unfortunately, after some early promise, the negotiations broke down over some of the key pillar issues I noted above.  Neither the OECD nor any of its member governments have attempted to revive the search for the elusive multilateral investment agreement framework.  Most OECD member nations seem, explicitly or implicitly, to have accepted the reality that, while multilateralism may be the optimal path, in the investment policy area, it is not, at least for now, a practical way forward.

The lesson I personally draw is clear, and it’s quite different from the approach advocated by Dr. Wouters.  Those Governments around the world that think foreign direct investment is a positive force for economic growth, are trying to make practical progress, not simply engage in endless and frustrating political debates.  They want to negotiate investment agreements that can attract real investment and, thereby, create real economic growth and jobs.  While some of them may see intellectual debates about a theoretical multilateral investment regime at some point in the future as an interesting exercise, their priority is on finding ways to grow their economies today and tomorrow.

So my questions to Dr. Wouters and other advocates of a focus on multilateralism in international investment regimes would include:

  • What kind of investment regime do you really envision?  How strong an agreement would it be?  Would it include the sorts of high-standard protections for investors currently found in recent investment agreements of OECD member countries?
  • What causes you to think there is realistic chance for success in a multilateral investment negotiation?  “Multilateral” now requires nearly 200 sovereign nations reaching a consensus.  Countries ranging from Cuba and Argentina to Japan and Canada; from India and China to the U.S. and the EU; from Russia and Venezuela to Saudi Arabia and Singapore would have to be major players in any multilateral investment effort. What sort of consensus could emerge from that wide-ranging group?
  • When the then 25 “like-minded” OECD member nations couldn’t negotiate an MAI, what causes you to think 200 diverse and widely diverging nations could come together now to negotiate a multilateral investment agreement or framework?

I’d love to be proven wrong, by Dr. Wouters or anyone else, if they can show me a credible path to that elusive high-standard multilateral agreement.  But until someone can show me how to get that done, I believe strongly the better path in the real world is to keep doing what individual governments and groups of countries have been doing for some time, to find willing partners and negotiate strong bilateral or regional investment agreements that work in the real world.  Here in the U.S., we in the business community are excited about the possibility of two “mega-regional” agreements, the recently-concluded Transpacific Partnership (TPP) and the on-going Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) as vehicles to update and strengthen investment protections with key partners.

When it comes to investment protection/promotion agreements, let’s focus all of our efforts on paths that we know can work – negotiating high-standard investment agreements.  If/when someone can find that elusive path to a high-standard multilateral agreement, great! I’ll be at the front of the line applauding. But until that path really emerges, let’s stay focused on what works – the bilateral and regional path that has proven it can deliver real results, real investment, growth, and jobs and leave the multilateral investment framework to the theoreticians.

The OECD, specifically its Investment Committee, has long been a place for serious investment policy research, analysis and debate. I’ve been privileged recently to participate in some of those sessions as a business stakeholder as a BIAC representative. I encourage OECD to continue, indeed redouble, that policy work. There are important and challenging issues to address. We in the international business community, along with other stakeholders, can add much to that OECD work.   I simply urge that the OECD investment work focus on concrete investment “deliverables” which can be implemented, rather than idealistic pursuits of some theoretical multilateral panacea.

Useful links

OECD Conference on investment treaties: The quest for balance between investor protection and governments’ right to regulate OECD, Paris, 14 March, 2016. This second OECD Investment Treaty conference will explore: How governments are balancing investor protection and the right to regulate; the search for improved balance through new institutions or improved rules for dispute settlement including the new Investment Court System developed by the European Union; a case study on addressing the balance through substantive law in particular through approaches to the fair and equitable treatment (FET) provision; and how the OECD, working with other international organisations, can support constructive improvement of governments’ investment treaty policies in this regard.

BIAC’s strategic recommendations on investment

Reconciling Regionalism and Multilateralism in a Post-Bali World, OECD Global Forum on TradeParis, 11 February 2014, Rapporteur’s report

 

Integrating Refugees in Labor Markets

IntegrationWith the widespread migration of refugees to many OECD countries, policymakers are grappling with how to effectively integrate the large number of refugees and other asylum seekers into the workforce. On January 28, representatives from the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD met with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi to discuss the view of business on migration and the integration of refugees in labor markets.

The event coincided with the a release of a release a new OECD booklet on experiences, policy lessons and good practice in the integration of refugees and other groups in need of protection, developed over the last year in consultation with OECD member countries and social partners.

In his message to governments and other high-level participants, BIAC Secretary General Bernard Welschke called for advanced skills recognition on the national level, immediate and intensive language training, and targeted programs to better facilitate the integration of beneficiaries of international protection and other migrants into local labor markets. He also emphasized the importance of a consistent and efficient process to clarify the status of humanitarian migrants and refugees as this is a critical factor to determine their perspectives in labor markets.

BIAC: International Investment Agreements Matter

Globe with Money UnderneathInternational Investment Agreements, as well as investment chapters included in free trade agreements, are a key component of a pro-growth policy environment. Regional trade agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership are a priority on the global trade and investment agenda and have increasingly attracted public attention. It is therefore more important than ever to remind policymakers and the public why international investment agreements matter, and how they contribute to economic prosperity worldwide. It is in this context that the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD is currently preparing a paper on why international investment agreements matter.

The BIAC paper will provide input to the upcoming OECD conference on International Investment Treaties, which will be held in Paris on March 14. The conference will focus on the balance between investor protection and governments’ right to regulate. Active business input to these discussions will be important.

Future of Work Forum and OECD Employment Ministerial

worker_femaleThe future of work and the digitization of jobs bring new challenges to the frontier of policy dialogue with business stakeholders. Innovation and integration of digital tools and processes have brought forth new business models, evolving employment contracts and changing demands for skills at the workplace. The impact of this progress is a demanding area of interest for businesses and the policy community.

At the OECD Future of Work Forum and the Employment Ministerial that took place in January in Paris, stakeholders and leaders from the business community, the public sector and academia convened to discuss ways to foster and adapt employment in the changing nature of the digital economy while encouraging inclusive growth. The Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD was represented at each of the high level panels of the Future of Work Forum, and a strong BIAC delegation led by Chair Ronnie Goldberg, USCIB senior counsel, contributed business views on labor markets and the digital economy in the Employment Ministerial. BIAC’s call for more comprehensive and targeted education policies and the necessary flexibility in labor markets was well received.

USCIB Highlights How OECD Work is Used by Business

OECD_WashingtonThe Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) produces domestic policy tools for governments by setting benchmarks, comparing progress and pointing out best practices. On January 29, the OECD Washington Center hosted a special 2016 kickoff event that reviewed how governments and other stakeholders including business take advantage of the OECD’s many resources.

At the event, Rob Mulligan, USCIB senior vice president for policy and government affairs, presented the views of USCIB as the U.S. affiliate to Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC), which is the official voice of business at the OECD.

Mulligan cited several examples of OECD work products that have had significant impacts on government policies of interest to business, including the Policy Framework for Investment, the AntiBribery Convention, the Trade in Value Added database, the Data Privacy Guidelines, and the Services Trade Restrictiveness Index. These are just a few of the many OECD products that are used by OECD and non-OECD governments in developing national laws and regulations affecting investment and business activities.

A summary of this and other activities undertaken by USCIB staff can be found in the most recent edition of Washington Update.

OECD and UNHCR Call for Scaling up Integration Policies in Favor of Refugees

ImmigrationThe integration of refugees in local economies has become more challenging as the refugee crisis continues to have a significant impact on local labor markets. Businesses have asked for orderly, transparent, efficient and well-thought immigration programs and have demonstrated a willingness to participate in deep discussions with their governments on how to contribute.

At the high-level conference with the OECD and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi on January 28, the BIAC delegation, headed by Secretary General Bernhard Welschke, called for advances in national level skills recognition, language training and targeted labor market programs to support the integration of beneficiaries of international protection and other forms of migrants into the local labor markets.

The OECD and UNHCR stressed not only the moral imperative but also the clear economic incentive to help the millions of refugees living in OECD countries to develop the skills they need to work productively and safely in the jobs of tomorrow.

“Far from a problem, refugees can and should be part of the solution to many of the challenges our societies confront,” said Gurría.

The OECD also released a report, Making Integration Work: Refugees and others in need of protection, which provides the main lessons from the experience of OECD countries in fostering the integration of refugees. The report highlights many good practices to tackle key barriers and support lasting integration of refugees and their children. It stresses the importance of early intervention, including providing access to language courses, employment programs and integration services as soon as possible, including for asylum seekers with high prospects to remain. It also stresses the need to help migrants settle where jobs are and not necessarily where housing is cheaper. The report also underlines the need to adapt integration programs to reflect migrants’ diversity in terms of skills and  the specific needs of refugees.