Business Calls for Fresh G20 Commitment on Jobs Especially for the Young

Employment

Working through two of USCIB’s affiliates – the International Organization of Employers (IOE) and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) – global business called on the G20 to make a fresh commitment to maintaining and creating jobs, following forecasts of renewed economic uncertainty and slow global growth.

At this week’s G20 labor ministerial in Paris, IOE Executive Vice President Daniel Funes de Rioja of Argentina stressed the need for strong, sustainable and balanced growth, underpinned by measures that will restore business confidence to take risks, invest and generate job opportunities.

American business representatives at the ministerial included BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter, principal with Deloitte LLP and a member of USCIB’s board, and USCIB Executive Vice President Ronnie Goldberg, who serves as a regional vice president of the IOE and chairs BIAC’s Employment, Labor and Social Affairs Committee.

Advocating concrete measures to address the worsening global jobs outlook, employers recommended improving the quality of business regulation, and a closer focus on labor markets, in the context of reduced government capacity for direct stimulatory expenditure.

Mr. Funes de Rioja particularly highlighted the need for youth employment, employability, skills and education to be recognized as top priorities for the G20, along with economic and financial reforms.  Read more on the IOE website.

BIAC called for strong action by G20 governments to avoid the devastating effects a “double-dip” global recession would have on employment.

“Without decisive action, we risk prolonging record levels of long-term unemployment and having millions more young people enter adulthood without the prospect of meaningful work,” stated Mr. Heeter. “This would be tragic for the individuals involved, their families and our societies.”

BIAC urged governments to prioritize action to restore investor and consumer confidence by delivering clear and pragmatic national, regional and global strategies for growth and job creation. “The way out of the crisis will come from the private sector growth. Governments must focus on creating a better business environment to restore investor confidence,” Mr. Heeter said.  Read more on BIAC’s website.

More on USCIB’s Labor and Employment Committee

With US Tax Reform Looming Global Experts Meet in Washington

L-R: Steven Miller, deputy commissioner for services and enforcement at the Internal Revenue Service, and Bill Sample, corporate vice president of worldwide tax at Microsoft Corp. and chair of USCIB’s Taxation Committee. Mr. Miller told the conference the IRS would move “in the next month or so” against foreign banks that refused to hand over details on American clients suspected of tax evasion.
L-R: Steven Miller, deputy commissioner for services and enforcement at the Internal Revenue Service, and Bill Sample, corporate vice president of worldwide tax at Microsoft Corp. and chair of USCIB’s Taxation Committee. Mr. Miller told the conference the IRS would move “in the next month or so” against foreign banks that refused to hand over details on American clients suspected of tax evasion.

With tax reform high on the agenda in Washington, what are the implications for multinational companies?  To help executives and policy makers keep up in this fast-moving area, USCIB convened its fifth annual tax conference earlier this month in Washington, D.C., focusing again on the work of the 34-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

This 2011 OECD International Tax Conference, which took place June 6 and 7 at the Four Seasons Hotel, provided a unique opportunity for the U.S. business community to interact with key representatives from the OECD Center for Tax Policy and Administration, as well as senior tax officials from the U.S. and other OECD countries.  The OECD and itsBusiness and Industry Advisory Committee
(BIAC), part of USCIB’s global network, joined in organizing the event.

“As the volume, speed and complexity of international business continues to grow, global firms need clear, consistent and stable tax rules more than ever,” said Bill Sample, corporate vice president for worldwide taxation with Microsoft Corp. and chair of USCIB’s Taxation Committee.  “The OECD is the recognized leader in promoting a tax system to facilitate multinational business and dispute resolution.”

Key topics addressed at the sold-out event included: the latest developments affecting permanent establishments, transfer pricing and intangibles; how countries are working together to improve tax compliance and cooperation; the relevance of the recent revision of the OECD’s Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises for tax planning; and how the OECD works with new members and non-members on tax matters.

Carol Doran Klein, USCIB’s vice president and international tax counsel, and Jeffrey Owens, director of the OECD’s Center for Tax Policy Administration.
Carol Doran Klein, USCIB’s vice president and international tax counsel, and Jeffrey Owens, director of the OECD’s Center for Tax Policy Administration.

Speakers at the event included:

  • Jeffrey Owens, head of the OECD’s Center for Tax Policy and Administration
  • Steven Miller, deputy commissioner of the IRS for services and enforcement
  • Pamela Olson, a partner with Skadden Arps and former assistant secretary of the Treasury for tax policy
  • Thomas Barthold, chief of staff of the Joint Congressional Committee on Taxation
  • Manal Corwin, deputy assistant secretary of the Treasury for international tax affairs
  • Masatsugu Asakawa of the Japanese finance ministry, incoming chair of the OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs

“Informed, ongoing dialogue with the OECD secretariat and with OECD member states is crucial for global companies,” according to Carol Doran Klein, USCIB’s vice president and international tax counsel.  “The fact that this year’s conference took place against the backdrop of potentially far-reaching tax reform in the United States only adds to its importance.”

Attendees applauded the substance and organization of this year’s tax conference.  “As always, the event was interesting, well-organized and flawlessly executed,” said Linda H. Fernandez of Eli Lilly.

The conference agenda is available at www.uscibtax.org.  Photos from the event can be accessed by clicking here.

Conference supporting organizations included the International Fiscal Association – USA Branch, the International Tax Policy Forum, the National Foreign Trade Council, the Organization for International Investment, the Tax Council Policy Institute, the Tax Executives Institute and the Tax Foundation.

Staff contact: Carol Doran Klein

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

OECD website

 

OECD Ministerial Marks 50 Years of Progress

At the signing of the revised OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises: L-R: Joris Oldenziel (OECD Watch), TUAC Chairman Richard Trumka (AFL-CIO), OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (Deloitte).
At the signing of the revised OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises: L-R: Joris Oldenziel (OECD Watch), TUAC Chairman Richard Trumka (AFL-CIO), OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (Deloitte).

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was among the many top officials and business executives who convened in Paris last week to celebrate the 50th birthday of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which began as an outgrowth of the Marshall Plan and has grown to encompass 34 leading industrialized democracies, and to lay out a vision for the organization’s future growth.

“For all of its changes, the OECD remains as it was in those earliest days, a community of shared values, open and effective markets, human rights, freedoms, and the rule of law,” Secretary Clinton stated. “This is a place where leaders and technocrats, business, labor, and civil society can find common ground and produce tangible benefits for our fellow citizens.”

On an issue USCIB has championed, Secretary Clinton also spoke of the need for governments to develop policies to address the role of state-owned enterprises in the global economy.

“As the OECD enhances its engagement with emerging economies, it must also continue its groundbreaking work to develop multidisciplinary guidelines for the treatment of state-owned and state-controlled enterprises,” she said. “Whether they are owned by shareholders or states, all companies should operate on a level playing field consistent with the principles of competitive neutrality. And these companies should be solely commercial, not political actors.”

USCIB members who played a leading role in the ministerial and surrounding events included USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III, who is chairman, president and CEO of The McGraw-Hill Companies, and board member Charles Heeter, principal with Deloitte LLP and chairman of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC), USCIB’s affiliate through which we provide input to the OECD policy process

USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III speaks at a panel on putting people back to work.
USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III speaks at a panel on putting people back to work.

Mr. McGraw took part in a panel discussion on the topic of “Bringing People Back to Work.” Among his key messages:

• Job creation requires taking concrete steps to improve the world’s economy, for example by opening markets through multilateral agreements such as the WTO’s Doha Round and through regional agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

• We need to narrow the skills gap, making sure graduates from our education systems are prepared to enter the workforce, and we must ensure everyone has the opportunity for life-long education.

• We need to make sure our education systems are providing quality, relevant education and training, so graduates have the necessary skills to succeed in today’s – and tomorrow’s – economy.

• Technology is a great enabler and equalizer, letting individuals use online courses to obtain degrees and certifications, and facilitating delivery of educational material via a variety of devices, providing “anytime, anywhere” learning.

In April, USCIB and BIAC organized a reception at the State Department to mark the OECD’s 50th anniversary, bringing together business, government and other stakeholders.

Also at the OECD ministerial, governments agreed on revisions to the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, an issue in which USCIB has been closely involved. Secretary Clinton delivered remarks
reflecting on the importance of the Guidelines, which were first introduced in the 1970s and remain one of the few corporate responsibility instruments with formal government imprimatur. In the context of the latest revision, business is seeking better understanding and application of the voluntary Guidelines in non-OECD countries, in order to create a level playing field for companies around the world.

Secretary Clinton chaired a high-level session on development that featured a discussion of women’s economic empowerment. In addition, Russia signed the OECD’s anti-corruption treaty, one of a host of requirements to move the country’s application to join the OECD toward actual accession. Russia must first complete its accession to the World Trade Organization.

 

Secretary Clinton’s remarks on the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (State Department website)

BIAC website

OECD website

Business Calls on G20 and OECD to Address Solicitation of Bribes

“Fighting public officials’ solicitation of bribes must be a priority in order to combat corruption,” said Jean Monville, chair of the Task Force on Bribery and Corruption at BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, USCIB’s affiliate. “BIAC is committed to creation of a clean global business environment and the goals of the G20 Anti-Corruption Action Plan; this will necessitate deeper co-operation between business and governments.”

Speaking at a G20-OECD conference in Paris on “Joining Forces against Corruption: G20 Business and Government,” Mr. Monville emphasized the importance of looking at all aspects of corruption. “The OECD, with support of BIAC, has been leading the international fight against corruption by means of the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention. However, this landmark treaty has focused on the bribing of public foreign officials. Addressing solicitation would make the fight against corruption by governments and international organizations even more effective and relevant.”

Read more on BIAC’s website.

At the same conference, another USCIB affiliate, the International Chamber of Commerce, said its RESIST (Resisting Extortion and Solicitation in International Transactions) toolkit offers a practical solution to recent worldwide calls for concrete results following anti-corruption commitments.

RESIST is an ICC joint initiative developed in collaboration with Transparency International, the UN Global Compact and the World Economic Forum Partnering Against Corruption Initiative (PACI).  Now also available in Spanish and French, the toolkit is designed to help companies train their employees to resist bribe solicitation.

Read more on ICC’s website.

Staff contact:  Eva Hampl

More on the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD

More on the International Chamber of Commerce

News Brief: Estonia Becomes OECD’s 34th Member

In December, Estonia deposited its instrument of accession to the OECD Convention, thereby becoming a member of the organization.  Estonia was invited by OECD countries to open negotiations for membership in May 2007.  This means that the Estonian Employers’ Confederation (ETTK) is now officially a full BIAC Member Organization.   “ETTK joins the BIAC membership at a crucial time in which the global economy is facing unprecedented challenges,” BIAC said in a statement.  “The need for greater international cooperation is therefore of fundamental importance for a return to sustainable economic growth, and BIAC is delighted to be able to work closely with the Estonian business community in this effort.”

BIAC website

OECD Forecasts Slow U.S. Recovery, but No Double-Dip Recession

At USCIB event, Gurría unveils latest U.S. economic survey
OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría presents the OECD’s findings.
OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría presents the OECD’s findings.

The U.S. economy will continue to rebound from recession, but at a relatively slow pace and with continued high unemployment, according to the latest OECD economic survey of the United States.  The 2010 survey was presented September 20 by OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría at a USCIB breakfast in New York.

USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III hosted the event at the Midtown headquarters of The McGraw-Hill Companies, where he serves as chairman, president and CEO.  Timed to coincide with the week’s UN-related activities in New York, the breakfast provided USCIB members, friends and the media with an opportunity to explore the OECD’s findings in depth.

“It is becoming increasingly clear that the economy has entered a soft patch,” according to Mr. Gurría.  “But this is not inconsistent with previous recoveries. We don’t see a risk of a double-dip recession. That said, we don’t see either a recovery that is strong enough to put a significant dent in unemployment.”

Mr. Gurría with USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III (left) and USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson.
Mr. Gurría with USCIB Chairman Harold McGraw III (left) and USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson.

The OECD chief said that macroeconomic support should be maintained in the short term.  “In this regard, we welcome the announcement of Chairman Bernanke that the Federal Reserve would be prepared, if necessary, to provide additional stimulus.”

The report addresses the need for government support of the U.S. labor market, as well as longer-term objectives of restoring fiscal discipline and tackling global climate change.

The survey recommends that training and education programs for the unemployed be prolonged to help workers adapt to the post-recession economy.  Such programs, it says, could potentially play an important role in facilitating the return to the job market of workers whose skills have been affected by a long spell of unemployment.

The OECD also argues that the best way to strengthen the public finances would be to make public spending more efficient, in particular health care programs.  In this respect, Mr. Gurría stated, recent U.S. health care reform, which includes measures to reduce the growth in health care spending, is an important landmark.

International Chamber of Commerce Chairman Rajat Gupta posing a question to Mr. Gurría.
International Chamber of Commerce Chairman Rajat Gupta posing a question to Mr. Gurría.

The OECD urges the U.S. government to take additional steps to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio, since spending cuts restraint alone are “unlikely to suffice,” it says.

“Barring cuts in entitlements and defense spending, which are currently not on the policy agenda, taxes will likely have to increase to stabilize the debt-to-GDP ratio by the middle of the decade and put it on a downward path thereafter,” according to the survey.

Moreover, the survey argues that the United States needs to play a pivotal role in a global agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  In that respect, according to the report, government support for emission-reducing technologies is important but insufficient without the right incentives in place.

Putting a price on carbon, either through a carbon tax or a cap-and-trade scheme, is the key to providing the correct incentives for a greener economy. It would also be less economically costly than purely regulatory approaches.

OECD country surveys are issued approximately every two years and are the result of the OECD’s peer-review process.  Policy recommendations in the reports are endorsed by the 33 OECD member countries, including the United States.

USCIB provides American business views to the OECD and its member governments through its affiliation with the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, which groups leading industry associations from all the OECD nations.

A summary of the OECD’s 2010 Economic Survey of the United States is available at www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/us.

Staff contact: Ronnie Goldberg

OECD website

BIAC website

USCIB Interview with the OECD Deputy Secretary General Richard Boucher

USCIB Interview:

OECD Deputy Secretary General Richard Boucher

The OECD’s Richard Boucher (center) with BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (right) and USCIB’s Tim Deal.
The OECD’s Richard Boucher (center) with BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (right) and USCIB’s Tim Deal.

Ambassador Richard Boucher, a career U.S. diplomat, was named deputy secretary general of the 30-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in November.  (Chile will become the OECD’s 31st member once its legislature ratifies accession.)  From 2006 to 2009, Ambassador Boucher served as assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, following upon a seven-year stint as assistant secretary for public affairs during which time he crafted the U.S. public approach on key world issues for three secretaries of state.

Ambassador Boucher, who has been tasked with spearheading the OECD’s enhanced engagement and accession processes, sat down for an interview with USCIB in Washington, D.C., earlier this month.  Participants included Charles P. Heeter, Jr. (Deloitte), chairman of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, Timothy E. Deal, USCIB’s senior vice president for Washington, Jonathan Huneke, USCIB’s vice president for communications and public affairs, and Jill Schuker, director of the OECD’s Washington office.

Q: What brought you to the OECD?

I’ve always had a tangential relationship with the OECD, from my early days in the State Department’s Economic Bureau.  I worked on Chinese economic reform throughout my career.  And the last couple years I spent working with India, including economic subjects such as an investment treaty.  I’ve had a career in international economics, even though I’ve often deviated from that to do public affairs or other things.  So one of the things that appealed to me at the OECD  was this is the organization that knows the most about how economies work, and that at a moment when we’re all scratching our heads again, and talking about how economies should work better, this was the place to be.

Q: What from your background have you brought with you to the OECD?

A sort of world-wide view.  Whether it was public affairs or some of the other jobs that I’ve done, I’ve worked in all major areas of the world.  I’ve tried to maintain a global outlook.  So what I’d like to get from the OECD is the perspective on how economies work around the world.  And what I’d like to bring to the OECD is to keep the global picture in mind, and to make sure that we stay relevant on a global scale.

Q: How do you explain the OECD’s relevance to Americans, especially business people?

It’s relevant on a bunch of different levels.  Whether it’s chemical standards or tax treaties, or international bribery standards, it has a direct effect on how business operates, and how economies operate around the world.  It’s the place where policy experts come together.  And it’s where people who are doing regulation – in taxes, financial services, corporate governance –come together and compare experiences.  They try to come up with best practices, standards and policies.   It’s founded on experience, on what works.  And if we want a world that’s based on real experience and not theory, I think the OECD is the best place to share that experience and come up with answers to the problems we all face in managing economies, managing companies.

Q: With the G8 giving way to the G20 as the primary high-level forum for global economic discussion, what is the role of the OECD?

We don’t know for sure.  As the G8 evolves, as the G20 evolves, the OECD is going to evolve as well.  What we’ve found so far is because we have the expertise, the shared policy experience of now 31 OECD members, and a substantial outreach effort to the bigger economies around the world, those organizations turn to the OECD and say, for example, “We need to look at fossil fuel subsidies, can you help us?”  And, the answer is yes, we can help do that.  Interested in innovation strategies?  Well, that’s something the OECD is working on already and bringing countries together.  Interested in labor?  We’re working with the International Labor Organization on putting together a G20 ministerial on labor.  We’ve got expertise in all these different areas, and we can develop new expertise as needed.  And I think we’ll see people turn to us.  That doesn’t mean we’re the only ones.  Obviously, the IMF has a role, the World Bank has a role, the Financial Stability Board has a role, because there are financial issues and regulatory issues or development issues.  But I think the core of economic management is at the OECD, as are the social impacts.  How do you deal with some of the jobs and the employment problems caused by the crisis?  How do you reestablish the structural potential of economies that might have been lost during the crisis?  Those are issues we can help people with, bring people together.  So what we’ll find is that these organizations turn to us in areas that we have the particular expertise or can develop it quickly, and they’ll turn to others where others have the expertise, and hopefully all this will work pretty well together.

Q: What can you tell us about the OECD’s accession and enhanced engagement efforts?

Chile is the first of probably four economies in the next six months that will come in.  And Chile has done a bang-up job getting ready for membership, not only adjusting its own economy to meet the highest possible standards of economic management, but also bringing something to the table.  We will learn a lot from Chile. We’ll look at Chile’s pension plans to enrich our understanding of aging societies.  Slovenia, Estonia and Israel also seem to be on track.  A couple more meetings and committees have to discuss the issues, but it looks like we’ll have them in by next June.  Russia’s on a slower timetable.  We all know there’s a lot for Russia to do.  The fact that they’re interested in accession is good.  I think it’s good for everybody in the business world.  The more Russia does to bring itself in line with global standards, the better off we all are.  They sent a very substantial delegation to the bribery meeting that was held in December, which is great.  Everybody knows they’ve got a long way to go.  But the fact that they’re serious and showing serious interest, that’s good for all of us.  And the more they do, the better we all are.

Beyond that, we’ve got five enhanced engagement countries that we’re actively working with: China, India, Indonesia, Brazil and South Africa.  And those are countries that have substantial weight in the world economy, that need to have substantial input into future world standards and best practices.  We need their understanding to enrich our discussion.  And we bring a lot to them as they face policy choices.  How do different countries do these things?  That’s what we can share with them.  So my job is to “enhance” the enhanced engagement as much as we can, make it meaningful to those countries and to us.  Beyond that, there is a broader outreach, to the Middle East, North Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia, other places where OECD experience can contribute to countries that want to develop market economies, but where we can also learn from them as they face different development challenges.   How they’re going about it, what they’re trying to do, and how some of them are succeeding.

Q: In Latin America, Chile is in line to join the OECD, and of course OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría is from Mexico.  Has that increased the organization’s influence in the region?

The fact that we have Latin American members means we now have a different kind of experience coming in.  As I said, Chile brings some really unique experience to the table.  So does Mexico.  It means that there are things for others to aspire to in the region.  Others can look at those countries and say, “Hey, they got their act together and did it right, maybe we should too.”  We’ve got programs with Argentina, Brazil and others.  We need to show people in the region that the market route works.

Q: BIAC has observer members in nearly all of the enhanced engagement countries as well as in the accession countries.  Can this network be helpful to you?

What we look to BIAC for generally is even more important in the enhanced engagement countries: What are the challenges people are facing?  What are the problems, and how are they trying to solve them?  It’s business people from those countries who, on a very practical level, must contend with unemployment insurance, or pension schemes or economic regulations.  Also BIAC members who operate in these countries know the problems we need to solve in different places.  Countries say “We want to be more competitive, we want to have a better investment environment.”  Well, if we’re going to help countries achieve a better investment environment, you know the investors, as well as the host countries, the recipients.  So that’s where the rubber meets the road.

Q: What specifically is involved in OECD accession?  What do countries have to do to make the grade?

Each of the OECD’s 20-odd major committees goes through the practices of the country in its particular area of expertise.  The tax people go through tax practices, bribery people go through what steps they take on bribery.  And in areas where they think the country ought to do more to come up to standards – for example, passing intellectual property legislation, as has happened in one or two of the present accession candidates – they say, “Look, we’ll give you a positive recommendation if you do this.”  The speed of accession is governed by the speed with which they are able to come through on those things.  So just the process of accession has led to upgrading the quality of law and implementation.  OECD doesn’t just say “You’ve got to pass these laws,” but “You’ve got to show us you can implement them, too.”  A lot of really important social issues come through it as well.  Enhanced engagement is more with a view to possible membership.  We would love those countries to come in, but they’re going to come in when they’re ready.  And what we need to do in the meantime is, as I said, make it meaningful for us and make it meaningful for them, meaning that when we have policy discussions we benefit from their experience, and when they face policy choices they get the benefit of our experience and our expertise.  If you go back 30, 40 years, the OECD was at least 80 percent, if not more, of the word’s GDP.  If we’re going to be the world’s premiere economic management organization, we’ve got to have that relationship with the countries that now constitute a significant portion of the world’s GDP.

Q: One USCIB member referred to China’s enhanced engagement as a “regulatory shopping cart,” meaning the OECD provides a supermarket of sorts where countries can choose the polices that best fit their needs.  Is this how it works?

Well, if you’ll forgive the analogy, we don’t do enhanced engagement like a Chinese menu, where you’ve got to chose one from column A and one from column B.  It is indeed more like a supermarket, where you go in and say “What do I need today?”  It has a lot to do with the state of your economy.  But it also has a lot to do with what you’re trying to accomplish.  If you’re trying to attract investment, build long-term stability, go through structural reforms and changes, address currency issues, then you tend to go in the aisles where those products are.

Q: You have a unique perspective, having been in the government at high levels for a number of years, and then going into the OECD.  What’s your perspective on how the OECD figures in U.S. policy making?  Is it an important organization?

I think it’s always been important.  It’s always been a part of our international economic picture.  Where I think it’s becoming more important is on the domestic economy.  We’re facing some fairly big economic challenges, and the people who are making domestic economic policy want to know what are other countries doing right now.  I was really struck when we had a full-day review of Chinese economic policy.  They face a lot of problems that are unique to their situation.  But they also face the question of pulling back on the stimulus and going to more demand-led growth.  At what point do we all have to slow down the expansion of monetary policy and credit in order to avoid inflation?  How do they start unwinding state ownership?  They face a lot of the same questions as we do.  And I think we have policy makers here who understand we face a lot of the questions that others do.  That doesn’t mean we’re going to grab somebody else’s method and use it.  But you can learn from people’s experience without trying to mimic their ways.  And I think this administration has a commitment to looking at the global picture.  That means that the OECD is a very important organization to face those challenges.

Q: Has the fact that the economic downturn was so heavily centered in the United States and Western Europe led some countries to question the value of open markets or some of the other things the OECD stands for?

Not fundamentally.  It’s interesting to look at people’s reaction to the crisis around the world.  There are a few places that say, “We were protected because we were protectionists,” but not that many.   Everybody’s wary.  Everybody remembers the experience of the 1930s, or at least learned about it in school.   And so one of the things on the G20 agenda is to watch out for trade and investment protectionism.  We’re also learning to look for it in more subtle forms.  I think countries by and large are committed to the global market economy, but they’re all watching each other pretty carefully.  But the fundamental issue of markets, market incentives, tracking investment, developing jobs, productivity, technology, education, better labor policies, better competition – nobody’s really questioning those.  They still believe that getting better at the fundamentals of economic management is the way to satisfy your population.

Q: How is OECD managing the planned revision of its guidelines for multinational enterprises?

We just had a big forum with a lot of corporate, NGO and labor input on where we go on the guidelines.  I found it interesting; it was my first real introduction to the area, and there was enormous attendance and enthusiasm.  Many pointed out the similarity of interests of local and international businesses in a given economy, the fundamental importance of national treatment, and that you may need guidelines that can apply to everybody.  Companies want to be contributors to the long-term health of economies and societies.  And so having a standard set of rules, a standard set of guidelines for everyone really does benefit everybody.  We’d like to see everyone adopt more or less the same practices.  We did that with the anti-bribery convention, and I think that was a very successful all around.

Q: The OECD convention on bribery just marked its tenth anniversary, correct?

Yes, and the history of that is very illustrative.  When we passed the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. companies had restrictions on them that nobody else did.  Now we’ve come out a lot better because everybody is meeting certain standards.  As new countries join the convention, that makes it better for business and for the countries themselves.  I read that the Chinese government put out a report saying there was $35 billion in illicit payments in China last year.  We now are moving to another level not just of recommendations, but of implementation and review.  Countries will be reviewed for not just whether they passed a law but whether they’re carrying it out.  It makes the business environment, the economic environment, and frankly the political environment so much more healthy in countries to have the process underway.  It’s gone global, beyond the OECD, to a huge number of countries.

Q: Should the OECD be doing more treaty-making?

There are definitely a lot of areas where it doesn’t have to be treaty-making, but rather standard-setting.  And sometimes maybe it’s just experience-sharing.  But sometimes taking these things global really makes sense.  Corporate guidelines would be an example, where perhaps we should try to have an international standard there that everyone can adhere to.  Or on taxes, an area where the OECD has informed and helped create the international standard, but it’s also gotten bigger than us.  I think there are a number of areas where we ought to do that to some extent, looking for advice from BIAC and others – what are the areas that would be most meaningful?  And that’s where the work we do with big economies outside the OECD – with China, India, Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia, and Russia – can be really important, because this lets them get involved in the setting of future standards.  They complain sometimes, “Why should we be expected to meet standards we didn’t have a hand in making?”  It’s in our interest to have them involved in standard setting.

Q: What is the OECD’s involvement in the climate change debate?

I think energy and climate change is one of the most interesting areas we’re involved in.  We’ve already done a lot of work on green growth.  Everybody wants to know how to manage an economy so that it grows greener over time and is sustainable.  How do you measure economic success?  It’s more than GDP.  It’s the ability to sustain the viability of your economy and population over time.  We had a big meeting in Busan, Korea last fall on this.  So a lot of these pieces come together – green growth, innovation, structural reform, measuring progress, and a number of other things – into the idea that people want to manage their economies better for the long term.  I think the OECD has a lot to contribute, and is a good place for countries to get together to discuss, what kind of taxes work on energy, what kind of cap-and-trade systems work, what ways are there to give the right incentives to grow greener rather than just making rules about it.

Q: What’s the role of the International Energy Agency in all this?

There’s an incredible amount of expertise to draw on in a symbiotic relationship with the IEA.  They have the annual World Energy Outlook, they have real experts in the use and development of energy, and we have a lot of the expertise on how that filters into the rest of the economy, and how you build your economy in the future.  Having the IEA as part of this is a good way to look at the mandates that we’re getting from governments, which is: tell us how to grow greener without losing our growth potential.

Q: Last question: What can business do to make your life easier?

Give me ideas I can steal.  Really, I think we’re all looking for good ideas these days.  And tell us what we should be doing.  We’ve got to be an organization that responds to the needs of our constituents – member countries, non-member countries, business, labor.  Everybody who’s working on the world economy these days needs to come forward with ideas and on things we ought to look at together.

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Brochure: The OECD Means Business

OECD website

Lisbon Hosts Business Conference on OECD’s Response to Global Economic Crisis

Participants sought to defend the global economy from protectionist backsliding.
Participants sought to defend the global economy from protectionist backsliding.

As global leaders continue to face the challenges of addressing the global financial and economic crisis, over 150 international business and government policy decision-makers met May 21 to explore and discuss how the OECD and the international business community are working together to promote open markets and job creation.

The one-day conference, organized by the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC) and its Portuguese member Associação Industrial Portuguesa – Confederação Empressarial (AIP-CE) on the occasion of BIAC’s annual general assembly, provided insight into how the Paris-based OECD, which groups the world’s most advanced industrialized nations, influences economic policies worldwide and how business can engage with it.

“We must work together, BIAC and OECD, to restore public trust,” said OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría. “Trust in governments and regulations, in banks and corporations, in open markets and globalization as a whole.”

BIAC Chairman Charles P. Heeter (Deloitte & Touche) helped open the event.  “Crisis management necessitates extraordinary measures, and governments are pressing, both domestically as well as internationally, to restore market confidence in the financial sector and to stimulate their economies,” he stated.  “BIAC is the means for the business voice to be heard at the highest levels at the OECD as it deals with today’s problems and thinks of tomorrow’s challenges.”

In a panel discussion of the current global economic outlook, USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson called upon governments to refrain from imposing new barriers to trade and investment, even where technically allowable under multilateral rules.  Referring to recent OECD discussions of globally integrated production, he stated: “We must resist the tide of ‘below the WTO radar’ non-tariff barriers that disrupt global, vertically integrated production patterns.”

Additional speakers included Fernando Teixeria Dos Santos, Portugal’s minister of state and finance, Jorge Rocha De Matos, president of AIP-CE, and Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues Portugal’s ambassador to the OECD.  Panels included numerous other business and industry representatives from the U.S., Japan, Germany, Brazil, India, Sweden, Norway and Switzerland, as well as host Portugal.

Mr. Heeter concluded by thanking AIP-CE for successfully hosting this year’s event, and by highlighting that BIAC will build on the outcomes of the roundtable in preparing for its June 23 consultation with OECD ministers in Paris.  “It is in times like these when our collective work is needed more than ever,” he said.  “Business and governments acting together can help restore trust in globalization.”

Staff contact: Peter Robinson

More on BIAC

The Financial Crisis: USCIB responds

Latest statements and information from USCIB and our global business network

Glass globe being held by C clamp on blue background with moneyAmid ongoing financial shocks and market turmoil, USCIB and its global business network continue to actively promote efforts to provide sensible regulatory oversight and get world economic growth back on track.

Our unique affiliations with leading worldwide business groups – including the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Organization of Employers, and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD – provide an invaluable channel through which to influence the course of global policies and regulations affecting business and the economy.

Here are links to the latest statements and actions from USCIB and our global network.

3846_image002USCIB:

– “The G-20 and the Danger of Protectionism” (letter in The New York Times by USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson, April 1, 2009)

– Joint industry letter to President Obama on keeping markets open for foreign investment
(March 30, 2009)

– Business, Anti-Poverty and Faith-Based Groups Unite in Support of Open Markets (March 20, 2009)

– U.S. Multinational Companies Strengthen the Domestic Economy: Study demonstrates how domestic multinationals contribute to American productivity and prosperity
(March 16, 2009)

– G8 Business Summit Preparations Well Underway (March 2, 2009)

– U.S. business groups urge rejection of “Buy American” provisions in stimulus package (letter to Senate, February 3, 2009)

– USCIB letter to President Obama on priorities for tackling the economic crisis (January 21, 2009)

– Now More Than Ever: In the current crisis, USCIB’s core values matter (column by USCIB President Peter M. Robinson, January 2009)

– G8 Business Leaders: Crisis Demands Urgent Response, But Does Not Indicate a Failure of Market Economics (December 4, 2009)

– Accepting USCIB Award, Coca-Cola CEO Says Financial Crisis Jeopardizes Market Openness
(November 17, 2008)

– USCIB statement on the G-20 Summit (November 13, 2008)

– USCIB President Peter M. Robinson: Some Thoughts on the Current Crisis (October 21, 2008)

– Key Officials Address Critical Role of Sovereign Wealth Fund Investment (October 14, 2008)

3846_image004International Chamber of Commerce:

– ICC welcomes G20 boost to trade finance and pledge to conclude Doha Round (April 2, 2009)

– ICC plea in Financial Times: avoid deceptively simple solutions (April 1, 2009)

– “Resist Protectionism”
(letter to The New York Times by ICC Chairman Victor Fung, March 31, 2009)

– G20 must take action to fight protectionism and support trade finance to keep trade flowing
(March 31, 2009)

– ICC calls on G20 to address impact of Basel II on trade finance (March 27, 2009)

– Trade volume and value decline sharply as a result of crisis (March 23, 2009)

– A staunch advocate of globalization and trade (interview with ICC Chairman Victor Fung, International Herald Tribune, March 20, 2009)

– ICC issues positions on global economic crisis (March 13, 2009)

– ICC Chairman Victor Fung meets Gordon Brown ahead of G20 Summit (March 12, 2009)

– Lowest global economic index in history (February 18, 2009)

– ICC experts discuss the financial crisis and its implications (December 19, 2008)

– Doha Round agreement all the more vital in global economic crisis (December 17, 2008)

– First ICC Regional CEO Forum for Asia Pacific calls for unlocking of liquidity to spur global trade
(November 24, 2008)

– Lowest global economic index in 20 years (November 20, 2008)

– ICC Chairman hails G20 leaders rejection of protectionism and commitment to conclude WTO’s Doha Development Agenda (November 17, 2008)

– ICC Commission on Banking discusses trade finance problems at WTO (November 17, 2008)

– In CNN interview, ICC Chairman urges G20 to stimulate trade (November 13, 2008)

– ICC Chairman urges G20 leaders to adopt bold solutions to financial crisis (November 12, 2008)

Op-ed by ICC Chairman calls for a revitalized global trading system (November 10, 2008)

– International cooperation vital to resolve financial crisis (October 15, 2008)

3846_image006Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD:

– Business calls for credible G20 action to support open markets (March 31, 2009)

– Water and the economic crisis (March 16, 2009)

– The financial crisis and the role of the OECD (BIAC newsletter, December 2008)

– Major exporters pledge ongoing credit support for developing country imports (November 24, 2008 – OECD website)

– OECD welcomes G20 Declaration and offers support (November 17, 2008)

– OECD forecasts protracted economic slowdown (November 13, 2008 – OECD website)

– OECD preparing two-pillar action plan in response to crisis, says Gurría (November 12, 2008 – OECD website)

– OECD business calls for decisive G20 action against protectionism (November 10, 2008)

3846_image008International Organization of Employers:

– IOE information paper: Exiting the Crisis in Labor Markets (April 2009)

– World Employers: Financial Markets Need to Provide Stability and Liquidity to Business
(February 10, 2009)

– IOE president: Global employers are up to the challenge of the economic crisis (IOE newsletter, January 2009)

– The impacts of global crises on labor markets must be addressed (October 20, 2008)

Companies Assail Tax Bill Punishing Investment in the U.S.

New York, N.Y., July 26, 2007 – America’s top global companies have expressed serious concern over proposed legislation, introduced as a potential means of funding the farm bill currently under Congressional consideration, that would discriminate against foreign companies operating in the United States. The proposal would effectively and unfairly raise taxes on foreign based companies which contribute to the U.S. economy and through American jobs and substantial U.S. based operations. It would also do serious damage to the tax treaty network on which U.S. business relies to prevent double taxation and provide certainty in its pursuit of business outside the U.S. The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents U.S.-based multinationals and major exporters, said the measure could serve as an impetus for retaliation against American firms doing business in abroad.

“This bill, if enacted, would clearly violate an array of U.S. tax treaties, invite retaliation overseas, and damage our economy by discriminatorily raising taxes on foreign investment, hampering foreign investment and job creation in the United States,” said USCIB President Peter M. Robinson.

On the heels of introduction by Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) of the legislation in question, H.R. 3160, yesterday, the Administration appropriately expressed its strong opposition to the proposal in a statement of opposition delivered to Congress. The bill could come up for a vote in the House of Representatives today, without the benefit of the normal hearing process. Its effect would be to force foreign companies to pay higher withholding tax rates than their U.S.-owned counterparts on such payments as royalties, interest and management fees to their foreign affiliates. This would violate many bilateral U.S. tax treaties, which aim to both reduce double taxation and ensure cooperation with foreign tax authorities.

Mr. Robinson urged members of Congress to avoid measures targeting foreign firms specifically. “Such practices are often seized upon by foreign governments as an excuse to restrict market access and investment opportunities by American companies,” he noted. “We are concerned that formal and informal barriers to investment are on the rise in many countries. It is clearly in the interests of the United States, as the world’s largest source of overseas investment and one of the largest hosts for foreign direct investment to maintain a level playing field for foreign firms, to ensure that our own firms are treated fairly.”

Mr. Robinson noted that U.S. subsidiaries of foreign businesses account for more than five million U.S. jobs, supporting annual payrolls of over $300 billion.

USCIB promotes an open system of global commerce in which business can flourish and contribute to economic growth, human welfare and protection of the environment. Its membership includes more than 300 leading U.S. companies, professional services firms and associations whose combined annual revenues exceed $3.5 trillion. As the exclusive American affiliate of three key global business groups – the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Organization of Employers, and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD – USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade. More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:
Jonathan Huneke, VP communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 (office), +1 917.420.0039 (mobile) or jhuneke@uscib.org
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