Celebrating World Trade Week 2011 in New York

Award winner Shazy Visram, founder and CEO of HappyBaby Foods (center). USCIB’s Cynthia Duncan is at far right.
Award winner Shazy Visram, founder and CEO of HappyBaby Foods (center). USCIB’s Cynthia Duncan is at far right.

USCIB once again played a lead role in organizing World Trade Week celebrations in New York City, which took place last week.  Working under the theme of “Global Markets: Now More Than Ever,” New York-area international trade organizations put on a full week’s worth of exciting and informative activities highlighting the world of international trade in the New York Metro area.

The week kicked off with a gala reception at the International Trade Awards Breakfast on May 16, hosted by the Weissman Center for International Business at Baruch College.  Awards were presented to local companies HappyBaby Foods, TurboFil Packaging Machines, Gotham Sound and Communications, the Judge Organization, Signature Fencing, If You Care and Snohetta. The New York District Export Council and the World Trade Centers Association were also honored.

Jim Guzzi of Gotham Sound and Communications (left), a Carnet user and World Trade Week award winner.
Jim Guzzi of Gotham Sound and Communications (left), a Carnet user and World Trade Week award winner.

Cynthia Duncan, USCIB’s senior vice president for Carnet operations, was a member of the organizing team for World Trade Week NYC.

 

Staff contact: Cynthia Duncan

World Trade Week NYC website

 More on USCIB’s ATA Carnet Export Service

Global Economic Climate Brightens Again, ICC/Ifo Survey Reveals

The global economic climate is at its brightest since 2007, but there may be trouble ahead, according to the latest quarterly World Economic Survey by USCIB affiliate the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and the Munich-based Ifo Institute for Economic Research.

Topping last quarter’s four-year high, the ICC/Ifo world climate indicator reached 107.7 points in April, far above its 1995-2010 average of 96.9. The figure, based on a survey of over 1,000 economists in 120 countries, combines respondents’ increasingly positive appraisals of their countries’ economic situation with their outlook for the next six months, which has dipped slightly while remaining confident.

Despite its overall optimism, the report highlights marked regional variations, and factors that could upset further global economic recovery in the next six months. Public budget deficits were top on the experts’ list of urgent problems, ahead of high inflation and unemployment.

ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier said: “The ICC/Ifo findings are an encouraging sign that the global economy is still recovering. But they also show growing anxiety about public deficits that have built up since the financial crisis. And if governments struggling to reduce their debts resort to increasing protectionism – there’s a real danger that further global economic recovery could stall. Governments must work together and encourage a multilateral trading system that can allow the global economy to continue regaining strength.”

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

View graphs of the WES Ifo Survey

Download the full WES Ifo report

Stakeholder Involvement is the Key to Continued Internet Development and Economic Growth

As the e-G8 gets underway in Paris on May 24-25, USCIB’s affiliate the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has reiterated its long-standing belief that Internet policy issues are most effectively addressed with the involvement of all relevant stakeholders on an equal footing, and highlighted global business positions on several policy topics to be discussed at the event.

Business acknowledges the positive contributions of the Internet to the global economy and advocates a favourable Internet governance environment as a pre-condition for continued investment, innovation and development in this dynamic network of networks.

ICC believes that effective Internet-related policies can foster economic recovery and growth.

“The e-G8 meeting is a positive recognition of the importance of the Internet sector, and the importance of taking a multistakeholder approach to Internet issues,” said ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier. “Helping more people to gain access to the Internet is the most effective way to ensure diversity of content and users. A regulatory environment that helps obtain development goals through private sector competition, is the most sustainable way to attract investment, promote innovation and help build necessary infrastructures to bring the benefits of the Internet to the next billion users.”

Read more on ICC’s website.

Related: Cooperation Key to Maximizing Internet and ICTs, ICC Tells UN Commission (May 23, 2011)

 

More on USCIB’s ICT Committee

More on the ICC EBITT Commission

More on the ICC BASIS initiative

Green Economies in Globalized Markets

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USCIB invites you to join your peers for an intensely focused, academically rigorous 3-day Executive Education program developed specifically for USCIB by Boston University School of Management on “Green Economies in a Globalized Market.”

4125_image005Viewed from the global perspective of multinational corporations, the curriculum is designed to keep you on the cutting edge of trends, activities and strategies required to cope with the challenges you face in moving towards a green economy on a global scale.  Leading members of the Boston University School of Management faculty will guide you through everything from business strategy and sustainability goals to the impact on innovation and competitiveness.

Assuring maximum benefit for your time, the curriculum has been developed in partnership with USCIB to elevate your skills as a business executive as you delve into leading-edge thinking on sustainability through course work designed to sharpen your abilities. You will:

  • Understand how to achieve competitive advantage, balanced with sustainability goals.
  • Gain insight into the current trends and activities in international negotiations related to climate change.
  • Understand the implications of greening accounting and assigning green values to aspects of business and ecosystem services, and learn how that translates to the bottom line.
  • Analyze best practices from leading global companies.
  • Develop the ability to recognize trends and discuss new business model frameworks in the face of regulatory and market place disruption.
  • Understand the development of financial incentives and contract structures to drive customer acceptance and adoption.
  • Explore major types of risk and the risks specific to the green economy.
  • Discuss corporate risk management structure including risk identification, measurement and reporting, and main risk drivers.
  • Address the financial cost of not managing risks.
  • Understand competition in green ecosystems using insights from related sectors.
  • Evaluate how best to position your organization in emerging energy ecosystems.

Classes are small and space is limited, so we urge you to register today to make this strategic investment in your future. Register by July 27, 2011 to receive the early registration rate of $2,100.  Details on the curriculumare available on the Boston University website.  Group discounts are available – please call for details.

If you have questions or need additional information please feel free to contact The BU Executive Programs department at 617-353-4248, e-mail elc@management.bu.edu.

If you would like to talk with USCIB about the program and the value it holds for your organization, please feel free to contact Abby Shapiro at ashapiro@uscib.org or Norine Kennedy at nkennedy@uscib.org.

Thank you. We look forward to your participation this September!

Global Trade Recovery Faces Difficulties Across Many Low-Income Countries

Most respondents agreed in the Survey that business on the whole has been significantly improving since the final quarter of 2009
Most respondents agreed in the Survey that business on the whole has been significantly improving since the final quarter of 2009

Global trade flows rebounded across many regions in 2010, according to latest trade and finance global survey from USCIB’s affiliate, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), but high pricing meant that traders in many low-income countries still faced difficulties accessing affordable trade finance.

Representatives from 210 banks in 94 countries responded to the ICC survey, which asked for their opinion, as well as statistics, on the current trade finance landscape in their respective countries. The survey, the fourth consecutive ICC poll of its kind, registered 30 percent more responses than in the previous year, in terms of the number of banks.

Recovery worldwide has been driven by increased trade in North America, Europe and Asia, as well as between Asia and the rest of the world, according to the survey. Other regions, especially Africa, continued to have stressed markets, and the cost of trade finance also remained high in many parts of Asia and Latin America.

Traders in many low-income countries still have considerable difficulty accessing trade finance at an affordable cost, particularly for import finance. One positive development is that the average price for letters of credit, or “L/Cs”, in large emerging economies fell from 150-250 basis points in 2009 to 70-150 basis points in 2010.

“What is needed now is a more targeted use of resources, focusing on the poorer countries and small and medium sized enterprises around the world,” said Pascal Lamy, director general of the World Trade Organization. “They should not be paying the high price for the repair and re-regulation of the global finance industry.”

Most respondents, however, agreed in the survey – which was commissioned by the WTO Expert Group on Trade Finance to track the developments in the industry – that business on the whole has been significantly improving since the final quarter of 2009. Markets in several advanced economies are quickly returning to normal trading conditions, in terms of liquidity and the availability of trade finance. The acceptance of risk and pricing has also become more favorable.

The 2003-2010 SWIFT trade traffic figures, which were provided to ICC on an exclusive basis, confirm that, overall, the downward trend in volumes experienced in 2008 and 2009 is now over. There were a total of 42.9 million transactions registered in 2010, representing a 5.81 percent increase over 2009 volumes, which stood at 40.5 million (rounded).

Results have been uneven across regions, according to SWIFT. Asia-Pacific continues to register far greater volumes for sent (import) messages. The regions with the largest volumes   ̶  Asia-Pacific, Europe-Eurozone and North America   ̶  showed larger fluctuations than those with smaller volumes.

Africa showed the highest growth between 2009 and 2010, at 21.2 percent, followed by Asia-Pacific with 10.1 percent and Central & Latin America with 9.7 percent. However, it was the large volume of transactions in Asia that drove the upswing in SWIFT traffic, rather than Africa, where volumes were small.

Banks responding to the ICC Survey witnessed an increasing demand for bank-intermediated L/Cs, which are particularly favoured by traders and producers in developing countries with weak institutions.

Survey respondents were concerned about the impact of new regulatory initiatives, in particular the new requirements of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision document known as Basel III, on the financing of international trade.

There has been concern that a one-size-fits-all approach to regulation could threaten trade finance in emerging markets dependant on trade.

Banks argue that rules set by bank regulators impose capital requirements on trade finance and are disproportionately high considering the relative safety of these mechanisms. The rules, they say, force them to lock up funds that could otherwise be used to support trade.

The Survey revealed that respondents are not only wary of these regulations, but also do not have a clear understanding of them. When asked the question “Do you anticipate that the Basel III requirements will cause your bank to re-assess its trade finance strategy and products?” 34 percent indicated that the new regulatory regime would make their financial institution reconsider its trade finance strategy. At the same time, 57 percent of respondents answered that they were lacking sufficient information on the new regulations.

“The regulators should step up their engagement with the industry and seek feedback to ensure that the regulations are on track to achieving what they are intended to accomplish,” said ICC Banking Commission Chair Kah Chye Tan.

ICC research has shown that, contrary to the beliefs underpinning new regulations, trade finance is low risk and self-liquidating in nature. In 2010, ICC developed the International Trade Credit (Loss) Register for collecting performance data in trade finance.

The register specifically examined the default risk of trade finance instruments between 2005 and 2009. Out of some 5.2 million transactions, with a total value of over US$2.5 trillion, ICC found that off-balance sheet trade finance transactions had an average tenor of just 80 days and an insignificant incidence of default. Even during the global economic downturn, trade finance transactions had relatively low default levels, with fewer than 500 defaults for 2.8 million transactions.

“This initiative is particularly useful in providing evidence that trade finance is safe and worth promoting,” said Mr. Lamy.

More on USCIB’s Banking Committee

ICC Elects New Chairman

Gerard Worms
Gerard Worms

The International Chamber of Commerce, USCIB’s affiliate, announced that Gerard Worms, vice chairman of Rothschild Europe and chairman of ICC France, has been named chairman of ICC, succeeding Rajat Gupta, who has requested that his membership on ICC’s Executive Board be suspended.

Having chaired ICC France for the past three years, Mr. Worms brings strong business credentials and excellent contacts with major governments, including in his home country, which will host this year’s G20 Summit.  He is former chairman and CEO of Suez Group, and a commander of the French Legion of Honor.  Mr. Worms has also served as chairman of Banque Indosuez and the insurance group Victoire.

ICC website

USCIB Urges Active Trade and Investment Agenda

President Obama and Korean President Lee Myung-bak at last fall’s G20 Summit in Seoul.  A U.S.-Korea trade pact has been submitted to Congress.
President Obama and Korean President Lee Myung-bak at last fall’s G20 Summit in Seoul. A U.S.-Korea trade pact has been submitted to Congress.

Providing its views on the Obama administration’s trade policies and outlook, USCIB submitted written testimony to a February 9 hearing in the House Ways and Means Committee, calling on the administration to “pursue an active trade and investment agenda to open global markets.”

USCIB commended the administration for finalizing the U.S.-Korea free trade agreement, for pledging to double U.S. exports over five years, and for moving forward on the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations. It also said efforts to improve enforcement of existing trade agreements, especially through the World Trade Organization, had been helpful.

But much more could be done to open global markets for U.S. business, according to USCIB.  The testimony stated: “The key elements of a trade and investment agenda should include: completing the Free Trade agreements with Korea, Colombia and Panama; concluding an ambitious Doha Agreement in the World Trade Organization; moving forward with the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations to reach a high-standard trade framework; identifying new bilateral and multilateral trade initiatives with significant economic partners; addressing ongoing U.S.-Chinese trade and investment issues; accelerating work on investment treaties that will ensure protection of U.S. business investments in other countries; and aggressively promoting U.S. exports of clean technologies and environmentally-friendly goods and services.”

USCIB urged the administration to act “quickly and decisively” and to undertake new trade initiatives with leading trading partners in the near term.

On March 1, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk released the Obama administration’s trade agenda.  “This agenda reflects our commitment to a job-focused, comprehensive trade policy that benefits American businesses and workers as well,” he said.

This week Mr. Kirk said his office had finished preparing the Korea free trade agreement for submission to Congress.  He also stated that the Colombia and Panama FTAs will require “weeks or months” of additional work to finalize, and that the administration intends to press ahead and seek approval of just the Korea pact at this time.  Trade proponents on Capitol Hill and in the business community have urged that the Colombia and Panama pacts be quickly finalized so that Congress can consider the three FTAs at the same time.

Staff contact: Rob Mulligan

USCIB Testimony on the Administration’s Trade Agenda

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

Business Seeks to Take UN Green Growth Talks to the Next Level

Business supports international cooperation towards greening economies and jobs.
Business supports international cooperation towards greening economies and jobs.

Under the auspices of USCIB’s affiliate the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), business representatives were front and center at UN preparatory talks last month in advance of next year’s landmark “Rio+20” environmental summit.

Martina Bianchini, director of EU government affairs and public policy for the Dow Chemical Company, and chair of ICC’s Green Economy Task Force, led the world business organization’s delegation to the 2011 UN Environment Program (UNEP) ministerial and governing council meetings.

The meetings, held February 17-24 in Nairobi, brought together environment ministers from over 80 countries to consider critical next steps in preparing the environmental input to the Rio+20 Conference in 2012.  Issues under discussion included new measures on chemicals, e-waste and heavy metals, and options to strengthen international environmental government institutions.

Speaking at a forum attended by UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner and U.S. Environmental Protection Authority Administrator Lisa Jackson, Ms Bianchini said: “Business supports international cooperation towards greening economies and jobs: in our view, to reach its full potential, the green economy concept must become global, seeking to green all elements of the economy.  The objective is to foster innovation, rather than mandate it.”

The ICC Green Economy Task Force plans to review and provide comments on the UNEP Green Economy Report, which was released at the Nairobi meetings.  Attending the UNEP meetings, Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for energy and environmental affairs, highlighted the report’s importance for considering how businesses across all sectors will contribute to progress towards environmental innovation, job creation and economic growth.  “The right enabling frameworks will amplify the opportunities for greener technologies and investments needed to take sustainable development to the next level,” she said.

Green economy, green growth policy and market options are being discussed in the G20, the OECD and a variety of other intergovernmental forums.  The “greening” of economies and jobs is seen as a response to a variety of economic, food, energy and environmental crises, and is an organizing theme of the UN Conference on Sustainable Development to take place in Rio in 2012.

The ICC Green Economy Task Force was launched in October 2010 to provide international and multi-disciplinary business input via BASD2012 to Rio+20 preparations, and to engage with UNEP and other intergovernmental forums.  ICC will also co-host the UNEP global business dialogue in April to provide more in depth comments on the Green Economy Report, and showcase business’ major contributions in delivering jobs, investments and solutions required for the transition to a green economy.

Staff contact: Norine Kennedy

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

ICC website

Banking Rules Set to Drive Discussion at the ICC Banking Commissions 80th Anniversary Meeting

The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), USCIB’s affiliate, will hold its annual Banking Commission meeting this year from March 21-23 in Zurich, Switzerland, where more than 250 members including bankers, business leaders, finance experts and government officials, are set to attend. Some topics of discussion will feature a presentation of the 2011-2015 strategy, as well as discussion on key policy topics from International Standard Banking Practice (ISBP), to the ICC Register on Trade and Finance, to counter terrorist financing and anti-money laundering.  The ICC is presenting its new Banking Commission to members at the upcoming meeting as part of an effort to encourage dialogue, make policy recommendations and develop rules to improve trade finance. Leading experts in trade and finance will speak at the meeting. A highlight of the meeting will be the release of the findings from the ICC Global Survey 2011, which covers the year 2010, achieved record participation levels, with around 210 respondents from 94 countries.

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

More on USCIB’s Banking Committee

ICC Secretary General Joins UN Global Compact Board

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has appointed Jean-Guy Carrier, secretary general of USCIB’s affiliate the International Chamber of Commerce to the board of the UN Global Compact, an initiative encouraging companies to align their operations with 10 principles including human rights, labor, environment and anti-corruption. Mr. Carrier will contribute a world business perspective on the Compact’s work.

The Global Compact represents more than 8,700 corporate participants and other stakeholders from at least 130 countries and is the world’s largest voluntary corporate citizenship initiative. It is the UN’s highest-ranking advisory body involving business and civil society, which also provides participants with resources for advancing sustainable business models and markets. The 23 board members who provide strategic and policy advice for the Global Compact also oversee implementation of the initiative’s integrity measures.

Click here to read more on ICC’s website.

More on USCIB’s Corporate Responsibility Committee