How can business best deal with the COVID-19 challenge? In an effort to answer this critical question, USCIB partnered with Business Fights Poverty (BFP) to host an online “challenge” discussion on March 19. USCIB Vice President for Innovation and Product Policy Mike Michener was on the panel, joined by USCIB policy staff and representatives of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the International Organization of Employers (IOE) and Business at OECD.
The USCIB Foundation’s Business Partners for Sustainable Development (BPSD) initiative Executive Director Dr. Scott Ratzan joined BFP’s Co-founder and CEO Zahid Torres-Rahman and Harvard Kennedy School’s Myriam Sidibe for the online discussion, supported by a panel of leading executives from business, civil society, the United Nations and the UK government. The discussion began with an evaluation of the current situation, and the impact on business and others. This was followed by dialogue on the immediate priorities for business, including best practices. The panel ended by weighing how business can partner with others to support immediate action, and well as longer-term resilience.
Michener said, “We are all in this together, and partnerships are key to solving all of the problems posed by this crisis – health, economic, and protecting the most vulnerable. I appreciated the opportunity to engage in the valuable BFP discussion, and I look forward to continuing the conversation.”
The USCIB Foundation’s program, Business Partnership for Sustainable Development, with Business Fights Poverty.
USCIB 
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:


Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:

Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
Quick Summary:
G20 Trade Ministers Release Statement on COVID-19
USCIB Concerned Over Draft “Buy American” Executive Order
Coronavirus Impact on ATA Carnet in the United States
ICC, B20, World Health Organization Call for Coordinated Global Response to COVID-19
USCIB had a strong and active presence at the International Labor Organization’s (ILO) technical meeting on Achieving Decent Work in Global Supply Chains in Geneva, February 25-28. USCIB Vice President for Corporate Responsibility and Labor Affairs Gabriella Rigg Herzog, as well several USCIB members, represented U.S. business at the meeting.

Ahead of November’s World Telecommunication Standardization Assembly (WTSA-20) in Hyderabad, India, USCIB prepared priorities for the U.S. government delegation to pursue. The recommended priorities included avoiding premature regulation or standardization of emerging technologies to ensure future investments in markets all over the world, avoiding top-down mandates on internet protocols, and advocating for resolutions that bind the scope of study groups to the ITU Telecommunication Standardization Sector’s (ITU-T) telecommunication/ICTs remit.