Multistakeholder Internet Governance Model Lauded at OECD

Reports

4766_image004Coming on the heels of the stock-taking meeting of  the World Summit of the Information Society earlier this month, The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Committee on Digital Economy Policy (CDEP) met last week in Paris to review policies affecting the development and use of information and communications technologies (ICTs). The committee held several sessions on the OECD Internet Policy Principles, the planned 2016 OECD Ministerial, revisions of the OECD Internet Security Guidelines and other issues relating to Internet governance.

USCIB is the American affiliate of the Business and Industry Advisory Council
to the OECD, which supports a multistakeholder model for Internet governance that upholds freedoms of information and expression, as opposed to a framework that would allow for unnecessary government intrusion and censorship.

USCIB’s Vice President for ICT policy, Barbara Wanner, reports that the CDEP meetings from June 16 to 20 focused on the relevance of the OECD’s 2011 Internet Policy Principles given current international developments in Internet governance. In addition, representatives from at least 30 OECD member states as well as the EU, BIAC, the Industrial Technology and Assistance Corporation, and Civil Society Information Society Advisory Council of the OECD forged a new path to revise the 2002 Security Guidelines, discussed plans for the ministerial, and determined work-streams that will support ministerial preparations.

High-Level Session on Internet Policy Principles

A special high-level session on the OECD’s Internet Policy Principles (IPP) featured senior government officials from the United States, Germany, Brazil, the UK, Sweden, and Korea, all of whom extolled the value of the IPP as providing a stable framework to use in addressing Internet governance issues in various domestic and global forums. The IPP promote the global free flow of information and seek to ensure an open and interconnected Internet.

Virgilio Almeida, Brazil’s secretary of information technology policies and chair of NETMundial pointed out that proponents of the multistakeholder model need to develop a compelling narrative for global Internet governance. This will help to broaden support among developing countries for a bottom-up approach to governance aimed at keeping the Internet open, stable, and resilient. In this regard, Almeida said the need for such a narrative presents the OECD with a unique opportunity to tap its core competence in evidence-based research. The OECD should undertake economic analysis that highlights the economic and developmental benefits that can be realized through access to the Internet, Almeida urged.

A related theme in several speakers’ remarks concerned the importance of institutional capacity building aimed at enabling more developing countries to understand and implement an IPP-based approach to Internet Governance. Olof Ehrenkrona, senior advisor to the Swedish minister for foreign affairs, observed that “those of us who believe yesterday is better than today will never prevail tomorrow.”  He cautioned that while the IPPs have “become main-stream” in only three years, there still are countries – he called out Russia, in particular – that are considering legislation that will open the door to censorship and other principles and practices antithetical to the OECD Principles. OECD members therefore need to do a better job of engaging developing countries and help them to understand the economic, developmental, and societal benefits of maintaining an open Internet.

2016 Ministerial

The three day conference, which will be along the lines of the OECD’s 2008 Seoul Ministerial on the “Future of the Internet Economy,” will be held in either late April or mid-May 2016 in Cancun, Mexico. It will be preceded by one-day parallel forums for stakeholders including BIAC. The proposed theme for the ministerial is “Digital Innovation Transforming Societies.”

BIAC urged that non-government stakeholders participate on the special steering group that will formed to plan to Ministerial.

Revision of the 2002 OECD Internet Security Guidelines

During a special drafting session on June 17, USCIB members who participated in the BIAC delegation made important contributions aimed at clarifying conceptual elements, improving definitions of key terms and addressing potential ambiguities in the second draft of the revised Security Guidelines. Earlier in the year, USCIB had submitted a number of substantive comments and editorial changes to the first draft.  Key points of the June 17 discussion included:

  • The Guidelines should apply to both the government and the business. BIAC noted that, unlike the earlier version, the second draft offers a less “top-down” approach to the development and implementation of frameworks for managing risk in a digital ecosystem.
  • More work is needed to clarify scope and definitions.
  • A new principle on international cooperation is warranted, with greater emphasis on public-private cooperation, particularly in the development of strategies for managing risk in a digital economy.
  • The term “participants” should be replaced with “stakeholders.” BIAC clarified that “stakeholders” include a range of people providing inputs “as appropriate to their role.”

OECD members will consider at least three more drafts and hold a second, in-person drafting session sometime in October with the goal of sending a final version to the CDEP for approval in December 2014. USCIB, through BIAC, will utilize these additional opportunities to help further improve and refine the revised Guidelines.

Staff contact: Barbara Wanner

More on USCIB’s Information and Communications Technology Committee

 

Summit Calls for United Effort to Address IP Abuses

4761_image001More than 300 government and business leaders gathered in London last week to press for stronger intellectual property (IP) enforcement measures around the world. The International IP Enforcement Summit was hosted by the United Kingdom IP Organization, European Commission, the Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market and the EU Observatory on Infringements of IP.

“The support and involvement of the leaders of these key government organizations is a clear demonstration that enforcement of IP rights is a critical public policy issue,” said Jeff Hardy, director of the International Chamber of Commerce’s Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting and Piracy (BASCAP) initiative.

“We are eager to work with these officials to follow up on discussions from the conference to implement ever stronger policy, legislative and enforcement measures to stop IP theft,” Hardy said.

Business leaders from BASCAP made significant contributions to the summit discourse, including presentations from Hewlett Packard, Lacoste, Microsoft and Unilever on issues ranging from limiting piracy on the Internet and cracking down on border control to improving consumer awareness.

Read more on the ICC website.

Staff contact: Helen Medina.

More on USCIB’s Intellectual Property Committee

WSIS Success Despite Controversy Over Freedom of Speech

4756_image002

4756_image003Government officials, business leaders and members of civil society and the technical community assembled in Geneva from June 10 to 13 for the stock-taking meeting of the World Summit of the Information Society (WSIS) to review decade-long progress on promoting the use of Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) as engines of economic and social development.

USCIB’s Barbara Wanner, vice president of ICT policy, attended the event as a representative of private-sector interests in WSIS’s efforts to maintain a multistakeholder model for Internet governance and to bridge the digital divide between developed and developing countries.

“The WSIS review process provides a unique opportunity to share and evaluate local and national initiatives that advance the Information Society, putting in place actions to improve and replicate those initiatives,” explained Jean-Guy Carrier, secretary general of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). “It offers a valuable forum for reviewing progress made across the past decade in implementing outcomes from those initial meetings in Geneva and Tunis.”

Coordinated by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and co-organized by UNESCO, UNCTAD and UNDP, the summit convened high-ranking officials who endorsed a proposal that presents a vision of bridging the digital divide by unleashing ICTs as engines of development. Hamadoun Toure, secretary general of ITU, said the proposal was developed in an open process than involved the participation of all stakeholder groups, including business.

A recurring theme throughout the discussions was that a multistakeholder model is the best way to address Internet governance. Daniel Sepulveda, deputy assistant secretary of state for international communications and information policy, captured this sentiment in his remarks: “No one country, no one institution, no one stakeholder can succeed alone. We will have to fulfill the WSIS goals together, acknowledging our success to date and overcoming remaining challenges together.”

Controversy Over Freedom of Speech

Participants hit an impasse regarding an important element of the WSIS document that addressed the role of ICTs in promoting freedom of the press.  A coalition led by the UK, which included the United States, Sweden, ICC-BASIS (Business Action to Support the Information Society), Cisco and Microsoft, promoted language that affirmed that: (1) the principles of freedom of expression and the free flow of information, ideas, and knowledge are essential for the knowledge society and economic development; (2) the same rights that people have offline must also be protected online, including the right to privacy; and (3) the safety of all journalists, media workers, bloggers and their sources must be assured.

Iran, Cuba and Saudi Arabia strongly opposed this language, leading to an impasse. But in an eleventh-hour effort to salvage a consensus on the document, UNESCO offered a compromise: the UNESCO proposal eliminated language extending protections to bloggers and sources, but continued to ground the right of freedom of expression in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

In spite of this and other disagreements, and thanks to appeals made by Toure and Multistakeholder Preparatory Platform (MPP) Chair Vladimir Minkin, all participants eventually endorsed the WSIS post-2015 Vision Statement, which incorporated the UNESCO compromise. The final outcome reflects a consensus among stakeholders throughout the world on the importance of the WSIS Action Lines in catalyzing economic development through ICT, according to Wanner.

Nevertheless, some WSIS participants remain concerned that certain countries may seize on the disagreements that emerged during the MPP process and the eleventh-hour manner in which the final agreement was reached as demonstrating the limits of the multistakeholder model. It is possible these critics will further argue that such discord warrants greater governmental oversight of Internet governance.

“It will be ever-more important to continue to actively engage in initiatives and outreach aimed at building bridges with developing countries that fortify support for the multistakeholder model of Internet governance,” Wanner said.

USCIB Helps Shape Course of Internet Stewardship Transition

USCIB’s comments have been cited in a document released by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) regarding the transition of Internet stewardship from the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) to the global mulitstakeholder community.

USCIB’s comments appear to have helped shape the decision to expand representation of business and other stakeholder groups in the IANA Transition Coordination Committee, according to Barbara Wanner, vice president of ICT policy.

ICC-BASIS (International Chamber of Commerce – Business Action to Support the Information Society) was assigned a seat on the coordination committee to serve as a representative of the larger business community.

Read ICANN’s “Process to Develop Proposal and Next Steps.”

 

Staff contact: Barbara Wanner

More on USCIB’s Information and Communications Technology Committee

Governments Practitioners and Business Review OECD G20 Push to Rewrite Global Tax Rules

IRS Commissioner John Koskinen addressing the conference
IRS Commissioner John Koskinen addressing the conference

Washington, D.C., June 4, 2014 – With governments from the G20 and other advanced economies moving forward in an effort to rewrite global corporate tax rules, officials from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) joined national policy makers, business executives and other tax experts to review progress and plot a realistic path  forward.

The 2014 OECD International Tax Conference, which wrapped up yesterday in Washington, D.C., provided timely insight into the OECD’s work on “base erosion and profit shifting” (BEPS), under which governments are seeking to curtail what they perceive as growing under-taxation or non-taxation of international corporate income.

The two-day conference was organized by the United States Council for International Business (USCIB) in cooperation with the OECD and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, which officially represents the view of industry in the Paris-based body, and for which USCIB serves as the U.S. member federation. It was the ninth in an increasingly popular annual series of such events held in Washington, D.C. Details are available at www.uscibtax.org.

A year after G20 leaders endorsed a 15-point action plan put forward by the OECD to draw up new global tax rules to counter base erosion and profit shifting, the first group of projects is heading towards completion. This includes work on intangibles, country-by-country reporting, tax treaty abuse, hybrids and the digital economy. The conference provided an opportunity to assess progress to date and look forward to the work that will occupy the OECD over the next year.

Pascal Saint-Amans, director of the OECD Center for Tax Policy and Administration, said that OECD was consulting closely and extensively with all countries and stakeholders involved in order to reduce uncertainties. “With the OECD’s member countries, G20 countries and stakeholders, we share the goal of limiting uncertainty in tax systems,” he said. “In the long run, the best way to make sure that global businesses can operate smoothly, taxed appropriately and not more than once, is for countries to work together rather than take uncoordinated, unilateral actions. That’s what we’re working at the OECD to facilitate, and we are fortunate to have so many interested and invested partners as part of this conversation.”

According to Bill Sample, corporate vice president for worldwide taxes with Microsoft and chair of USCIB’s Taxation Committee, the conference underscored the importance and complexity of the debate around BEPS and global tax policies, and the OECD’s centrality in it. “The OECD process gathers the most important government officials, and benefits from strong business participation,” he said. “While there have been differences of opinion, it is clear that the OECD offers the best forum for such discussions.”

Will Morris, director of global tax policy with GE International and chair of the BIAC Committee on Taxation and Fiscal Affairs, said: “There is a danger to the OECD’s central mission of promoting cross-border trade and investment if the focus of the BEPS project becomes solely about anti-abuse, rather than about improving the international tax system. Furthermore, unilateral action by states is a real risk. It’s in the interest of business to have as broad an agreement as possible, for the sake of certainty.”

Carol Doran Klein, USCIB’s vice president and international tax counsel, who serves as vice chair of the BIAC Tax Committee, said tight deadlines had made input difficult. “Events like this provide a good opportunity for OECD governments and secretariat officials to hear from the business community,” she said. “And we need to ensure that the private sector can contribute meaningfully to the detailed technical work being done across a range of areas.”

IRS Commissioner John Koskinen, the conference keynote speaker, focused his remarks on evolving cross-border regulatory compliance under the U.S. Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). “Although the policy issues have been settled and tax transparency is the common goal, tax administrators still must answer the question of how we make automated information work well as a practical matter,” he said.

On BEPS, Koskinen warned against the development of an overly complex country-by-country reporting system. “My hope would be that policy and legal determinations not be made without thoroughly considering the practical implications of these decisions, not only for businesses, but for tax administrations,” he stated.

Other speaker at this year’s conference included:

  • Mike Williams of Her Majesty’s Treasury in the UK, vice chair of the OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs
  • Tizhong Liao, China’s director general of international taxation
  • Robert Stack, deputy assistant secretary for international tax affairs, U.S. Treasury
  • Eduoard Marcus, deputy director of international and European affairs, French Ministry of Finance
  • Martin Kreienbaum, director general of international taxation, German finance ministry
  • Armando Lara Yaffar, director general, Mexican finance ministry.

They were joined by other OECD experts on transfer pricing, international tax cooperation and related matters, tax officials from the U.S. and other OECD governments, and business experts from USCIB and BIAC’s global membership.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence. Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world. With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including BIAC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:
Jonathan Huneke, VP communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

Conference agenda and other information

View conference photos (flickr)

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

USCIB Helps Prepare for Global Nutrition Conference

4739_image001More than half the world’s population is adversely affected by malnutrition, which undermines economic growth and perpetuates poverty. For this reason, nutrition continues to be high on the international agenda and an important topic of the UN’s Post-2015 Development Agenda.

The Second International Conference on Nutrition, which will take place November 19-21 in Rome, will contribute to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s call for a high degree of policy coherence at global, regional, national and sub-national levels, and a global partnership for development at all levels.

According to Helen Medina, USCIB’s senior director for product policy and innovation, the conference will review progress made towards improving nutrition since 1992, reflect on remaining nutrition problems – as well as on the new challenges and opportunities for improving nutrition presented by changes in the global economy, in food systems, and by advances in science and technology. Participants will seek to identify policy options for improving nutrition.

“While governments can pursue policies to encourage solutions to malnutrition, USCIB continues to point out that the private sector is also an important actor to implementing those policies,” Medina said.

To underscore the importance of the private sector in issues related to nutrition and the agriculture sector in general, Medina was in Rome last week to meet with U.S. and foreign government officials at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. The meeting included a discussion with the Committee on Food Security’s Chair, Ambassador Gerda Verburg of the Netherlands. The second day of meetings featured dialogues with 48 different country representatives including the African Regional Group, the Near East Group, Russia, the European Union, Denmark, Iceland, Japan, Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil and Argentina.

As a delegate in these groups, Medina  was able to advocate for business and industry participation at the upcoming International Conference on Nutrition (ICN2). She also highlighted that ICN2 should recognize the private sector’s contributions to improved nutrition through innovative products, scientific and technological know-how, and improved production and management practices. USCIB also advocates for the following:

  • Developing the economy, including promoting women’s role in the economy, is important.
  • The private sector can play a critical role in further strengthening markets, spurring economic growth and improving livelihoods.

In addition to these meetings, Medina delivered a statement on behalf of the private sector on “food waste”. During her intervention on this topic, Medina emphasized that the private sector has an objective to reduce waste in order to reap the greatest potential from limited input resources. In addition, any actions for addressing food waste or loss are directed towards the entire food chain, rather than isolated parts.

Innovation should also be encouraged since innovative technologies or solutions are of value, she said. Global initiatives for addressing food waste or loss should be adapted to local circumstances. Consumers need to be educated about food waste and loss, especially in schools and by government-driven campaigns regarding proper storage and preparation of food, as well as by the interpretation of “best before” and “use by” labels. Governments should encourage private investment and public-private partnerships in improving infrastructure and storage facilities, especially in developing countries. However, this requires an enabling environment for investment.

Finally, Medina emphasized that closer linkages between farmers and processors, particularly in developing countries, must be fostered; thus governments can create a better environment to provide investment in the food industry so that local farmers can address supply chain issues. Meanwhile, ensuring trade and market access is efficient and effective to get food to where it is needed.

USCIB members attending the meeting included McDonald’s and Monsanto.

 

Staff contact: Helen Medina

 

More on USCIB’s Health Care Working Group

More on USCIB’s Food and Agriculture Working Group

Tax Conference to Spotlight OECD/G20 Work on Base Erosion

OECDTAXConferenceWashington, D.C., May 15, 2014 – As governments from OECD/G20 economies work to rewrite many of the fundamental rules of global corporate taxation, an upcoming conference will provide timely, essential insight for American companies into the process. On June 2-3 in Washington, D.C., the United States Council for International Business (USCIB) will hold its ninth annual global tax conference, in cooperation with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD.

A year after G20 leaders endorsed a 15-point action plan put forward by the OECD to draw up new global tax rules to counter “base erosion and profit shifting,” or BEPS, the first group of projects is heading towards completion. This includes work on intangibles, country-by-country reporting, tax treaty abuse, hybrids and the digital economy. The conference will provide an opportunity to assess progress to date and look forward to the work that will occupy the OECD over the next year.

“BEPS is an enormous undertaking, with far-reaching implications for how companies do business and how countries collect tax across borders,” said Carol Doran Klein, USCIB’s vice president and international tax counsel. “It is crucial that governments, OECD officials and the private sector work together to develop rules that meet government revenue goals, but also provide business with the certainty needed to make cross-border investments confidently.”

The 2014 OECD International Tax Conference, which will take place at the Four Seasons Hotel, will provide a unique opportunity for business experts to interact directly with key leadership from the OECD’s Center for Tax Policy and Administration, as well as senior tax officials from the United States and other OECD countries.

Speakers at this year’s conference include:

  • Keynote speaker IRS Commissioner John Koskinen
  • Masatsugu Asakawa of the Japanese finance ministry, who chairs the OECD Committee on Fiscal Affairs
  • Pascal Saint-Amans, director of the OECD Center for Tax Policy and Administration
  • Tizhong Liao, China’s director general of international taxation
  • Robert Stack, deputy assistant secretary for international tax affairs, U.S. Treasury
  • Will Morris, director of global tax policy with GE International and chair of the BIAC Committee on Taxation and Fiscal Affairs

They will be joined by other OECD experts on transfer pricing, international tax cooperation and related matters, tax officials from the U.S. and other OECD governments, and business experts from USCIB and BIAC’s global membership.

“Given the complexity of the issues, their significant potential impact on the taxation of international business, and the rapid progress the OECD is making on BEPS and related matters, it is essential that U.S. and other global companies gain a full understanding of the issues now and make their views known,” said Bill Sample, corporate vice president for worldwide taxes with Microsoft and chair of USCIB’s Taxation Committee.

“The business community is providing important input to the BEPS process,” added GE’s Morris. “This conference will provide an opportunity for further dialogue between the public and the private sectors on important matters affecting public confidence, revenue generation and economic growth.”

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson said: “The OECD is a valuable forum for informed discussion and guidance on many facets of government policy and regulation, especially in taxation. We are delighted to continue our long tradition of working with the OECD and BIAC to showcase the OECD’s important work on global tax policies.”

Robinson noted that, this year, USCIB had also partnered with the OECD on a March 10 conference in Washington on information and communications technologies, and would organize a joint conference this October on new directions in trade and investment policy.

The 2014 OECD International Tax Conference is co-organized by USCIB, the OECD and BIAC, which officially represents the view of industry in the Paris-based body, and for which USCIB serves as the U.S. member federation. Details are available at www.uscibtax.org.

About USCIB:

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and regulatory coherence. Its members include U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of our economy, with operations in every region of the world. With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including BIAC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More information is available at www.uscib.org.

 

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP communications, USCIB

+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

 

Conference agenda and other information

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

 

Medina Briefs Consumer Products Companies on Global Product Policy

Helen Medina, USCIB’s senior director for product policy and innovation, addressed the Consumer Specialty Products Association’s International Committee’s mid-year meeting, May 6 in Chicago, providing CSPA members with an update on international product policy issues. CSPA, which represents hundreds of companies that manufacture, formulate, distribute and sell a wide range of consumer products, is a member of USCIB.

Medina presented an overview of USCIB’s product policy priorities, which include a science-based approach to chemicals life-cycles management and bringing downstream users’ perspectives to policy-making decisions. She also discussed three important international forums for USCIB Product Policy Working Group:

  • work in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) process
  • the UN’s Strategic Approach to International Chemicals’ Management (SAICM) process, and
  • the work of the UN Environment Program.

In addition, USCIB has been working to provide input on Korea’s new chemical regulation, referred by many observers as “Korea REACH” due to the legislation’s similarities to the European Union’s REACH (registration, evaluation and authorization of chemicals) rules.

Medina’s main takeaway points were that these inter-governmental discussions of product policy matter for companies of all sizes, that business can and must be involved in the process, and that different industries must work together to present a common private-sector viewpoint and positions.

Staff contact: Helen Medina

More on USCIB’s Product Policy Working Group

NetMundial Conference in Brazil Debates Future of Internet Governance

4717_image001At last week’s NETMundial Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance in Sao Paolo, Brazil, a diverse array of Internet stakeholders reached agreement on a non-binding document, the “Multistakeholder Statement of Sao Paulo.” This followed two days of intense work to develop a set of Internet governance principles, as well as a “roadmap” for the future evolution of the Internet governance ecosystem.

Barbara Wanner, USCIB’s vice president for information, communications and technology policy, attended the event along with scores of USCIB members and hundreds of business representatives from around the world. All told, over a thousand Internet stakeholders from business, government, civil society and the technical community – from nearly a hundred countries – took part in NetMundial, many from remote hubs set up to facilitate participation.

NETMundial Chair Vergilio Almeida, Brazil’s secretary of IT policy, hailed the two-day event as a “threshold of a new beginning,” not an end destination, and a “milestone in the history of Internet governance.” He said the multistakeholder statement might not be a “perfect document,” but nevertheless represented a significant achievement having been produced by a bottom-up process that encompassed input from literally all over the world.

Wanner said the multistakeholder statement reflected important discussions on key aspects of Internet policy of interest to USCIB members and global business. On net neutrality, for example, despite strong support from civil society and some governments to include a specific reference to net neutrality as an Internet governance principle, business and its allies advocated effectively for inclusion of net neutrality as a “point to be further discussed beyond NETMundial” requiring better understanding and further discussion.

On intellectual property, Wanner said business successfully advocated for the inclusion of language on IP as part of the statement’s Human Rights principle, which states that everyone should have the right to access, share, create and distribute information on the Internet, consistent with the rights of authors and creators as established in law. In addition, business and its allies worked to secure key language upholding IP rights in the principle calling for an “enabling environment for innovation and creativity.”

Other parts of the multistakeholder statement addressed protection of Internet intermediaries, privacy and surveillance, and the future of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). Wanner said USCIB is monitoring follow-up to NetMundial closely and will coordinate the elaboration of additional business views with members, the International Chamber of Commerce and our other global business partners.

Staff contacts: Barbara Wanner

More on USCIB’s Information, Communication and Technology Committee

Geneva Conference on Facilitating Trade in the Digital Economy

The ICC attracted more than 125 participants from 24 countries.
The ICC attracted more than 125 participants from 24 countries.

Business and government representatives from around the world came together in Geneva on April 8 and 9 to investigate how electronic systems can replace paper-based trade and administrative processes in key business areas such as customs, taxation and public procurement.

Leading experts from governments in emerging and industrialized markets, companies, law firms, and business and intergovernmental organizations gathered to share their vision on how stakeholders can work together to develop Internet governance, and apply practical standards and principles needed for efficient paperless trade.

“A more coordinated international approach to digital interactions would improve trade flows considerably,” stated ICC Secretary General Jean-Guy Carrier in opening the conference, a timely follow-up to a March 10 USCIB/OECD conference in Washington, D.C. focusing on growth, jobs and prosperity in the digital age.

The overriding conviction shared by conference participants was that paperless trade can help governments and companies reap substantial savings, while increasing the security of transactions and contributing to economic growth and social development.

Statistically speaking, paperless trade was said to increase productivity by more than 20 percent on average. However, this represents only part of the potential savings, the lack of coordination among regulators using different approaches to control digital trade continue to hamper solutions that could make massive savings available to all parties through improved efficiency in e-customs, e-public procurement and e-tax.

“Governments worldwide use ICT to work more effectively with business,” said Joseph Alhadeff (Oracle), chair of ICC’s Commission on the Digital Economy. “Regulations and processes, however, often vary, even within countries, meaning that the ways in which countries approach electronic trade procedures and e-government is increasing in variety and complexity.

“This comes with its own set of challenges and results in many different – and often conflicting – approaches to the ways businesses and governments interact electronically. Business and government regulators need to collaborate and coordinate more effectively in order to improve electronic trade procedures in a mutually beneficial way.”

Read more on ICC’s website.

Staff contacts: Barbara Wanner

More on USCIB’s Information, Communication and Technology Committee