ICC & USCIB Customs and Trade Facilitation Symposium: Finding Solutions to Cross-Border Challenges

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February 22-24, 2015

The Four Seasons Hotel | Miami, Florida, USA

 

Limiting cross-border friction is increasingly vital to smooth the flow of trade and boost competitive­ness for all business, especially for small and medium sized businesses and emerging industry sectors. This conference brings business, govern­ment, international organizations and operational customs and trade experts together from the world over for an important dialogue on the most effec­tive means to ease the movement of goods and services between countries along supply chains.

Topics Will Include:
  • Best regional practices and global cooperation on
    • single window initiatives
    • de minimis
    • intellectual property rights, and
    • supply chain solutions
  • Balancing security and trade facilitation
  • WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement: implementation and challenges
Click Here for the Program

 

Full List of Confirmed Speakers:
  • Kunio Mikuriya, Secretary General of the World Customs Organization (WCO)
  • Yi Xiaozhun, Deputy Director General of the WTO
  • Gil Kerlikowske, Commissioner, U.S. Customs and Border Protection
  • Harold McGraw, Chairman, McGraw Hill Financial [now S&P Global]; Chairman, ICC; Chairman, USCIB
  • John Danilovich, Secretary General, ICC
  • Mark Linscott, Assistant United States Trade Representative for WTO and Multilateral Affairs
  • Peter Robinson, President and CEO, USCIB
  • Brenda Brockman Smith, Assistant Commissioner, Office of International Trade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
  • Lev Kubiak, Assistant Director, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homeland Security Investigations, International Operations, U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
  • Virginia Brown, Director, Office of Trade and Regulatory Reform, USAID
  • Evdokia Moïsé, Senior Trade Policy Analyst,Trade and Agriculture Directorate, OECD
  • James Bacchus, Chair, Global Practice Group, Greenberg Traurig; Chair, ICC Commission on Trade and Investment Policy
  • Judy Lao, Head of Trade Facilitation Programs, Office of Western Hemisphere, Pathways to Prosperity Program, U.S. Department of Commerce; International Trade Administration Market Access and Compliance
  • Luis Eduardo Lara Gutierrez, General Administrator for Foreign Trade Audit, Mexican Tax Administration
  • Dan Duncan, Senior Director, International Affairs, McGraw Hill Financial
  • Gilbert Lee Sandler, Founding Member, Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg P.A.
  • Maritza Castro, Vice President, Head of Customs and Regulatory Affairs, Americas Region, DHL Express USA
  • Oliver Peltzer, Vice Chair, ICC Commission on Customs and Trade Facilitation; Partner, Debelstein & Passehl
  • Frank Reynolds, President, International Projects
  • Rafael Farromeque, Senior Specialist, Head of the Logistics Practice for Latin America, Vice Presidency of Infrastructure, Development Bank of Latin America (CAF)
  • Antoni Estevadeordal, Manager, Integration and Trade Sector, Inter-American Development Bank
  • Eugene Laney, Head of International Trade, DHL
  • Norm Schenk, Vice President, Global Customs Policy & Public Affairs, UPS; Chairman, ICC Customs and Trade Facilitation Commission
  • Ruth Snowden, Executive Director, CIFFA, International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations
  • Jerry Cook, Vice President, Government and  Trade Relations, Hanesbrands; Chair, USCIB Customs and Trade Facilitation Committee
  • Leroy J. Sheffer, Partner, International Trade Advisory Services
  • Cindy Duncan, Senior Vice President, Trade Services, USCIB
  • Simon Schofield, Vice President – European Tax and Corporate Audit, Samsung Electronics
  • Michael Heldebrand, Principal, EY Global Trade, Ernst & Young LLP
  • William Bullard OBE, Corporate Relations Director, DIAGEO WestLAC
  • Sarah Thorn, Senior Director, International Trade, Wal-Mart
  • Denise Coutinho, Senior Manager, Global Trade Strategy, Global Tax and Customs, Cisco
  • Darcy Price, Director, Value Chain Applications, Oracle
Registration Information:
  • You can register online by following this link, or by filling out a registration form.
  • Registration costs are:
    • $550 for USCIB Customs and Trade Facilitation Committee and ICC Customs and Trade Facilitation Commission Members
      • Contact Diana Jack for the Committee and Commission discount code.
    • $600 for all other USCIB and ICC Members
      • Contact Diana Jack for the USCIB and ICC member discount code.
    • $675 early-bird special for non-members – ends January 16
    • $750 regular price for non-members
  • For more information:
Hotel Rooms at the Four Seasons are Sold Out!  Click Here for a List of Nearby Hotels
NEW! NCBFAA NEI Credit
  • NCBFAA NEINow eligible for National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Association of America (NCBFAA) Educational Institute (NEI) Credit!
  • Earn 11.5 CCS or CES credits.
  • You must bring your CCS/CES ID number in order to attend.
Sponsorship Information:
  • For information on how you can become a sponsor:
Sponsored by:
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EY
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With Support From:
Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg, P.A.
Enterprise Florida
FCBF
Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce
The Journal of Commerce
Presented by:
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ICC & USCIB Customs and Trade Facilitation Symposium: Finding Solutions to Cross-Border Challenges — Registration Instructions

ICC AND USCIB

CUSTOMS TRADE FACILITATION SYMPOSIUM

FINDING SOLUTIONS TO CROSS-BORDER CHALLENGES

 

Registration Information

 Online Registration:
  • If you received an email invitation from USCIB to one of our events, you already have an Events Portal Account. To activate your account, go to register online and click the “Forgot Password” link to receive your password via email. Then login and register.
  • If your e-mail address is not recognized, you will have to create an account with USCIB, by filling out the Online Events Registration Login Request form.
  • There are discount codes available to the following groups:
    • USCIB Customs and Trade Facilitation Committee members
    • ICC Customs Commission members
    • All other USCIB members
    • All other ICC members
  • Please contact Diana Jack at 202-617-3156 or djack@uscib.org to receive the appropriate discount code if you fall into one of the categories listed above, or if you experience problems registering online.

 

Click here to register online.

 

Registration Form:
  • If you prefer register by fax, email or standard mail, please click here to fill out the registration form.

 

Confirmation emails are sent to registrants shortly after the registration has been received.

If you think you have registered but have not received a confirmation email, please contact Diana Jack at (202) 617-3156 or djack@uscib.org to confirm that your registration has been processed.

Investment Tops BIACs Agenda

4877_image002Revision of the OECD Policy Framework for Investment

Since 2006, the OECD Policy Framework for Investment (PFI) has provided a comprehensive and systematic approach for governments to implement specific policy reforms to create a robust and competitive environment for domestic and foreign investment. The PFI has been widely used for the OECD’s country-specific investment policy reviews, and has served as a reference point for investment promotion agencies and donors.

To reflect the developments that have reshaped the global investment landscape, such as the emergence of new major outward investors, the spread of global value chains, and growing investment protectionism, the PFI is currently being updated. A first discussion, including on five revised draft chapters, took place in October back-to-back with the Investment Committee meeting. A more extensive consultation is planned for December 2 when the OECD Advisory Group on Investment and Development will organize a half-day stakeholder consultation. In the meantime, the BIAC Development Task Force will discuss the PFI revision in its meeting on November 6. 

BIAC Raises Concerns about Threats to Investment

On multiple occasions, BIAC emphasized the importance of OECD’s ground-breaking work on fostering an open and conducive investment climate as a fundamental prerequisite for job creation and economic growth.  At the same time, business observes a proliferation of restrictions on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) as well as worrying developments in the area of investment protection. Of particular concern to business is that Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) and Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), which are crucial to mitigate risk in international investment decisions, have come increasingly under attack. Business needs the OECD to provide governments with objective and fact-based analysis, foster dialogue among member and non-member countries and highlight the importance of adequate protection of investments as a priority.

BIAC raised these concerns during its consultation with the OECD Investment Committee in October and will reiterate them at the annual consultation with OECD Ambassadors in January. In October, the chair of the BIAC Investment Committee also represented BIAC at the UNCTAD World Investment Forum, highlighting BIAC’s concern in the session on reform of the international investment agreement system and ISDS. BIAC will continue to urge the OECD to address and underline the importance of investment protection and market openness as priorities for growth and development.

Staff contact: Eva Hampl

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

ICC Warns Against Double Taxation in BEPS Action Plan

4879_image002The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has expressed concern that the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Action Plan on combating Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (“BEPS”), mandated by the G20, may inadvertently incur severe collateral damage on compliant taxpaying companies of all sizes as a result of well-meaning measures undertaken unilaterally by states to mitigate double-non-taxation.

While ICC fully supports the BEPS Action Plan and actively engages with the OECD and the UN on the issues at hand, concern was raised during back-to-back meetings with the United Nations (UN) Committee on International Cooperation in Tax Matters at UN Headquarters in Geneva last week.

Stressing that taxation systems should be sound and stable – to encourage transparency, efficiency and predictability and to incentivize long-term investment, job creation and economic growth – ICC advises governments and policymakers to take the following into consideration:

  1. ICC strongly believes that several of the 15 BEPS Action Points are interdependent and recommends an overall perspective and coordination of the various recommendations – including the 2014 deliverables of Phase 1 in Phase 2 of the project.
  2.  ICC calls for a coordinated implementation of the combined deliverables of the G20/BEPS project on a multilateral basis with a consensus approach in order for the solutions to be consistent and uniformly applied on an international level. ICC therefore cautions against implementation of domestic tax legislation through unilateral and divergent actions which risk leading to disparate rules, increased complexity and double taxation.
  3. ICC urges mitigating the increased unavoidable and foreseeable risk of double taxation via a solid dispute resolution mechanism, with mandatory agreements forcing competent authorities to agree on how to tax certain transactions, or simplified, how to split the ‘tax cake.’

ICC strongly opposes tax fraud and tax evasion but warns that it is crucial to distinguish these illegal activities from the use of lawful methods of tax planning and tax management, provided they are aligned with commercial and economic activities.

More on ICC’s website.

Staff contact: Carol Doran Klein

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

USCIB’s First Annual Trade Conference Spotlights 21st Century Trade Challenges

There has never been a more appropriate time for the business community to stand up for international trade and investment. With a stubborn impasse at the World Trade Organization on Trade Facilitation, increasing opposition to investment protections in regional trade agreements and disappointing setbacks on Capitol Hill regarding Trade Promotion Authority legislation, the moment is right for taking stock of the global trade environment and for reviewing which policies best promote economic growth, create jobs and lead to sustainable development.

L-R: Terry McGraw (McGraw Hill) and Ambassador Michael Froman (USTR)
L-R: Terry McGraw (McGraw Hill) [now S&P Global] and Ambassador Michael Froman (USTR)
It is against this backdrop that USCIB organized its first annual trade conference on October 30, “Exploring New Approaches to Trade, Investment and Jobs: Insight and Impact for Business from the OECD,” with a keynote dialogue from United States Trade Representative Michael Froman.

The conference covered a wide range of trade and investment topics including global value chains (GVCs), regulatory barriers, investment protections in trade agreements, the pros and cons of plurilateral agreements such as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and the uncertain future of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA).

Hosted by the USCIB Foundation, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, and the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), the full-day event at the St. Regis Hotel in Washington, D.C. highlighted the OECD’s innovative work on trade and investment. The conference convened government officials, trade experts, and representatives from the OECD and the World Trade Organizations to review the global trade environment and discuss how the OECD’s work impacts job creation and trade negotiations around the world.

 

During the keynote dialogue with USCIB Chairman Terry McGraw, Ambassador Froman said his priority is to close good deals on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with the EU and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) with Pacific Rim countries. He explained that the United States strongly supports multilateral multilateral trade liberalization, but with the current TFA stalemate at the WTO, the United States will not hesitate to explore other, regional trade agreements if the multilateral option isn’t successful. He noted that bilateral and regional trade agreements can also help get higher-standard rules agreed to globally via the WTO.

“The final deal is crystallizing,” Froman said about TPP. “There’s a lot of momentum around the table on getting it done in the near-term.”

Froman echoed statements made by President Obama earlier this year that the United States will sign to any trade agreement provided it is a “good one.”

McGraw commended Ambassador Froman for his leadership throughout the Obama Administration for charging ahead on an ambitious and robust U.S. trade agenda: “It’s all about achieving higher levels of economic growth, it’s all about job creation, it’s all about prosperity.”

Watch Froman’s remarks.

Below is a summary of the event’s panel discussions. See also the event’s full agenda.

Global Value Chains: How Can Trade Policy Catch Up with Trade Reality?

L-R: Terry McGraw (McGraw Hill Financial), Peter Robinson (USCIB), Mari Kiviniemi (OECD), Michael Froman (USTR) and Phil O’Rielly (BIAC).
L-R: Terry McGraw (McGraw Hill Financial), Peter Robinson (USCIB), Mari Kiviniemi (OECD), Michael Froman (USTR) and Phil O’Rielly (BIAC).

Businesses are adapting to political, technological, and economic changes around the world by creating global value chains (GVCs), where companies move intermediate goods between countries in producing a final product. The path-breaking work of the OECD-WTO on Trade in Value Added (TiVA) finds that between 30 and 60 percent of G20 country exports are comprised of imported inputs, and services account for 42% of exports in value-added terms. Panelists discussed the impacts of GVCs on economic growth and the policies governments can pursue to reduce costs on companies that want to take advantage of GVCs.

Speakers included Cathy Novelli (U.S. State Department), Ken Ash (OECD), Ambassador Karan Bhatia (General Electric) and Rob Mulligan (USCIB).

Novelli stated that the statistical reality showcased in the OECD’s work hasn’t caught up to the reality on the ground. Traditionally, governments would focus on the end product in trade, but now GVCs make each intermediate step in the value chain just as important. GVCs are forcing policies to rethink how they approach trade and investment, and supply chains critical factors when crafting trade policy.

Mulligan concluded the panel by summarizing policies that impose undue costs on businesses, such as forced localization requirements, cross-border data flow restrictions, travel restrictions and poor governance. “We need regulators to understand that we can advance trade without sacrificing consumer safety,” Mulligan said.

Insights from the OECD’s Services Trade Restrictiveness Index (STRI)

Services are becoming an ever larger part of the global economy.  However, regulatory barriers can increase the costs facing firms operating internationally and hold back growth and job-creation. The innovative OECD Services Trade Restrictiveness Index (STRI) released earlier this year documents the extent of restrictive measures on services which generate a huge proportion of the wealth and jobs in the most advanced economies.

Speakers, which included Ambassador Fernando de Mateo (WTO), Crawford Falconer (OECD), Mark Linscott (USTR), Damien Levie (EU Delegation to the U.S.) and Rick Johnston (Citigroup), weighed in on the STRI and gave their perspectives on how trade restrictions impact services. “STRI is a great tool for trade negotiators,” Linscott summarized nicely.

Johnston urged regulators to understand that trade agreements are about more than just tariffs. To that end, the STRI can help trade negotiators accept the new realities of global commerce and contribute to the overall trade and investment debate.

Why Investment Protections are Critical to Growth and Jobs

L-R: Michael Tracton (U.S. State Department), Kimberly Claman (Citigroup) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB).
L-R: Michael Tracton (U.S. State Department), Kimberly Claman (Citigroup) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB).

International investments foster growth, innovation and sustainable development, and these investments have been facilitated by strong protection for foreign investors in investment treaties. The OECD has developed a Policy Framework for Investment (PFI) that helps governments design and implement policy reforms to create an attractive robust, and competitive environment for domestic and foreign investment. At the same time, the OECD publishes an FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness Index that gauges the restrictiveness of a country’s FDI rules.  These products are particularly relevant at a time when investor-state dispute settlement systems face increasing political opposition, especially in the context of the TTIP negotiations.

Panelists included Daniel Price (Rock Creek Global Advisors), Pierre Poret (OECD), Heinz Hetmeier (German Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy), Michael Tracton (U.S. Department of State), Ambassador Shaun Donnelly (USCIB), and Kimberley Claman (Citigroup).

Donnelly captured USCIB member sentiment on the importance of investor protections in TTIP. “Personally, I find it hard to envision a comprehensive, high-standard and ambitious trade agreement absent strong ISDS provisions.”

Are Regional Trade Agreements Good or Bad for a Multilateral Trade Agenda?

With the uncertain future of the WTO’s multilateral trade agenda given the impasse on the TFA, many countries are looking to other regional and plurilateral trade agreements as alternatives. This panel considered whether regional agreements are a threat to the multilateral system, or whether they provide the stepping stones for preserving the momentum towards more open trade and investment, setting global standards which will ultimately be multilateralized. OECD has looked extensively into the question of whether deep provisions in RTAs can be multilateralized on a wide range of issues, from government procurement, to IP, transparency, competition, services and more. A synthesis of their findings has recently been published in a report entitled “Deep Provisions in Regional Trade Agreements: How Multilateral Friendly?”

Speakers included the Honorable James Bacchus (Greenberg Traurig Global Practice), Ambassador Susan Schwab (Mayer Brown), Iza Lejarraga (OECD), Clifford Sosnow (BIAC) and Ed Gresser (Global Works Foundation).

Sosnow noted that although nobody believes that regional trade agreements are a bad thing, they do have a “dark heart” because they’re exclusionary, and they discriminate against least-developed countries that have the fewest options available to them with regard to trade. But Schwab pointed out that it is not at all likely that the WTO will close a multilateral trade deal in a timeframe that is relevant to the business community. In the meantime, regional trade agreements are the next best option.

What’s Next for the Stalled WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement?

L-R: Trudy Witbreuk (OECD), Ambassador Wayne McCook (WTO), Leslie Griffin (UPS).
L-R: Trudy Witbreuk (OECD), Ambassador Wayne McCook (WTO), Leslie Griffin (UPS).

The final panel reviewed progress on the WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement since implementation was blocked by India in July. The trade facilitation element of the December 2013 Bali package has the potential to significantly reduce trade costs. The OECD has developed a set of Trade Facilitation Indicators that identify areas for action by governments and enable the potential impact of reforms to be assessed. According to OECD estimates, total costs for low income countries would be reduced by 14.1 percent, by 15.1 percent for lower middle income countries and by 12.9 percent for upper middle income countries.

However, panelists, which included Scott Miller (CSIS), Yonov Frederick Agah (WTO), Trudy Witbreuk (OECD), Ambassador Wayne McCook (WTO) and Leslie Griffin (UPS) all agreed that momentum on the TFA is slow and uncertain.

Griffin stated that business plays an important role in implementing trade facilitation as a source of expertise and capacity building, and as an advocate for countries like Dubai which “do the right things” regarding trade facilitation. Agah encouraged the business community to reach out to their governments to voice private sector interests.

“Beware of the gap between capacity and commitment,” Miller said at the panel’s conclusion. “Trade facilitation is not self executing. It does require work.”

Staff contact: Rob Mulligan

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

Exploring New Approaches to Trade Investment and Jobs Agenda

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AGENDA

8:00 – 9:00  Registration / Continental Breakfast

9:00 – 9:30  Welcome / Opening Comments

  • Peter Robinson, President and CEO, USCIB
  • Phil O’Reilly, Chairman, BIAC; Chief Executive, BusinessNZ
  • Mari Kiviniemi, Deputy Secretary General, OECD; Former Prime Minister of Finland

9:30 – 10:45  SESSION 1

Global Value Chains: Changing Policies for Changing Business Models

Companies are adapting to political, technological, and economic changes around the world by creating global value chains (GVCs) that drive growth, innovation, and jobs. The pathbreaking work of the OECD-WTO on Trade in Value Added (TiVA) finds that between 30% and 60% of G20 country exports are comprised of imported inputs, or are used as inputs by others. Services account for 42% of exports in value-added terms. The new configurations of production and trade that characterize GVCs force us to think differently about trade and investment policy. Policies that force localization, restrict the flow of data, favor state-owned entities, or impose regulatory impediments to trade undercut the ability of companies to take advantage of GVCs. This session will look at how the TiVA data helps policymakers understand the impact of GVCs on economic growth and development and will explore which trade and investment policies facilitate the operation of GVCs as major contributors to growth, competitiveness and jobs.

  • Moderator – Anabel Gonzalez, Senior Director, The World Bank Group Global Practice on Trade and Competitiveness; Former Minister of Foreign Trade, Costa Rica
  • Cathy Novelli, Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy and the Environment, U.S. Department of State
  • Ken Ash, Director for Trade and Agriculture, OECD
  • Ambassador Karan Bhatia, Vice President and Senior Counsel, Global Government Affairs and Policy, General Electric;  Former Deputy United States Trade Representative
  • Rob Mulligan, Senior Vice President, Policy and Government Affairs, USCIB

10:45 – 11:00  Coffee Break

11:00 – 12:15  SESSION 2

Tackling Regulatory Barriers in Trade Agreements:  Insights From the OECD Services Trade Restrictiveness Index (STRI)

Services are becoming an ever larger part of the global economy.  However, regulatory barriers can increase the costs facing firms operating internationally and hold back growth and job-creation. The innovative OECD Services Trade Restrictiveness Index (STRI) released earlier this year documents the extent of restrictive measures on services which generate a huge proportion of the wealth and jobs in the most advanced economies. Issues of conflicting, duplicative, or burdensome regulations are at the heart of negotiations in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), the Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA), and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). This session will draw on insights from the STRI in addressing what countries can do to unilaterally reduce domestic regulatory barriers and what they can do in trade agreements to promote greater regulatory coherence across borders.

  • Moderator – Ambassador Fernando de Mateo, Permanent Representative of Mexico to the WTO; Chair of the Dispute Settlement Body of the WTO, Chair of the OECD Trade Committee
  • Crawford Falconer, Head of Trade in Services Division, OECD; Former Deputy Secretary the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  • Mark Linscott, Assistant United States Trade Representative for WTO and Multilateral Affairs
  • Damien Levie, First Counselor, Head of  the Trade and
    Agriculture Section, Delegation of the European Union to the United States
  • Rick Johnston, Managing Director, International Government Affairs, Citigroup; Executive Board Vice Chair, BIAC; Chair of USCIB Trade and Investment Committee

12:15 – 1:45  Lunch

Keynote Dialogue
  • Ambassador Michael Froman, United States Trade Representative
  • Moderator  Harold McGraw III, Chair, McGraw Hill; Chairman, ICC; Chairman, USCIB

1:45 – 3:00  SESSION 3

Foreign Direct Investment: Why Investment Protections are Critical to Growth and Jobs

International investments foster growth, innovation and sustainable development. They have been facilitated by strong protection for foreign investors in investment treaties. The OECD has developed a Policy Framework for Investment (PFI) that helps governments design and implement policy reforms to create an attractive, robust, and competitive environment for domestic and foreign investment. At the same time, the OECD publishes an FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness Index that gauges the restrictiveness of a country’s FDI rules.  These OECD products are particularly relevant at a time when the need for investment agreements and investor-state dispute settlement systems is being debated, especially in the context of the TTIP negotiations. Although many countries continue to strongly support treaty protection for foreign investors, some are seeking modifications and in a few cases countries are terminating treaties. This session, utilizing OECD data, will examine how investor protection provisions promote trade and investment and will discuss concerns about current mechanisms for settling disputes between foreign investors and states.

  • Moderator – Daniel Price, Managing Director, Rock Creek Global Advisors; Former Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics
  • Pierre Poret, Deputy Director, Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs, OECD
  • Dr. Heinz Hetmeier, Director of Trade Policy, German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy
  • Michael Tracton, Office Director, Office of Investment Affairs, U.S. Department of State
  • Ambassador Shaun Donnelly, Vice President, Investment and Financial Services, USCIB; Former Assistant United States Trade Representative for Europe and the Middle East
  • Kimberley Claman, Senior Vice President, International Government Affairs, Citigroup; Former Deputy Assistant USTR for Financial Services

3:00 – 3:15  Coffee Break

3:15 – 4:30  SESSION 4

Reconciling Regional, Plurilateral and Multilateral Trade Agreements: Threat or Opportunity?

Are regional and plurilateral trade agreements a threat to the multilateral system, or do they provide the stepping stones for preserving the momentum towards more open trade and investment, setting global standards which will ultimately be multilateralized? OECD has looked extensively into the question of whether deep provisions in RTAs can be multilateralized on a wide range of issues, from government procurement, to IP, transparency, competition, services and more. A synthesis of their findings has recently been published in a report entitled “Deep Provisions in Regional Trade Agreements: How Multilateral Friendly?” This session will discuss those findings and look forward to identifying how to reconcile the two movements and whether there are risks to the multilateral system posed by a proliferation of regional and plurilateral trade agreements.

  • Moderator – The Honorable James Bacchus, Chair, Greenberg Traurig Global Practice; Former Chairman of the Appellate Body and Chief Judge at the WTO; Former Congressman (FL-11, FL-15); Chairman, ICC Commission on Trade and Investment Policy
  • Ambassador Susan Schwab, Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland; Strategic Advisor,  Mayer Brown; Former United States Trade Representative
  • Iza Lejarraga, Senior Analyst, Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs, OECD
  • Clifford Sosnow, Partner, Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP; Chair, BIAC Trade Committee
  • Ed Gresser, Executive Director, ProgressiveEconomy, Global Works Foundation; USTR Scholar in Residence; Former Policy Advisor to United States Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky

4:30 – 5:45  SESSION 5

What Next for the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement?

The trade facilitation element of the December 2013 Bali package has the potential to significantly reduce trade costs. The OECD has developed a set of Trade Facilitation Indicators that identify areas for action by governments and enable the potential impact of reforms to be assessed. According to OECD estimates, total costs for low income countries would be reduced by 14.1 percent, by 15.1 percent for lower middle income countries and by 12.9 percent for upper middle income countries (assuming full implementation). This session will review the current state of implementation of the Trade Facilitation Agreement and discuss how the business community can best contribute to ensuring that benefits are maximized.

  • Moderator – Scott Miller, William M. Scholl Chair in International Business, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
  • Yonov Frederick Agah, Deputy Director General of the WTO
  • Trudy Witbreuk, Head of Development Division, OECD (Click for PowerPoint)
  • Ambassador Wayne McCook, Permanent Representative of Jamaica to the WTO
  • Leslie Griffin, Senior Vice President, International Public Policy, United Parcel Service

5:45 – 6:00  Closing Remarks

  • Ken Ash, OECD

6:00 – 7:30  Reception

ICC Hails Progress on Automatic Exchange of Information Agreement

The International Chamber of Commerce has welcomed an agreement reached this week by over 90 countries to automatically swap tax information, describing the step towards achieving transparency in this area as an important milestone for the international tax reform agenda. The new OECD/G20 standard on automatic exchange of information was endorsed in Berlin yesterday by all OECD and G20 countries as well as major financial centers participating in the annual meeting of the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes. More than 50 countries additionally agreed to put exchange systems in place by the year 2017.

More on the ICC’s website

Staff contact: Carol Doran Klein

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

BIAC Welcomes FTA Focus on Eliminating Double Taxation

Participants to the OECD Forum on Tax Administration (FTA) meeting on October 23 and 24 in Dublin agreed that ever-greater cooperation is necessary to implement the results of the OECD’s project on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) and Automatic Exchange of Information.

The Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD welcomed the opportunity to attend part of the FTA, which gathers tax commissioners from more than forty countries, enabling them to identify, discuss and influence relevant global trends and develop new ideas to enhance tax administration around the world. BIAC engaged with the FTA on the issue of improving tax control frameworks.

Will Morris, chair of the BIAC Tax Committee, noted: “We very much welcome the commitment of the tax authorities present to improve the Mutual Agreement Procedure for resolving tax disputes. This shows that the OECD and FTA remain focused on continuing to eliminate double taxation, as well as on preventing double non-taxation. We also welcome the continued emphasis on the cooperative compliance program. One of the best ways of preventing base erosion and profit shifting is by building trust between tax authorities and taxpayers, and that is exactly what cooperative compliance does. This was a positive and very useful meeting.”

USCIB, BIAC and the OECD organize an annual tax conference, the most recent of which took place in June, which reviews the OECD’s work on BEPS, under which governments are seeking to curtail what they perceive as growing under-taxation of international corporate income.

Staff contact: Carol Doran Klein

More on USCIB’s Taxation Committee

ICC Raises Concerns Over WTO Customs Database Misuse

The World Trade Organization (WTO) held an informal workshop in Geneva on October 27 about valuation databases and reference pricing serving. The forum provided an occasion to share experiences and perspectives on the use of customs valuation databases. The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) was welcomed as the only non-governmental actor and as the representative of the trade community.

The long-anticipated event was the result of several ICC appeals to the WTO and World Customs Organization (WCO), over the past two years, to address the misapplication of valuation databases to set reference and minimum prices. The closed workshop was attended by approximately 100 participants comprising WTO delegates, representatives of the WCO and Customs agencies.

During the workshop ICC provided business views which offered valuable insights on the use of customs valuation databases. Mark Neville (International Trade Counsellors), a member of the ICC Commission on Customs and Trade Facilitation, raised ICC’s concerns on the proliferating misuse of valuation databases. While acknowledging that these databases can provide a useful tool for risk assessment, Neville recounted traders’ experience and provided a number of country examples in which WTO members were using valuation databases to set reference and minimum prices – a practice prohibited by Article 7 of the WTO Customs Valuation Agreement.

“These practices are in violation of the positive basis of the price actually paid or payable which is the core principle of transaction value under the WTO Customs Valuation Agreement,” said Neville.

The workshop was the first time the WTO discussed the misuse of valuation databases. Following the event ICC will continue to actively engage with the WTO and the World Customs Organization as the issue evolves.

More info at ICC’s website.

Staff contact: Kristin Isabelli

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USCIB Talks Trade and Investment in the Americas at IDB Forum

The global trade environment is changing rapidly, with the emergence of new global trade architecture, the uncertain fate of the WTO’s trade facilitation agreement, and increasing opposition to investment protections in trade agreements such as the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Treaty (TTIP).

On October 20, the Integration and Trade Sector of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) hosted a forum on “The 21st Century Trade Architecture: Implications for Latin America and the Caribbean” for a discussion about the most pressing trade policy challenges, with an emphasis on Latin American economies.

Rob Mulligan, USCIB’s senior vice president for policy and government affairs, participated in a panel on “Trends in Trade and Integration: Trading against Headwinds,” in which he spoke about global value chains (GVCs), where companies move intermediate goods between countries in producing a final product, and of the benefits to be gained from the participation of Latin American economies in GVCs.

The panel was moderated by Gary Hufbauer, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, and Mulligan was joined by John Melle, Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for the Western Hemisphere; Ken Ash, director of trade and agriculture at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; Abdel-Hamid Mamdouh director of trade in services at the World Trade Organization and Sally Yearwood, executive director of the Caribbean-Central American Action.

In his remarks, Mulligan stressed the importance of using GVCs to remain competitive, innovate, and stay close to customers. He cited an OECD study that found that one-third of most countries’ imports is part of their exports, and noted that in order to remain competitive in GVCs companies require access to efficient imports of goods and services. Latin American economies have much to gain from participating in global value chains, and government policies can impact the extent of that participation.

Mulligan also discussed the factors that companies consider when they’re deciding whether to invest in a country along a global value chain. Such factors include infrastructure, workforce development, a fair and transparent tax system and effective rule of law. He noted that certain policies inhibit companies’ ability to operate through GVCs, such as forced localization, restrictions on cross-border data flows and restrictive customs rules and regulations.

Trade agreements are an effective way to pursue policies that facilitate that movement of goods and services within GVCs, and Mulligan explained that business prefers multilateral trade agreements and also supports regional agreements such as TTIP and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).

In order to take advantage of GVCs, Mulligan concluded by noting that Latin American governments could take unilateral steps to improve infrastructure and education, and eliminate localization rules and date flow restrictions. These countries could also benefit from regional trade integration.

Staff contact: Rob Mulligan

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee