USCIB Highlights How OECD Work is Used by Business

OECD_WashingtonThe Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) produces domestic policy tools for governments by setting benchmarks, comparing progress and pointing out best practices. On January 29, the OECD Washington Center hosted a special 2016 kickoff event that reviewed how governments and other stakeholders including business take advantage of the OECD’s many resources.

At the event, Rob Mulligan, USCIB senior vice president for policy and government affairs, presented the views of USCIB as the U.S. affiliate to Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC), which is the official voice of business at the OECD.

Mulligan cited several examples of OECD work products that have had significant impacts on government policies of interest to business, including the Policy Framework for Investment, the AntiBribery Convention, the Trade in Value Added database, the Data Privacy Guidelines, and the Services Trade Restrictiveness Index. These are just a few of the many OECD products that are used by OECD and non-OECD governments in developing national laws and regulations affecting investment and business activities.

A summary of this and other activities undertaken by USCIB staff can be found in the most recent edition of Washington Update.

OECD and UNHCR Call for Scaling up Integration Policies in Favor of Refugees

ImmigrationThe integration of refugees in local economies has become more challenging as the refugee crisis continues to have a significant impact on local labor markets. Businesses have asked for orderly, transparent, efficient and well-thought immigration programs and have demonstrated a willingness to participate in deep discussions with their governments on how to contribute.

At the high-level conference with the OECD and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi on January 28, the BIAC delegation, headed by Secretary General Bernhard Welschke, called for advances in national level skills recognition, language training and targeted labor market programs to support the integration of beneficiaries of international protection and other forms of migrants into the local labor markets.

The OECD and UNHCR stressed not only the moral imperative but also the clear economic incentive to help the millions of refugees living in OECD countries to develop the skills they need to work productively and safely in the jobs of tomorrow.

“Far from a problem, refugees can and should be part of the solution to many of the challenges our societies confront,” said Gurría.

The OECD also released a report, Making Integration Work: Refugees and others in need of protection, which provides the main lessons from the experience of OECD countries in fostering the integration of refugees. The report highlights many good practices to tackle key barriers and support lasting integration of refugees and their children. It stresses the importance of early intervention, including providing access to language courses, employment programs and integration services as soon as possible, including for asylum seekers with high prospects to remain. It also stresses the need to help migrants settle where jobs are and not necessarily where housing is cheaper. The report also underlines the need to adapt integration programs to reflect migrants’ diversity in terms of skills and  the specific needs of refugees.

ICC Academy: 2016 Supply Chain Finance Summit

supply_chain_summit

The ICC Academy invites you to join us for the upcoming Supply Chain Financing Summit, which will take place in Singapore on March 9 and 10.

The summit will welcome 150 trade finance experts from all over the world and will provide an opportunity for thoughtful deliberation, practical action and high-value networking.

A key feature of the summit will be the release of new internationally-standardized definitions for techniques of supply chain finance endorsed by the ICC Academy, facilitated by the ICC Banking Commission and jointly produced with key global industry associations.

Register before February 5 2016 to take advantage of the early bird rate.

Topics will include:

  • Evolution of Global Trade Hubs
  • Trends in Supply Chain Financing and alternative models
  • FinTech Innovations
  • China Market Updates, New Normal
  • ICC/SCF Terminology
  • Conversation with Market Leaders

Read the full program here.

USCIB Webinar: ILO General Discussion on Global Supply Chains

worker_female

Recent pressure from workers’ groups and certain governments has urged the International Labor Organization (ILO) to focus its attention on global supply chains, which will be the topic of its next General Discussion in June. USCIB hosted a webinar on February 10 about the upcoming discussion, which reviewed how to push back against the unsupported claims that global supply chains will drive down workers’ wages, and that global companies can somehow be made to control their entire supply chains.

The webinar gave members an opportunity to share their perspective on the General Discussion with the Employer spokesperson, Ed Potter, as well as International Organization of Employers Secretary General Linda Kromjong.

To view a recording of the webinar, please contact Rachel Spence (rspence@uscib.org).

IOE President Targets 5 Key Inhibitors of Labor Markets at B20 Kickoff

labor_and_employmentSpeaking at the B20 kick off meeting in Beijing on January 26, International Organization of Employers (IOE) President Daniel Funes de Rioja targeted the five key inhibitors of flexible labor markets and optimal labor market participation.

With employment already earmarked by the Chinese G20 presidency as a prime area of focus, Funes wasted no time in setting out the expectations of business: “I want the G20 to make ambitious commitments on the headline aim of Energetic Labor Markets and Adaptable Workforces.”

He set out five key actions for the G20 leaders to optimize labor market participation:

  • Remove barriers to starting, operating and growing a business.
  • Create easy-to-understand, employment-friendly labor law.
  • Promote the variety of forms of employment needed to allow companies maximum opportunities to hire as many people as possible.
  • Decrease the burden of non-wage labor costs – in many cases an obstacle to employing people.
  • Create attractive regulatory framework conditions that stimulate the establishment of apprenticeships systems.

Funes went on to recall the recent IOE-BIAC-Deloitte survey on youth employment in G20 countries, launched just six weeks ago in Ankara, which found that 80 percent of respondents believed that the current regulatory framework for the establishment and operation of enterprises was “more cumbersome than supportive.” The IOE President cautioned that with such framework conditions in place, bringing more people into employment remained a pipe dream.

On top of the required action above, Funes also called for more transparency and accountability in the G20 employment process. The G20 national employment plans could, he acknowledged, play “a decisive role”, but their potential had not been fully exploited to date. The G20, with the support of business, needed to ask themselves:

  • Are the employment plans concrete and ambitious enough?
  • Is implementation of the employment plans sufficient?
  • What are the lessons learned from the last two years?

Summing up, Funes said that the B20 called on the Chinese G20 presidency to refocus the employment process on job creation and growth, and to strengthen the implementation of employment commitments through more rigorous and robust assessment of the employment plans in place across the G20.

New Book Explores Approaches to Lifelong Learning for the 21st Century

Meta-learning chartWhat kinds of competencies will be needed in a world where advanced technologies, including robotics and artificial intelligence, play an increasingly integral role in our workplaces and societies? A new book co-authored by Charles Fadel, founder of the Center for Curriculum Redesign, titled Four-Dimensional Education grapples with the challenges faced by today’s educators in preparing learners for the 21st-century economy.

In 2014, anticipating the present concerns, Fadel led a symposium on the impact of robotics and artificial intelligence in the workplace, organized by the USCIB Foundation in partnership with the McGraw Hill Financial Global Institute. Furthering the work of the Foundation on education, training and human capital requirements in the 21st century, the symposium gathered experts in technology, education and employment to explore how robotics and AI could impact the future jobs market. Fadel is the chair of the Education team of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD education committee, and was formerly Global Education Lead at Cisco Systems.

The book explains that the education systems of the United States and many other advanced countries were designed with the needs of the 19th –and 20th century, with a largely industrial workforce, in mind. These systems are no longer adequate for addressing the needs of our modern, hyper-connected and digital economy. The book argues that in order to equip learners with the competencies they need for a more technologically advanced workplace, older curricula will need to evolve to new systems that foster Skills (such as creativity, critical thinking, communication and collaboration), and Character qualities (such as ethics, leadership, mindfulness, curiosity, courage and resilience) all of which will be needed to adapt in a faster-changing jobs market.

Four Dimensional Education brings a deeply cogent, synthetic, open-minded conversation to explore one of the key challenges to our society – how to transform our education systems to respond effectively to global 21st century needs and aspirations,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson. “USCIB has been privileged to be part of this conversation through a series of sponsored roundtables with the CCR bringing educators together with economists and business to bring new insights and perspectives to help students build the world we want.”

In an interview with USCIB, Fadel explained that educators will be stymied in their progress unless they revisit educational standards and assessments, including for those areas of knowledge that are more relevant today. For example, in the late 1800s educators began teaching trigonometry because the economy demanded more wood workers and land surveyors. Today, there is demand for “big data” – statistics and probability, and algorithmics. Fadel stressed the need for teaching branches of mathematics that are underrepresented in current curricula, such as Game theory, and algorithmics.

Additionally, he said new disciplines are needed, such as robotics and coding: “We talk about STEM – science, technology, engineering and math – but we only teach the ‘S’ and the ‘M,’ parts. What about Technology and Engineering?  And beyond STEM, what about entrepreneurship, wellness, etc? It is not about STEM or Humanities/Arts, it is STEM and Humanities/Arts. All these disciplines matter.”

The “social pain” of innovation

Fadel then noted that over time technology zooms ahead of education, which leads to instances of social pain, usually followed by an educational response. After the industrial revolution, policymakers responded with mass schooling, which helped a large number of mostly illiterate people, farmers and artisans become factory-ready. Once our educational systems caught up with advances in technology, prosperity ensued.

“Well, the digital revolution is doing the same now at an accelerated rate, where you have a lot of jobs that can be off-shored or automated due to technology,” Fadel said. “So we have to catch up and adapt, even faster than we did for the industrial revolution.”

When asked what the education system of the future should look like, Fadel remarked that students will still need a broad knowledge base that they can tap throughout their life as they move from one specialization to another: “When you’re a young kid, you’re going to learn how to read, write and compute – there’s no deviation. But when you’re an adult, you choose your pathway to stay current. So what we’re trying to cultivate is what IBM has been calling a ‘T-shaped individual,’ where you’re broad through your education and deep through your specialization, and if you expand that it’s an M-shaped model where you add specializations as you go through your career, drawing from that breadth that you’ve acquired in your younger years, and staying current.”

Many societal actors have a role to play in fostering new 21st-century education systems, including governments, parents and corporations. Fadel argued that governments should broaden how they measure and assess students’ capabilities similar to how corporations judge potential job applicants or existing employees, whereby employers examine not just knowledge but also character and skills. He then noted that parents have a role to play by advocating for changing what gets taught in schools, rather than applying pressure on overburdened teachers. And finally, corporations can help by being clearer about exactly what kinds of knowledge, skills, and character qualities they value in future employees.

“I’d love to see corporations be more systematic about their requests for change both in clarity of needs, and stamina,” Fadel concluded. “They seem to come in and out; they get distracted by their own strategic imperatives. It’s hard for corporations to have a steady hand year after year because they have their own dynamics, yet that’s what’s required – a steady hand and a steady set of requirements that’s adaptive to a rapidly changing world.”

ICC Scorecard Flags Missed G20 Opportunities

2016 ICC G20 Business Score CardThe International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) unveiled its fifth annual ICC G20 Business Scorecard, which rates G20 responsiveness to key business policy priorities. The Scorecard shows G20 progress on a number of international business priorities but reveals some important missed opportunities to advance trade and international investment policy frameworks.

“We published the Scorecard to help the G20 gauge progress and identify areas that merit greater attention. This edition finds that the G20 is making progress on the B20 recommendations that will lead to economic growth and job creation,” said ICC and USCIB Chairman Terry McGraw as he presented the latest edition of the ICC G20 Business Scorecard on January 26 in a keynote speech to the Business-20 (B20) China kick-off event in Beijing. “It is critical that G20 leaders, with support from business, unite to exercise stronger leadership in tackling the world’s economic policy challenges, particularly on trade, investment and the environment.”

The ICC Scorecard is a valuable mechanism for global business to evaluate the G20’s responsiveness to B20 policy recommendations. The fifth edition examines a total of 25 business priorities developed during the 2015 Turkish B20 cycle and rates G20 responsiveness across seven policy areas. This year’s score of 2.0 out of 3.0, translates to an assessment of “Fair.”

“The score is a slight decrease from the Brisbane and St. Petersburg Summits’ scores of 2.1 reflecting our disappointment in G20 leadership on the trade agenda,” said ICC Secretary General John Danilovich.

The Scorecard suggests that passive wording used in the Antalya Communiqué amounted to a missed opportunity to amplify both the urgency of advancing the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) to implementation and the importance of TFA progress to adding $1 trillion to global GDP and 18 million jobs, primarily in emerging markets.

“The G20 should have rallied endorsement for the TFA in the run-up to the WTO ministerial in Nairobi,” said McGraw. “We need 108 countries to ratify the TFA and we still have 10 G20 countries that haven’t. We must get this done.”

Can do better on investment

G20 action on investment and infrastructure yielded a score of only 1.3 out of 3.0. While this demonstrates some progress on the infrastructure investment agenda launched at the 2013 St. Petersburg Summit, the Scorecard notes that G20 leaders have not responded to a growing chorus calling for G20 leadership on international investment governance.

“The country-specific investment strategies endorsed by leaders in Antalya are the type of concrete actions we need to see from the G20,” said Jeffrey Hardy, director of the ICC G20 CEO Advisory Group. “But we also need them to set national targets on infrastructure spending, as a percentage of GDP, and to agree overarching national strategies for credible infrastructure pipelines.”

According to Scorecard ratings the G20 also failed to address B20 calls for leadership on international investment governance, including a B20 recommendation for a model investment framework.

“This was a missed opportunity for the G20 to demonstrate leadership on rationalizing the current patchwork of bilateral and regional investment rules,” said Hardy.

A promising start on SMEs

Reflecting the emphasis on SME growth as a priority during Turkey’s G20 Presidency, G20 commitments to SMEs scored 2.0 out of 3.0 – with high marks for secured for official G20 recognition of the new World SME Forum (WSF), a groundbreaking initiative to unlock the potential of SMEs worldwide. Co-founded by ICC and launched during the Antalya Summit, the WSF will be an enduring legacy of Turkey’s G20 Presidency.

While acknowledging a concrete commitment by G20 leaders to reduce the proportion of young people most at risk of being left permanently behind in the labor market, the Scorecard signals that implementation will require comprehensive reform and modernization of national and vocational education and training systems along with the creation of open and dynamic labor markets.

“It is disappointing that G20 ministers failed again under the Turkish Presidency to address key issues around bringing more people into employment,” said Daniel Funes de Rioja, president of the International Organization of Employers (IOE). “It’s not enough for the G20 employment process to take the line of least resistance; the difficult tasks need to be tackled. Business stands ready to support G20 Governments in this endeavor.”

Much improvement on environment and energy

The Energy and Environment score of 2.2 out of 3.0 is a significant increase over last year’s score of 1.2 and the highest since ICC began monitoring. The increase is the result of a heightened focus on energy and climate change in the Antalya Leader’s Communiqué, coupled with the first G20 Energy Ministers Meeting on October – both indicating that energy and climate issues are gaining greater traction in G20 deliberation at leader level.

“ICC is pleased that the G20 has recognized several of the business priorities outlined in 2015,” said Hardy. “The Antalya Communiqué included unprecedented strong language on climate change, stating and that it was ‘one of the greatest challenges of our time.’ The G20’s Antalya commitments held firm and helped secure the historic global climate agreement reached in Paris in December.”

Delivering on anti-corruption

The Scorecard also reflected good G20 progress on Anti-Corruption, which received a score of 2.3 out of 3.0. The score is acknowledgement of the ongoing partnership between the B20 and the G20 Anti-corruption working Group (ACWG), with several commitments and deliverables in the 2015-2016 G20 Anti-Corruption Action Plan aligned to B20 recommendations. The ACWG is by far the most inclusive of all official G20 working arrangements, with B20 representatives routinely invited to participate in ACWG meetings and to submit suggestions to the ongoing G20 anti-corruption agenda.

“It is encouraging that the G20 continues to demonstrate leadership in denouncing corrupt practices, including the delivery and publication in Antalya of national implementation plans on beneficial ownership transparency,” said Danilovich. “This is an important area of focus for the G20 and presents a significant boon to the global effort to increase transparency and deter corruption. However, one year after Brisbane, there are still gaps between the G20’s own principles and the current state of regulation in several G20 countries.”

The full G20 Business Scorecard is available here.

6 Reasons Why ICC is Celebrating International Customs Day

customs declaration

To remain competitive in an increasingly integrated global economy, businesses need to be able to rely on efficient Customs regimes and smooth logistics when exporting and importing goods. That is why the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and USCIB are celebrating International Customs Day, dedicated this year to promoting the digitization of Customs process under the slogan “Digital Customs: Progressive Engagement.”

ICC has highlighted six ways in which the world business organization is helping to promote trade facilitation and customs modernization, and helping businesses counter some of the border challenges they face today. USCIB is proud to support these initiatives as U.S. affiliate of ICC.

Working with the World Customs Organization (WCO)

ICC and the World Customs Organization (WCO) share a commitment to harmonize customs procedures and practices. ICC’s longstanding partnership dates back to the 1950’s when the two organizations declared support for the modernization of Customs as a core means of enhancing supply chains and economic competitiveness.

In 2015, ICC contributed to the development of the World Customs Organization’s Customs-Business Partnership Guidance which offers step-by-step advice for developing sustainable engagement between customs authorities and the private sector.

Natural allies on Trade Facilitation

Through the ICC Commission on Customs and Trade Facilitation, ICC provides input to the WCO on a number of technical issues including Customs Classification (in the WCO Harmonized System Committee) and Customs Valuation (in the WCO Technical Committee on Customs Valuation). On a strategic level, ICC and the WCO work together to address the Customs challenges and opportunities identified by traders.

In 2015, ICC provided perspectives on the inappropriate use of Customs valuation databases to set minimum or reference pricing for imports. ICC has also been engaged from the start in the WCO Working Group on the implementation of the World Trade Organization’s landmark Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA). Given that the agreement deals almost entirely with Customs-related topics, ICC works closely with the WCO to ensure the TFA’s successful implementation.

Practical guidance on international taxation

ICC proposals for more coherent tax and customs revenue collection were included in the WCO Guide to Customs Valuation and Transfer Pricing released in 2015 as part of a WCO Revenue Package. The guide provides concrete guidance on revenue collection to governments around the globe and aims to harmonize revenue collection between customs and tax authorities.

ICC also continues to support the efforts of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the United Nations towards further coherence of tax and customs administrations.

ATA Carnets – a passport for goods

Administered by ICC through its World Chambers Federation (WCF), the ATA Carnet is a tool for the temporary duty-free and tax-free admission of goods. The Carnet works like a passport for goods, removing the need for exporters to provide Customs authorities with the otherwise necessary guarantees required for goods to cross borders. Today, the ATA System is in force in 75 countries with over 178,000 ATA Carnets, covering hundreds of thousands of Customs transactions, issued worldwide every year for goods valued at $25 billion. USCIB is the U.S. national guaranteeing association for the ATA Carnet.

From computers and prototype cars to prehistoric relics and seismic equipment, Carnets are issued for all kinds of goods including commercial samples, professional equipment and goods for trade fairs and exhibitions.

Certificates of Origin – facilitating trusted trade

Every country in the world considers the origin of imported goods when determining the duty that will be applied to the goods or, in some cases, whether the goods may be legally imported at all. Certificates of Origin (CO) are important international trade documents attesting that goods in a particular export shipment are wholly obtained, produced, manufactured or processed in a particular country. Millions are issued every year.

ICC through its World Chambers Federation provides an international accreditation chain system for chambers of commerce, the principal agent in the delivery of certificates and has established international standards, rules and procedures that reinforce the trust and integrity of the CO Chain, to the benefit of traders and Customs administrations alike.

Incoterms® Rules – the daily language of trade

ICC’s famous Incoterms® rules are accepted as the global standard for the interpretation of the most common terms used in contracts for the international sale of goods. Incorporated in contracts for the sale of goods worldwide, they provide guidance to importers and exporters helping trading partners to avoid costly misunderstandings by clarifying the tasks, costs and risks involved in the delivery of goods from sellers to buyers.

To learn more about ICC trade tools that facilitate cross-border transactions visit:

http://www.iccwbo.org/products-and-services/trade-facilitation

For more information about USCIB’s trade services visit:

https://uscib.org/trade-services-UD-4293/

 

ICC and UNCTAD Pledge to Work Together on 2030 Development Agenda

unctad_iccThe International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) have pledged to strengthen their work maximizing the benefits of international trade and investment for economic and social development, and laid out plans for new collaborative efforts to advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in September 2015.

UNCTAD Secretary General Mukhisa Kituyi and ICC Secretary General John Danilovich issued a joint statement when they met at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, which took place in Davos, Switzerland from January 20 to 23.

“Both UNCTAD and ICC are strongly committed to implementing the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and can collaborate in a number of important areas such as trade facilitation, e-commerce, investment and competition law,” Kituyi said. “The private sector will play a significant role in fulfilling the implementation of the SDGs and we are very pleased to partner with ICC, being the largest representative business organization in the world.”

“Collaboration between the private sector and intergovernmental organizations – especially UNCTAD, given its convening role for developing countries on trade and investment – is vital if we are to make progress towards the SDGs and ensure a more sustainable and prosperous future for all,” said Danilovich. “Our engagement with UNCTAD is a clear and visible demonstration of the private sector’s commitment to the goals.”

Building on the success of the widely adopted UNCTAD/ICC Rules for Multimodal Transport Documents, Kituyi and Danilovich said that their organizations shared a mutual interest and expertise in developing standards for use in international trade. Accordingly, the organizations will collaborate in supporting countries wishing to ratify and implement the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement, which aims to cut red tape and the cost of cross-border trade.

In addition, in order to enhance the potential of foreign direct investment in the achievement of the SDGs, the organizations will promote dialogue on this subject at their joint Investment Advisory Council, a high-level platform for the exchange of ideas between senior business leaders and officials, and at the World Investment Forum, UNCTAD’s two-yearly gathering for discussions on emerging investment-related challenges.

As for the digital economy, both organizations will join forces to capitalize on the potential that information and communication technologies, including the Internet, have for development.

Recognizing that non-tariff barriers to trade have been shown to be up to four times as restrictive as traditional tariff measures, UNCTAD and ICC will cooperate to raise awareness among governments about the significance of such measures and foster transparency.

The organizations will also work jointly to strengthen consumer protection and safeguard competition law.

The partnership between UNCTAD and ICC will strengthen the voice of the private sector at the fourteenth session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development taking place in Nairobi, Kenya, on July 17-22.

The conference brings together heads of state and government, ministers and key stakeholders from the business world, civil society and academia to tackle global trade and economic development issues in relation to the SDGs and to move from decisions to actions in the implementation of Agenda 2030.

Enabling a Vibrant Digital Economy Is Essential for 21st Century Business

Digital GlobeSeveral years ago in this column, I remarked on the amazing transition from e-commerce to the “Internet economy.” Nowadays, it is clear that the digital economy, for all intents and purposes, is the economy. Very little commerce, both in-country and across borders, could take place without the interconnected networks enabled by the global Internet. Think about how your business would function for even a day without reliable access to modern information and communication technologies (ICTs).

The OECD, which has served as an invaluable forum for discussion of sensible policy approaches to the challenges and opportunities presented by the digital economy, is gearing up for a ministerial meeting this June in Cancun, Mexico. The meeting will explore work undertaken by the OECD Committee for Digital Economy Policy to address the continued evolution of the digital economy in the eight years since a previous 2008 ministerial in Seoul, South Korea. USCIB and our members played an active role at the Seoul ministerial, where I had the privilege of serving as chair of the “business day” events.

The Seoul ministerial acknowledged the essential nature of the Internet as a platform for economic growth, and emphasized the need for all stakeholders to guide its development. Recognizing the vast changes in this area since 2008, the Cancun ministerial will highlight the extent to which the entire economy has become digitized, and explore how this transformation has affected social interactions, business and government operations, laws and regulations, and jobs and skills. Numerous USCIB and other global companies are set to participate.

Privacy and localization concerns

The Cancun ministerial comes against the backdrop of growing unease in some markets over privacy protections for cross-border data transmissions. The European Court of Justice got everyone’s attention recently when it invalidated the European Commission’s 2000 decision concerning the adequacy of the existing transatlantic “safe harbor” framework. In the past 15 years, thousands of U.S. companies have used this framework to ensure that their data practices are in line with European Union privacy rules.

Addressing the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show in January, Federal Trade Commission Chairwoman Edith Ramirez said she was confident that U.S. and EU officials would reach agreement on a new data transfer deal – a so-called Safe Harbor 2.0, which is essential for the global operations of both tech and non-tech companies. As we went to press, however, there was still no agreement, and the clock was ticking loudly toward a January 31 deadline imposed by EU Data Protection Authorities (DPAs). The DPAs indicated that if U.S. and EU negotiators do not conclude Safe Harbor 2.0 by that date, they may launch probes of U.S. tech companies to ensure compliance with European law. Such actions could have a severe chilling effect on transatlantic data flows, with potentially devastating consequences for both the U.S. and EU economies.

A related development is rising support for the forced localization of data centers within a country’s border. As USCIB members have made clear in numerous forums, such requirements diminish the investment appeal of these markets by creating undue burdens for global companies. Localization requirements also threaten ground-breaking ICT advances – with promise of significant economic and societal benefits for these countries – in such areas as cloud computing, use of Big Data and the Internet of Things. Also important (and ironic), data localization measures effectively undermine privacy and security by distracting from efforts to create better protections for individuals and generally making these markets more vulnerable to hackers.

More generally, we are seeing a proliferation of other types of localization barriers, such as local content requirements, discriminatory government procurement practices, technology transfer requirements and other policies and regulations aimed at promoting domestic industry and shielding it from foreign competition.

Wise policy choices needed

A vibrant digital economy holds great promise for individual businesses and the global economy more generally. Many countries realize this, but in their efforts to harness the innovative and developmental potential of an Internet-fueled economy, they are resorting to policies that risk quashing that vibrancy.

During last year’s review of the decade-old World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), an initiative launched under UN auspices, we also heard calls from some countries for a stronger government role in governance of the Internet. Such an approach would undermine the bottom-up, multi-stakeholder approach to Internet governance. When governments work together with other stakeholders, we can realize significant progress in raising capacity, knowledge, and understanding of digital economy issues. Policymaking invariably is improved when representatives of business, the technical community, and civil society inform such discussions; such inclusion also helps to lower the risk of unintended consequences.

The upcoming OECD ministerial provides the perfect opportunity for the business community to tell lawmakers which policies best realize the promise of Internet-enabled development and innovation. USCIB seeks a ministerial outcome that recognizes the importance of private-sector investment and “light touch” regulation that preserves the Internet’s interoperability. We would also like to see the OECD highlight how emerging technologies facilitate economic development and address societal needs. And collaboration between all stakeholders is a must in order to expand inclusion in the digital economy.

USCIB addresses these issues at a global level through our unique role as U.S. affiliate of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and of BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD. We are lucky to have strong member support and leadership from individuals such as Eric Loeb (AT&T) and Joseph Alhadeff (Oracle), chair and vice chair, respectively, of our ICT Policy Committee. (Alhadeff also chairs the corresponding committees at ICC and BIAC.)

I am confident that USCIB and our members will have robust representation in Cancun. And I am equally confident that policymakers will recognize the Internet’s role as a platform for innovation, social inclusion and economic development. With your continued strong support, USCIB and our members can continue to drive industry leadership in this critical area; ICTs are essential for doing business in the 21st century.