USCIB Labor CSR Committees Review Business Priorities

washington-Lincoln-MemorialsLast week, USCIB members and government officials gathered in Washington, D.C. for two days of meetings on human rights, labor policy, and corporate social responsibility, as USCIB’s Corporate Responsibility Committee and Labor & Employment Policy Committee met on consecutive days. Laura Chapman Rubbo (Walt Disney) acted as chair of the Corporate Responsibility Committee meeting, while Ed Potter (Coca-Cola) chaired the Labor & Employment Policy Committee meeting.

UN debates Ecuador proposal on human rights

One focus of discussion was renewed action in the United Nations on human rights and business. The ground is shifting, with the UN Human Rights Council recently voting, at the behest of Ecuador and a few other states, to pursue talks toward a binding UN instrument on business and human rights.

The United States and numerous other governments voted against the Ecuador resolution, but their opposition was insufficient to prevent the measure from moving ahead. Members heard updates on this fast-moving topic from Jason Pielemeier, special advisor at the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor; Lene Wendland, advisor to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights; and Amol Mehra, director of International Corporate Accountability Roundtable.

Myanmar open for business

Members also discussed new opportunities and challenges as Myanmar (formerly Burma) increasingly opens itself for business and foreign investment. The Burmese government has expressed an interest in bolstering the country’s relationship with American businesses, and a number of USCIB members operate in the country. Company representatives said their decision to expand in the country came after intensive due diligence and numerous dialogues with the government. American business activity in the country is only a small percentage of overall investment in Myanmar, which is dominated by companies from other Asian countries.

The steady growth of Myanmar’s garment manufacturing sector has spurred U.S. and other foreign investors to take stock of factory safety, in order to avoid a repeat of last year’s Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh, and to work closely with the International Labor Organization to improve working conditions in the country. Members cited greater ease in intergovernmental and private-sector dialogue with the Burmese government then was experienced in Bangladesh, a positive sign for the well-being of workers moving forward.

Corporate Responsibility Updates

Members also reviewed progress on a wide range of business and human rights issues, including a discussion on how and where to functionally embed oversight for human rights into a company’s organization, updates on the various regulatory measures related to conflict minerals, emerging trends in CSR and human rights reporting, and a recap of USCIB’s UN-business door knock event on engaging the private sector with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Bennet Freeman (Calvert Investments) gave a presentation on evolving trends in CSR and human rights reporting for businesses. Respect for human rights now constitutes a core part of companies’ business models, as opposed to being limited to CSR or philanthropic activities, and business is making steady progress in reporting in this area. Freeman gave a similar presentation at USCIB’s September conference on Engaging Business and Human Rights in Atlanta.

On the UN SDGs, Ariel Meyerstein (USCIB) and Tam Nguyen (Bechtel) reported on USCIB’s doorknock event, “Practical Private Sector Engagement in the UN Post-2015 Development Agenda,” hosted at Pfizer’s New York headquarters. They noted that business is much more engaged with the UN’s Post-2015 Development Agenda than it was for the UN’s Millennium Development Goals, and that the private sector hopes that the UN takes into consideration existing CSR reporting mechanisms when formulating the SDG targets, so that companies won’t have to grapple with new and redundant sets of metrics and indicators.

Staff contact: Ariel Meyerstein

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ICC Identifies Business Priorities for Digital Economy

L-R: Eric Loeb, chair of USCIB’s ICT Committee and chair of ICC’s Task Force on Internet and Telecommunication, and Christoph Steck, co-chair of ICC”s Task Force on Internet and Communications.
L-R: Eric Loeb, chair of USCIB’s ICT Committee and chair of ICC’s Task Force on Internet and Telecommunication, and Christoph Steck, co-chair of ICC”s Task Force on Internet and Communications.

Gathering 34 business experts representing companies and organizations leading the International Chamber of Commerce’s (ICC) policy work on information and communication technologies (ICTs), the biannual meeting of the ICC Commission on the Digital Economy identified next steps on priority topics for global business including Internet governance, privacy and cyber-security, and trade facilitation – and linking these specific priorities to overall strategic ICC messages. The event took place at ICC global headquarters in Paris on September 30 and October 1.

In remarks to the commission, ICC Secretary General John Danilovich said ICC plays a leadership role on behalf of world business in the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) through the ICC Business Action to Support the Information Society (BASIS).

“While attending the last IGF in Turkey, I was able to see first-hand some of the issues carried by this commission and how, through your work and that of the BASIS initiative, ICC is able to lead global business engagement in the forum,” he said.

In the context of a strategic discussion on Internet governance, Alhadeff and Eric Loeb, chair of the commission’s Task Force on Internet and Telecommunications and chair of USCIB’s ICT Committee, suggested that the preparation of the commission’s Global Action Plan – a compilation of business positions on digital economy policies – should strive to highlight the relevance of these issues to all sectors, as well as their relevance to the work of other ICC commissions and top-line business messages.

Staff contact: Barbara Wanner

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IOE European Social Charter Must Support Job Creation

Europe from spaceAdopted in 1961, the European Social Charter is an EU treaty that guarantees social and economic human rights, such as the rights to fair remuneration and safe working conditions.

Speaking at the High-Level Conference on the European Social Charter in Turin, Italy on October 17, the International Organization of Employers (IOE) Vice President for Europe, Renate Hornung-Draus said that the European Social Charter will only gain relevance if it supports reforms for job creation and sustainable social security systems. She warned that the way in which the supervisory bodies of the Council of Europe interpreted the principles of the European Social Charter was undermining its relevance for Member States.

Since 1990 many new member States have joined the Council of Europe. They have different economic and social challenges than the founding members. The interpretation of the European Social Charter by its Supervisory bodies has to be more responsive to their specific situation.

Hornung-Draus said: “The Social Charter will achieve its goal of promoting economic and social development only if its principles are implemented in a way that respect the variety of situations of Member States, and if they are conducive to the structural reforms and fiscal consolidation required by the changing economic and social context.”

Globalization, technological changes require open, dynamic and flexible labor markets and a commitment to life-long learning. In some European countries, where labor market regulation has not adapted to this changing context, very high unemployment, and especially youth unemployment, can only be properly addressed with profound structural labor market reforms.

In addition, social spending in some countries European countries has reached levels that overwhelm economic resources, leading to high public debt. Public debt crowds out investment, because social security systems in those countries become unsustainable in light of changing demographics. Fiscal consolidation in these countries is urgently required, not only to restore the credibility of financial markets and attract investment, but also as an act of social justice towards the young generation.

Staff contact: Ariel Meyerstein

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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

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Customs Agencies and Business Community Join Forces on Trade Facilitation

Shipping-ContainersIn the spirit of the strategic partnership between the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and the World Customs Organization (WCO), WCO Secretary General Kunio Mikuriya welcomed the ICC Commission on Customs and Trade Facilitation to WCO headquarters in Brussels for its fall 2014 meeting.

The meeting took place on October 16 and 17, and it gathered 50 participants from 20 countries to discuss ICC’s work on trade facilitation. Participants included large multinational companies such as Fedex, Diageo and Samsung, as well as chambers of commerce and business associations representing a large number of small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

Opening the meeting, Norman Schenk, vice president of global customs policy and public affairs at UPS and chair of the ICC Commission on Customs and Trade Facilitation, emphasized the importance of Customs-Business partnerships. Illustrating the transparent and constructive continuous dialogue between ICC and the WCO, several representatives and experts of the WCO secretariat, including WCO Deputy Director Compliance and Facilitation Heike Barczyk, participated in the commission’s deliberations on reducing barriers to cross-border trade.

Guest speaker Mikuriya recognized ICC as the longest standing partner of the WCO in the context of customs-business cooperation. He encouraged ICC to share its insight in emerging new business models and to provide advice on how border procedures should be improved to support a true business environment.

“Borders divide but customs connect,” he said. Pointing out the increasing significance of global value chains and e-commerce, ICC commission members emphasized the importance of taking into account the experiences of SMEs’ while addressing bottlenecks hampering cross-border trade. Improved border and customs measures could trigger a 60 to 80 percent increase in cross-border SME sales in some economies, according to research. Bringing SMEs into trusted trader programs and allowing them to have a voice will be key to moving forward

Addressing the impasse on ratification of the World Trade Organization (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA), Mikurya said: “Regardless of what happens with the TFA, in the short term we will push for trade facilitation.”

It is noted that while the TFA is a WTO agreement, 85 percent of the articles will have to be implemented by border agencies and the WCO Mercator Program offers a practical framework to ensure consistent implementation. While WTO negotiators are trying to address the political bottlenecks in Geneva, Customs agencies and the business community remain natural allies in enhancing trade facilitation.

“We want to stress the importance of moving forward on trade facilitation regardless of what happens at the World Trade Organization with the TFA,” said Kristin Isabelli, USCIB’s director for customs and trade facilitation. “The WCO will be moving the ball forward on trade facilitation, and we’ll be ready to support them any way we can.”

ICC launched an intense advocacy campaign to mobilize its global business network to push for ratification of the TFA signed in Bali in December 2013. Highlighting the diversity of the members of the commission – both geographically and in ideas and views – the commission chair reconfirmed ICC’s support to work together with customs around the globe to drive economic growth. “ICC can help connect the dots in bringing the different groups together: customs, trade and other government agencies,” said Schenk.

Staff contact: Kristin Isabelli

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ILO Americas Delegates Agree to ProBusiness Lima Declaration

The informal economy – unregulated, untaxed and often dangerous – is a barrier to development and economic growth. At this year’s 18th International Labor Organization Americas Regional Meeting in Lima, Peru (October 13 to 16), nearly 500 governments, worker and employer delegates agreed to the Lima Declaration, a series of measures to promote the fight against informality and inequality in the region.

They agreed on a package of labor and economic that promote social inclusion, decent work and productive employment as well as an enabling environment for sustainable enterprises.

In particular, the Lima Declaration urges governments to adopt the following ILO-supported policies over the next four years and beyond:

  1. Policies that promote an enabling environment for the creation and development of enterprises, in accordance with the resolution concerning the promotion of sustainable enterprises adopted by the International Labor Conference in 2007, including the principles of sustainable enterprises, free enterprise and respect for the right to private property
  2. Policies to diversify production based on industrial transformation towards products with higher value added, and
  3. Regional integration policies to promote wider trade markets and investment, with an emphasis on infrastructure, to increase the region’s competitiveness

With the presence of Jørgen Rønnest, the International Organization of Employers (IOE) vice president, Alberto Echavarría, employer vice president of the regional meeting,; Ronnie Goldberg, IOE vice president for North America and the Caribbean and USCIB senior counsel and Alexander Furlan, IOE vice president for Latin America, the Employers’ Group emphasized that most countries in the Americas should take decisive action through structural reforms to boost economic growth.

Governments should focus their efforts on structural reforms that lead to enhanced and sustained growth and productivity, that is: reforms to reduce the labor productivity gap that exists between the majority of Latin American countries and developed economies. The Employers Group also asked governments to undertake reforms that diversify production structures into sustainable and intensive knowledge- and technology-based activities that generate added value and quality jobs. Investments in infrastructure are also crucial for economic growth.

In the closing ceremony Juan Mailhos, employer delegate from Uruguay and a member of the ILO Governing Body, highlighted the group’s commitment to an ILO that has adapted to the challenges of the 21st century.

Staff contact: Ronnie Goldberg

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October 23, 2014

IOE: European Social Charter Must Support Job Creation

Adopted in 1961, the European Social Charter is an EU treaty that guarantees social and economic human rights, such as the rights to fair remuneration and safe working conditions.

Speaking at the High-Level Conference on the European Social Charter in Turin, Italy on October 17, the International Organization of Employers (IOE) Vice President for Europe, Renate Hornung-Draus said that the European Social Charter will only gain relevance if it supports reforms for job creation and sustainable social security systems. She warned that the way in which the supervisory bodies of the Council of Europe interpreted the principles of the European Social Charter was undermining its relevance for Member States.

Since 1990 many new member States have joined the Council of Europe. They have different economic and social challenges than the founding members. The interpretation of the European Social Charter by its Supervisory bodies has to be more responsive to their specific situation.

Hornung-Draus said: “The Social Charter will achieve its goal of promoting economic and social development only if its principles are implemented in a way that respect the variety of situations of Member States, and if they are conducive to the structural reforms and fiscal consolidation required by the changing economic and social context.”

Globalization, technological changes require open, dynamic and flexible labor markets and a commitment to life-long learning. In some European countries, where labor market regulation has not adapted to this changing context, very high unemployment, and especially youth unemployment, can only be properly addressed with profound structural labor market reforms.

In addition, social spending in some countries European countries has reached levels that overwhelm economic resources, leading to high public debt. Public debt crowds out investment, because social security systems in those countries become unsustainable in light of changing demographics. Fiscal consolidation in these countries is urgently required, not only to restore the credibility of financial markets and attract investment, but also as an act of social justice towards the young generation.

Staff contact: Ariel Meyerstein

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Conference to Shed New Light on 21st Century Trade Policy Challenges

U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman will deliver keynote remarks at the October 30 conference, “Exploring New Approaches to Trade, Investment and Jobs: Insight and Impact for Business from the OECD.”
U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman at the Oct. 30 conference: “Exploring New Approaches to Trade, Investment and Jobs: Insight and Impact for Business from the OECD.”

Washington, D.C., October 16, 2014 – How are cross-border trade and investment changing in an era of ever-more sophisticated global value chains? What new policies and agreements are needed to ensure that trade and investment can generate high-quality jobs and other benefits to society? And how can new research from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) shed light on these changes and provide insight for policy makers?

These will be among the central questions addressed at a timely, high-level conference, “Exploring New Approaches to Trade, Investment and Jobs: Insight and Impact for Business from the OECD,” to be held October 30 at the St. Regis Hotel in Washington, D.C. Organized by the USCIB Foundation (the educational arm of the United States Council for International Business), the OECD and BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, the conference will highlight the OECD’s innovative work in the areas of trade and investment, and address how this work impacts policy, job creation and trade negotiations around the world.

“It’s clear that a 21st-century trade policy must address a host of new concerns beyond ‘old-school’ issues like tariffs and quotas,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson. “While those types of trade barriers still exist, their importance is fast being eclipsed by the growth of global value chains, barriers to trade in services, new investment agreements, trade facilitation, and the relationship between regional and multilateral trade negotiations.”

The event will bring together experts from the OECD, U.S. and foreign governments, and business to assess the issues and discuss solutions. Participants will draw upon the innovative research and policy discussions coming from the OECD – including its Services Trade Restrictiveness Index, OECD-WTO efforts to measure trade in value-added, and studies on the importance of global value chains.

Keynote remarks at the conference will be delivered by U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman. Other speakers include:

  • Cathy Novelli, under secretary for economic growth, energy and the environment, U.S. Department of State
  • Mari Kiviniemi, deputy secretary general, OECD, former prime minister of Finland
  • Yonov Frederick Agah, deputy director general, World Trade Organization
  • Ambassador Susan Schwab, strategic advisor, Mayer Brown, former U.S. trade representative
  • Harold McGraw III, chairman of McGraw Hill Financial [now S&P Global], chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), chairman of USCIB
  • Ken Ash, director, Trade and Agriculture Directorate, OECD
  • The Honorable James Bacchus, chair of Greenberg Traurig’s global practice, former chairman  of the WTO Appellate Body, and chairman of the ICC Commission on Trade and Investment Policy
  • Phil O’Reilly, CEO of Business New Zealand, chairman of BIAC.

More information about the conference is available here.

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 at www.uscib.org.

ContactJonathan Huneke, USCIB

+1 212.703.5043, jhuneke@uscib.org

World Investment Forum Looks at Leveraging FDI to Support Sustainable Development

L-R Peter Robinson (USCIB) and Mukhisa Kituyi (UNCTAD)
L-R Peter Robinson (USCIB) and Mukhisa Kituyi (UNCTAD)

USCIB and the International Chamber of Commerce brought a pro-business, pro-investment perspective to the three-day World Investment Forum, which took place this week in Geneva.

Organized by the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the biennial forum gathers heads of state, global CEOs and civil society leaders for dialogues on the world’s emerging investment-related challenges. This year’s event had a special focus on leveraging investment to support the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

On Tuesday, the forum’s first day, ICC leaders and Mukhisa Kituyi, the UNCTAD secretary general, co-chaired the 11th meeting of the Investment Advisory Council. During the open discussion, Shaun Donnelly, USCIB’s vice president for investment and financial services, made a strong pitch for bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements, which was echoed by a range of business and government representatives. ICC and USCIB Chairman Terry McGraw and ICC Secretary General John Danilovich spoke at the forum’s opening plenary, where they were joined by senior government officials.

Also on Tuesday, McGraw, Danilovich and USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson met with Roberto Azevedo, the director general of the World Trade Organization, to discuss ways to restart the stalled Trade Facilitation Agreement. At the meeting Robinson thanked Azevedo for his leadership and said he looked forward to honoring him at USCIB’s annual award dinner in Washington, DC on November 19.

Mobilizing the Private Sector

On the forum’s second day, Robinson delivered plenary remarks, in which he discussed the four key elements that would crystallize private-sector support for sustainable development: good governance, economic growth, innovation and infrastructure. He noted that governments and businesses must work together to facilitate initial investments in least developing countries that lack basic infrastructure. Initial infrastructure funding can then help leverage further investments, leading to a “virtuous cycle.”  He also made the case for investment protection.

“Let’s continue the dialogue and partnership to harness investment as a key driver of economic, sustainable and inclusive development,” Robinson concluded. “And work together to create the virtuous investment circle, particularly in those countries that need it the most.”

Given the forum’s focus on investment for the SDGs, Robinson also emphasized that “taken together, open international trade and investment are important inter-related fundamentals and key drivers for engaging the private sector in achieving global economic growth that is inclusive, and environmentally and socially sustainable.”

On Thursday Robinson and Donnelly took part in key panel discussions on the role of bilateral and multilateral investment agreements and on investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), where they spent over four hours defending investment agreements and ISDS in a morning-long Investment Agreement session, the centerpiece session during the final day of UNCTAD’s World Investment Forum.

With over 50 speakers limited to three-minute interventions, government and NGO representatives were often critical of investment agreements and ISDS in particular, whereas business voices were scarce. Robinson explained the overall importance of international investment agreements, while Shaun tackled the sensitive ISDS issue, emphasizing the need for effective enforcement measures to truly incentivize and protect FDI flows that are vital for economic growth, development and job creation. Donnely also highlighted USCIB’s strong opposition to any sectoral carve-outs from ISDS protections.

Although too many government participants opposed ISDS, Michael Tracton, director of the investment office at the U.S. Department of State, voiced support for strong investment agreements and ISDS, citing the high standards and balance of the USG’s Bilateral Investment Treaty and free trade agreement investment chapters.

Unfortunately, opposition to ISDS from NGOs has shown no signs of letting up. “USCIB will continue to confront these pressures internationally at forums like UNCTAD and in free trade agreement negotiations, voicing our strong support for common-sense, pro-business investment policies,” Donnelly said. “We will continue to leverage our international networks BIAC and ICC to mobilize international business support for these policies.”

Staff contact: Shaun Donnelly and Eva Hampl

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Leveraging Partnerships to Combat Malnutrition

4861_image002As part of a series of public discussions leading up to the Second International Conference on Nutrition (ICN2), the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization hosted a dialogue on October 14 in Rome about the critical role public-private partnerships in fighting malnutrition. The well-attended event convened representatives from member states, the private sector and civil society to raise awareness of global nutrition issues and catalyze support for partnerships. Dr. Nancy Stetson, special representative for global food security at the U.S. Department of State, noted that partnerships are necessary to reduce global hunger and malnutrition.

Louise Kantrow, ICC’s permanent representative to the UN, made a strong case for engaging the private sector as a full partner in deciding strategies for addressing malnutrition, since business is involved throughout the entire agriculture supply chain, from seeds to food processing to all the products farmers need to grow and distribute food.

“The UN has recognized that the problems confronting the global community now know no boundaries and all actors in society must come to the table and provide inputs,” said Kantrow, who also stressed the importance of trade and investment in the agriculture industry as it relates to economic development, empowering women, and innovation as areas where the private sector can contribute to the fight against malnutrition.

USCIB will attend ICN2 in November at the FAO’s headquarters in Rome.

Read the event summary on the FAO’s website.

Staff contacts: Louise Kantrow and Helen Medina

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USCIB Observes Nutrition Conference Negotiations

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L-R: Katy Lee (Private Sector Mechanism), Ann Steensland (Global Harvest Initiative), Nico Belzen (International Dairy Federation), and Helen Medina (USCIB)

The United Nations and World Health Organization will convene the Second International Conference on Nutrition (ICN2) next month to address the persistently high twin threats of hunger and malnutrition around the world.

In the lead-up to ICN2, member states met in Rome at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) from October 10 to 12 to negotiate the final outcome documents for ICN2 – the political declaration and the framework for action. The meeting was a continuation of negotiations in Geneva last September where member states made progress finalizing the political declaration.

The ICN2 outcome documents will provide key priorities and technical assistance to governments and other stakeholders for improving people’s nutrition.

During the Rome meeting, USCIB partnered with the Global Harvest Initiative to represent U.S. business interests at the negotiations. USCIB’s Helen Medina, senior director for product policy and innovation, attended the meeting. Watch her summarize the meeting’s key takeaways for business.

Prior to the negotiations, private sector representatives were concerned with outstanding issues in the political declaration for ICN2. The document contained some language on “culturally acceptable food” that might have produced negative trade implications. Business believes that the document should focus on nutrition and leave discussions about trade policy to the World Trade Organization. Private sector representatives sought to eliminate language that could create potential trade barriers.

Business also paid attention to other areas of concern in the Framework for Action, including policies that deal with food pricing incentives, marketing and labeling regulations, language the puts a pejorative spin on processed food, and policies that are not inclusive of the entire agriculture industry.

“There are some good winds for the private sector,” Medina said at the end of the meeting. Negotiators deleted language in the political declaration that would have had a negative impact on trade. However issues remain with the Framework for Action, which recommends policies in international trade and investment that would be problematic for business. The U.S. government has reserved its position on the framework’s paragraphs about recommended trade and investment action, and USCIB is planning a follow-up meeting with USG to learn about any remaining issues with the framework before ICN2.

ICN2 will take place in Rome from November 19 to 21.

Staff contact: Helen Medina

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