USCIB Pushes Back Against Efforts to Permit Capital Controls Under FTAs

USCIB and other industry groups have written to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to argue against calls by some academics to change capital control rules in U.S. trade and investment agreements.  Presently, U.S. free trade agreements and bilateral investment treaties generally preclude the imposition of capital controls, except in extraordinary circumstances.  But some have argued that broader use of such measures may be needed in light of the 2008 financial crisis.

In the letter, the business groups argued that U.S. investment treaties and trade agreements already permit governments to take necessary action, including capital controls, to ensure the safety and soundness of their financial systems.  “That flexibility is more than sufficient to allow countries to take necessary actions to deal with a financial crisis,” the letter stated.

“Moreover, the critics advocating these changes inaccurately characterize the United States as some sort of outlier in including these rules in their trade agreements and BITs.  In fact, most Western European, Canadian and Japanese investment treaties (which are far more numerous than U.S. agreements) have long included similar provisions requiring the free flow of capital.  Most of those agreements are not as flexible as U.S. trade agreements and BITs because they do not contain the prudential flexibility found in U.S. agreements.”

According to USCIB Vice President Stephen Canner, the industry letter is timely in light of next week’s upcoming round of talks under the Trans-Pacific Partnership initiative.

Staff contact: Stephen Canner

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EU Audit Policy Proposals Stir Concern

In a move that will have a broad impact on companies operating globally, the European Commission recently published a Green Paper on “Audit Policy: Lessons from the Crisis,” launching a consultation process which could lead to new European legislation on statutory audit and related matters in 2011-2012.  The Commission explicitly stated its intention to assume international leadership on these matters in the context of the G20.

The Commission’s proposals, if enacted into law, would affect not only European-based companies, but also U.S. companies with investments in Europe.  U.S. subsidiaries subject to statutory audit requirements in Europe would be directly affected, and US parent companies would be affected by the indirect impacts on the audit of consolidated financial statements.

The Green Paper is important because it suggests, among other things, audit policy changes and related actions that could:

  • Disenfranchise audit committees of the board and shareholders with respect to the appointment, oversight and remuneration of external auditors and the provision of non-audit services;
  • Impose new costs and increased audit complexity on companies by requiring mandatory rotation of audit firms and/or mandatory retendering of the audit on a fixed schedule;
  • Impose new corporate reporting, communication and audit requirements in areas such as social and environmental responsibility;
  • Expand communications between the auditor and the audit committee of the Board, as well as external stakeholders;
  • Address issues of competition and choice in the audit market; and
  • Substitute regulation for management and market-based decision-making.

This month, USCIB submitted comments on the Green Paper.  We have also addressed some of these issues through our work on corporate governance, capital markets and investment in BIAC and ICC.  While new legislation may be inevitable, it is important that business work at these early stages in the EU’s process to help assure that the outcome is cost-effective, protects shareholder rights, preserves audit quality, and does not unduly burden international companies.

Staff contacts: Justine Bareford-Badimon and Stephen Canner

USCIB comments on the EU Green Paper on Audit Policy

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Whither the Alien Tort Statute

4020_image001USCIB Senior Advisor Timothy Deal participated in a panel discussion on November 10 organized by the DC Bar Association in Washington on “Whither the Alien Tort Statute?”

The ATS, adopted in 1789, gives federal courts civil jurisdiction over non-U.S. citizens for acts in violation of “the law of nations” or a U.S. treaty, such as piracy or attacks on ambassadors.  Since 1980, a number of suits brought by foreign plaintiffs against foreign governments and multinational corporations have stretched the interpretation of the statute and the meaning of “the law of nations” to include human rights abuses and anti-union violence, among other things.

The meeting followed a recent ruling by a U.S. Second Circuit panel in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum that the ATS gives U.S. courts jurisdictions over alleged violations of international law by individuals, but not by corporations.  Joining Mr. Deal on the panel were: John Bellinger, a partner at Arnold & Porter and the former State Department legal advisor; Terry Collingsworth, a partner at Conrad & Scherer; and Professor Ralph Steinhardt of the George Washington University Law Center.  Professor Edward Swaine, also from the GWU Law Center, moderated the discussion.

In his prepared remarks, Mr. Deal outlined continued U.S. business community concerns over the proliferation of ATS lawsuits, which principally target U.S. multinationals.  According to Mr. Deal, a major problem with the legislation is that global companies often “find themselves entangled in litigation brought by non-U.S. plaintiffs alleging wrongs committed outside the U.S., not by companies, but by the plaintiffs’ own government or agents of those governments, over which they have no control.”  He noted that ATS suits increase the risk, uncertainty, and cost of overseas operations and investments.  They can also “expose American companies to costly and protracted smear campaigns.”

While the panelists debated the pros and cons of ATS litigation from varying points of view, all agreed that the Second Circuit’s decision could ultimately reach the U.S. Supreme Court, given the importance of the issues addressed and differing views among lower courts throughout the nation about the appropriateness of ATS lawsuits against corporations.

To read Mr. Deal’s remarks in full, click here.

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New Study Demonstrates Trades Positive Impact on US Jobs

The Business Roundtable has released an update of a study from Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC, entitled “Trade and American Jobs.”  Coupled with a recently revised study published by USCIB and the Roundtable on the positive net employment and other economic effects of outbound investment by U.S. firms, this newly revised report helps convincingly demonstrate how international economic engagement provides major benefits for the U.S. economy.

The BRT study’s major findings are:

  • U.S. trade continues to expand, and with it, domestic employment.  More than 38 million U.S. jobs depend on trade.  That means that more than one in every five jobs is linked to exports and/or imports of goods and services.
  • Service-sector jobs figure prominently among trade-dependent jobs in the United States.  In addition, contrary to popular belief, the net impact of trade on the overall number of U.S. manufacturing jobs is positive.
  • Trade-dependent jobs have grown at a faster pace than U.S. employment as a whole.

Click here to download the study.

Staff contact: Stephen Canner

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Business Presses for Reform of Agricultural Exports and Travel With Cuba

Havana waterfront: Cubans are hungry for American agricultural products, but our government makes it difficult for farmers to export to the island.
Havana waterfront: Cubans are hungry for American agricultural products, but our government makes it difficult for farmers to export to the island.

USCIB has joined other U.S. business associations and the agricultural and agribusiness community in backing legislation in the House of Representatives to ease certain restrictions on agricultural trade with Cuba and travel to that country.

On April 12, 2010, we expressed our strong support for H.R. 874, which would remove restrictions on the travel of U.S. citizens to Cuba.  The letter notes that current policies toward Cuba, including the travel ban, have not achieved their objectives and that the U.S. continues to lose influence in that country by isolating our citizens from traveling their as “Ambassadors of Freedom.”  We also highlight the anomaly that U.S. citizens can travel to North Korea and Iran, but not to Cuba.

On April 28, 2010, USCIB joined a larger group of organizations, most of which represent the U.S. agricultural community, in calling for passage of H.R. 4645, the Travel Restriction Reform and Export Enhancement Act.

The bill has three provisions:

  • It would reverse a Treasury Department interpretation of the term “payment of cash in advance” for agricultural sales to Cuba, which has a strong negative impact on U.S. exports.
  • It would eliminate a costly and discriminatory requirement that payments to U.S. agricultural exporters must pass through banks in third countries.
  • And it would lift restrictions on U.S. citizens traveling to Cuba.

USCIB has long believed that U.S. policy toward Cuba is antiquated, ineffectual and self-defeating, and sees these bills as a modest step forward in easing existing restrictions on agricultural trade and travel.

Staff contact: Timothy Deal

April 12 business letter on H.R. 874 to allow travel between the United States and Cuba

April 28 letter on H.R. 4645, Travel Restriction Reform and Export Enhancement Act

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USCIB Applauds House Passage of Free Trade Agreement With Peru

peruWashington, D.C., November 8, 2007 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents America’s top global companies, applauded passage today of the U.S.-Peru Free Trade Agreement by the U.S. House of Representatives.

“This agreement will provide improved market access for U.S. manufactured goods, offer new opportunities to the services sector, including financial services providers, and open up Peru’s market to American agricultural exports,” stated USCIB President Peter M. Robinson.

Mr. Robinson also noted that the Peru agreement would give greater security and predictability to U.S. investors operating in that country.  “Especially important in that regard is the strong investor-to-state dispute-settlement mechanism in the agreement, which means that investors will have a neutral forum for adjudication of any disputes,” he said.

“We are hopeful that the U.S. Senate will now move promptly to approve the agreement, which will do much to cement relations with one of our best neighbors in the hemisphere,” stated Mr. Robinson.  He also said USCIB members hoped it would provide a spur to additional market-opening trade agreements at the bilateral and multilateral levels.

USCIB promotes an open system of global commerce in which business can flourish and contribute to economic growth, human welfare and protection of the environment.  Based in New York, its membership includes more than 300 U.S. companies, professional service firms and associations whose combined annual revenues exceed $3.5 trillion.  As American affiliate of the leading international business and employers organizations, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide and works to facilitate international trade.

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

U.S. Trade Representative’s office fact sheet on the U.S.-Peru FTA