Business at OECD (BIAC) is looking forward to welcoming senior representatives from its global membership to its 2016 Business Day on December 8 at the OECD Conference Center in Paris. Business Day connects business leaders with key OECD representatives, and this year’s topic will focus on the OECD Contributions to the G20 and B20, addressing how OECD work impacts the economy and business, and how private sector can get engaged in this important work.
Trade and Investment Archives
US Small Business Speaks Up for Global Trade
International trade has gotten a bad rap in the U.S. electoral campaign and elsewhere around the world. Pushing back against the misconceptions around global trade is a key focus of the #TradeMatters campaign from the International Chamber of Commerce. A key feature of the campaign are testimonials from entrepreneurs and small business owners around the world explaining why trade matters to them, and how governments could make cross-border trade easier for small business.
World Technology Corporation, a New York-based exporter of environmentally friendly technologies, was recently featured in the campaign. Peter Tierney, the company’s managing director, said in his contribution to the campaign: “Exporting has helped our company stabilize its sales and provided a financial cushion during the last recession. People say what we do – exporting – is risky. We believe that not exporting in today’s global economy is a much riskier position to take.”
You can view World Technology’s posting on the ICC website here.
Talking Responsibly About Trade and Investment

The recently launched OECD interim Economic Outlook reveals global GDP growth is projected to slow marginally to 2.9 percent in 2016, and acknowledges trade as an important driver of productivity growth — enhancing competitiveness, enabling greater specialization and facilitating knowledge transfer. Against this background, Bernhard Welschke, secretary general of Business at OECD, called on the OECD and member governments to communicate the benefits of trade more responsibly.
Read Welschke’s posting in the OECD Insights blog.
U.S. Embassy in Ethiopia Honored for Commercial Diplomacy

The U.S. Departments of State and Commerce have for the first time ever recognized one overseas commercial diplomacy team whose effective cooperation has advanced U.S. commercial and economic objectives. The award was presented jointly in a ceremony at the State Department on September 29 by Commerce Department Assistant Secretary Arun Kumar and State Department Assistant Secretary Charles Rivkin to a team from the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The Benjamin Joy Award was created to highlight and promote inter-agency collaboration and honor commercial diplomacy excellence. The winning team, led by former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia Patricia M. Haslach, includes Deputy Chief of Mission Peter H. Vrooman, Senior Foreign Commercial Service Officer Tanya Cole, Trade and Investment Promotion Officer Gaia Self, Commercial Specialist Tewodros Tefera, and Advocacy Center Regional Manager Nnaji Campbell. The embassy’s leadership and innovation advanced U.S. business interests in Ethiopia and created a model for U.S. missions to support fair competition and increase U.S. exports in Africa.
USCIB Vice President Shaun Donnelly, a retired U.S. ambassador who has also worked recently with Commerce and State on commercial diplomacy policy under the auspices of the American Academy of Diplomacy, represented USCIB at the awards ceremony. Several leading USCIB member companies also attended.
The winner was selected from 43 nominations from U.S. embassies and consulates around the world. The award’s namesake, Benjamin Joy, was an early exemplar of U.S. commercial and economic diplomacy, appointed in 1792 by President George Washington as the first American consul and commercial agent to India. Today, there are more than 200 diplomatic outposts helping to strengthen America’s economic reach and positive economic impact.
More details on the award are available in the State Department press release and in the remarks at the ceremony by Assistant Secretary Rivkin.
New Survey Finds Worsening Global Shortage of Trade Finance
Business executives have identified a sharp decrease in the availability of financing for cross-border trade, according to the latest annual survey of global trade finance from the International Chamber of Commerce. According to the survey — which received 357 responses from 109 countries worldwide — 61 percent of respondents reported a global shortage of trade finance . Only 52 percent of respondents reported an increase in trade finance activity, compared to 63 percent in 2015 and 80 percent in 2012. Furthermore, the perceived shortfall came predominantly from regional and global banks — 78 percent and 56 percent respectively, compared to 41 percent of national banks.
ICC Secretary General John Danilovich said: “We must emphasize the importance of trade finance. It is often forgotten – trade finance has dropped off the international agenda. We need to do more to communicate its central importance to the global economy.”
Read more and download the survey on the ICC website.
How and Why to Rethink Data Fow Restrictions
Taking part in discussions on the latest developments in world trade at the World Trade Organization’s Public Forum in Geneva this week, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has signaled increasing business concern regarding countries that impose restrictions on cross-border data flows without considering the impact on their respective economies and small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that make up 95 percent of enterprises globally.
In a new set of recommendations issued today at the Forum, ICC calls on policymakers to consider the detrimental effects to GDP growth from applying blanket restrictions and highlights the importance of creating trusted environments to better enable use of information and communication technologies (ICTs), and related data flows, on which companies of all sizes rely.
The flow of digital information is a key driver of economic development and inclusive growth by raising productivity, increasing efficiency, broadening participation in and facilitating access to markets not least for developing-economy businesses.
Over the last 10 years data flows are estimated to have raised world GDP by at least 10% and today exert a larger impact on GDP growth than trade in goods.
“The Internet and Internet-enabled services, which rely on cross-border data flows, are vital for companies across all sectors of the economy and are particularly critical for small- and medium-sized enterprises,” the ICC paper says. “Access to digital products and services, such as cloud applications, provides SMEs with cutting edge services at competitive prices, enabling them to participate in global supply chains and directly access customers in foreign markets in ways previously only feasible for larger companies.”
To help policymakers address negative implications for growth from blanket restrictions to data flows, the new ICC primer outlines seven steps that governments can take to ensure citizens and companies realize the full potential of the Internet as a platform for innovation and economic growth.
The recommendations are:
Build trust
This can be done by ensuring that users have appropriate control and practical mechanisms with regard to how personal data is used, and the companies to which they entrust their data should adopt recognised and applicable best practice to ensure that the data is appropriately secured as technology and services evolve.
Promote the establishment of a new trade principle
This should include the underlying objective of allowing the flow, storage, and handling of all types of data across borders, subject to privacy and security laws and other laws affecting data flow covered under GATS article XIV.
Be non-discriminatory
Certain compelling public policy issues – including privacy and security – are recognised as possible exceptions and may form a legitimate basis for governments to place some limits on data flows if they are implemented in a manner that is non-discriminatory, is not arbitrary, is least trade restrictive, and not otherwise a disguised restriction on trade.
Include relevant players and show consistency
Any limits on cross-border data flows for privacy and security objectives should be consistent with GATS obligations, and include all relevant players and are equally applied.
Promote coherence
This can be done through national rules and regulations that affect the movement of goods, services, and information across borders.
Support the Internet’s enabling role
Especially for SMEs to grow and participate in global trade.
Ensure any regulatory measures which limit data flows are necessary to accomplish the recognised and compelling public policy objective
Measures should be the least trade restrictive policy alternative needed to effectively address the issue, not be arbitrary or discriminatory, and not be disguised restrictions on trade in services.
Read Trade in the digital economy: A primer on global data flows for policymakers
Transatlantic Trade Talks Lack European Leadership
Originally published in the Wall Street Journal on September 20
Many details of TTIP still need to be negotiated. But what’s missing is a sign of seriousness from the EU.
By PETER ROBINSON and THOMAS NILES
Sept. 20, 2016 3:05 p.m. ET
Readers following the progress of negotiations over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership would be forgiven for thinking that a deal is now impossible. Between the Brexit vote, antitrade rhetoric on the U.S. presidential campaign trail and stern opposition by assorted European political leaders, TTIP appears to lack the kind of serious support needed to succeed.
The commercial and diplomatic logic behind TTIP remain as compelling as ever. An agreement would further open each side’s market to mutual trade, which currently amounts to more than $1 trillion annually. It would strengthen rules-based investment in what is already the world’s largest relationship for foreign direct investment. And it would improve market access for trade in services while tackling costly nontariff barriers, including regulatory obstacles.
Done right, the effort to roll back the impediments to trade and investment between the U.S. and the European Union could be a huge boost to both economies. Business leaders on both sides of the Atlantic are united in support of an ambitious agreement.
But progress in the 4-year-old talks has come more slowly than the governments or the business communities had hoped. TTIP certainly faces headwinds in the U.S., where the two major candidates in this presidential election have turned their backs on a half century of bipartisan trade policy and American global engagement. Instead, they pander to antitrade, isolationist, protectionist forces.
But the greatest challenge to TTIP right now comes from Europe, in the form of naked antitrade and anti-American prejudices from some European leaders.
Over the past couple of years, the European Parliament has consistently belittled American policies and positions, issuing unhelpful “red-line” declarations, for example, that no single EU policy or regulation could possibly be modified under a TTIP agreement, or that the U.S. would have to adopt wholesale the EU’s regulatory regime.
Particularly disappointing have been a series of high-level political statements in recent weeks from senior Austrian, French and German officials calling for a stop to TTIP negotiations because of American intransigence. These complaints are unfounded. In fact, the U.S. has been quite forthcoming about eliminating tariffs on industrial goods and agriculture, as well as removing barriers to trade in services and in government procurement. The EU has declared far more areas of negotiation to be off limits.
While Cecilia Malmström, the EU’s trade commissioner, has, to her credit, defended TTIP, the overall response from the European political leadership has been disappointing. Many prominent EU leaders have remained silent. And while Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel has shown consistency and courage with a strong defense of TTIP, too many other European leaders haven’t matched her commitment or clarity.
Like all real-world negotiations, getting to agreement on TTIP will require tough decisions and compromise. American business groups are joining with other stakeholders in pushing their government to achieve an ambitious,
comprehensive, high-standard TTIP agreement. They have consistently opposed, for instance, the U.S. government’s insistence that the regulation of financial services be excluded from TTIP.
But the real question isn’t what detailed provisions will be included in a TTIP agreement. Rather, it’s whether the EU is serious about the negotiations at all. Will European leaders simply use TTIP to mollify their own critics at home? If the EU is serious about cementing its member economies more closely to each other, then European leaders need to stand up in support of a deal, and they need to do so now. Meanwhile, the European Commission should move quickly to schedule multiple negotiating rounds with the U.S. before the end of the year.
The two sides have agreed to continue talking, with the next round of TTIP negotiations set for early October. Hopefully this will result in actual progress and not additional excuses for delay. Both the U.S. and EU need to show the courage, vision and commitment to the transatlantic relationship and to push forward for the kind of balanced, ambitious, high-standard TTIP that both economies need.
Mr. Robinson is president and CEO of the United States Council for International Business. Mr. Niles, the council’s past president, is a retired U.S. diplomat who served as ambassador to the European Union.
Four Ways to Boost Global Trade
This year’s G20 Leaders Summit concluded last week in Hangzhou, China. The event took place against a backdrop of sluggish GDP growth and growing concerns about stagnating living standards – leading G20 leaders to place a heavy emphasis on global trade as an engine of inclusive growth and job creation in their annual communiqué. The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and USCIB commended the G20’s focus on strengthening the global trading system, but turning words into action has not always been a strong point for the G20 when it comes to trade.
Here are four ways we think the G20 can take meaningful action in the coming months to revitalise world trade as a driver of growth, opportunity and jobs:
1. Ratify the WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement
Four G20 countries are yet to ratify the World Trade Organisation’s landmark Trade Facilitation Agreement forged in 2013. ICC has called for the deal to be ratified and implemented without delay to facilitate access to global markets by reducing unnecessary red tape at borders. The deal could add more than US$1 trillion to global trade flows, creating 20 million jobs in the process. G20 governments need to lead by example in ensuring this agreement is implemented without further delay.
2. Stop protectionism in its tracks
A recent WTO report cited that between mid-October 2015 and mid-May 2016, G20 economies had introduced new protectionist trade measures at the fastest pace seen since 2008.
ICC has been clear that tackling protectionism should be a first order priority for the G20 and has called on the G20 to lead by example when it comes to refraining from introducing new trade barriers.
3. Spearhead talks on digital trade
In a letter to the Financial Times published Monday, ICC Secretary General John Danilovich said that spearheading talks on a new e-commerce agreement under the auspices of the World Trade Organisation could “unleash a new era of genuinely inclusive growth”.
With studies showing the growth of small- and medium-sized enterprises using online platforms to be five times more likely to export than those in the traditional economy, ICC believes efforts to level the global trading field must start with a concerted push to address remaining barriers to Internet-enabled commerce.
4. Make the case for why trade matters
ICC couldn’t agree more with the G20’s analysis that the benefits of trade and open markets must be communicated to the wider public more effectively. But amid souring public opinion on trade in many of the world’s largest economies what is the best way to explain how and why trade matters for all?
Launched earlier this year, ICC’s #TradeMatters campaign aims to promote a balanced and evidence-based debate on the role of trade in today’s economy. One based on fact and experience rather than the myth and hearsay of political campaigns.
As part of the campaign we want to tell your trade story: what does importing or exporting mean for your business? Where do you need help to better access international markets?
Business Urges Congress to Approve Ex-Im Bank Quorum Requirement
USCIB joined 14 other business associations urging Congress to approve the Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank’s quorum requirement so that it may again review transactions over $10 million.
“While the Ex-Im Bank is back in operation and accepting new applications, it is prohibited from approving significant transactions because of the lack of a quorum on the Bank’s Board of Directors,” the business group wrote in a letter sent to Congressional leaders on September 12. “As a result, manufacturers and other exporters throughout the United States are at a significant disadvantage to global competitors who are aggressively supported by their own governments’ export credit agencies.”
The business associations argued that a fully operational bank would support millions of U.S. jobs by enabling companies to compete more successfully in the global economy. USCIB and others noted that the Bank is a vital tool in leveling the global playing field, helping American businesses secure new customers, particularly in emerging markets.
“With every passing day, businesses from the United States are missing out on new business opportunities overseas, to the detriment of local economies and American jobs. Congress can and must act swiftly,” USCIB and others wrote. “As associations representing millions of businesses throughout the United States, we urge you to move forward legislation as part of the Continuing Resolution that will enable Ex-Im to consider and act on all transactions immediately to boost America’s ability to compete globally.”
G20 Leaders Make Broad Commitments to Expand Trade, Resist Protectionist Policies
G20 leaders held their annual summit in Hangzhou, China on September 4-5. USCIB participated in the B20 Trade and Investment taskforce this past year, and we were pleased to see that the G20 leaders statement included support for several issues on trade that were part of the B20 recommendations. Some of the key aspects of the statement:
- G20 leaders committed to ratification of the Trade Facilitation Agreement by the end of 2016 and called on other WTO members to do the same.
- They committed to advancing negotiations in the WTO on issues remaining from the Doha Development Agenda and recognized the need to discuss in the WTO other issues that may be of common interest to members and of importance to today’s economy.
- Leaders reiterated their opposition to protectionism and extended their commitments to standstill and rollback of protectionist measures until the end of 2018.
- Those participating in the Environmental Goods Agreement negotiations welcomed the landing zone achieved in the EGA negotiations and reaffirmed their efforts to conclude by the end of 2016.
- Leaders endorsed the G20 Strategy for Global Trade and Growth, under which the G20 will lead by example to lower trade costs, harness trade and investment policy coherence, boost trade in services, enhance trade finance, promote e-commerce, and address trade and development.
Following the summit, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), for which USCIB serves as the American national committee, issued a statement calling on G20 leaders to match their actions to their words to push back against a rising tide of protectionism worldwide.
“In the current environment, it will be critical for the G20 governments to follow through on these and the other commitments they made in their communique,” said Rob Mulligan, USCIB’s senior vice president for policy and government affairs. “We will be working directly with the U.S. government and, through ICC, with other governments to press for effective action. We will also look to engage with German B20 leaders as Germany hosts the G20 for the coming year.”
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