USCIB Welcomes Conclusion of Trans-Pacific Partnership Negotiations

Golden_GateWashington, D.C., October 5, 2015 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) welcomed the conclusion of negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership by TPP trade ministers meeting in Atlanta, saying that a comprehensive, market-opening TPP agreement would provide a significant boost to the U.S. and world economies.

“We have urged the conclusion of an ambitious, high-standard TPP throughout the course of these talks, and we look forward to reviewing details of the agreement to see if they meet these expectations,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson.” U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and his counterparts are to be congratulated for seeing these talks through to their conclusion.”

Robinson continued: “Our future prosperity hinges on expanded trade, investment and job creation. Together, the TPP nations account for some 40 percent of global GDP, with a burgeoning middle class. And of course there is the added potential of other countries signing on now that a deal has been sealed.”

USCIB is a leading member of the U.S. Coalition for TPP, a broad-based group of U.S. companies and associations that supports the negotiation of a comprehensive, high-standard and commercially meaningful TPP agreement.

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 the International Chamber of Commerce, International Organization of Employers, and the Business & Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD — USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More at www.uscib.org.

Contact:
Jonathan Huneke, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043, jhuneke@uscib.org

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

TPP: A 21st Century Trade Agreement

by USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson

Golden_GateLike many in the U.S. business community and other key stakeholders, we at USCIB and our member companies are eagerly anticipating a successful and swift conclusion to the long-running Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations. We are encouraged by senior White House National Economic Council official Carolyn Atkinson’s suggestion last week that a successful conclusion may be imminent.

Experience dictates that the endgame of any international negotiation is always more complicated, more challenging and less predictable than foreseen. However, getting a comprehensive, ambitious, high-standard TPP agreement over the finish line is absolutely a top priority for our organization and our member companies. A strong TPP is good news for American workers, companies, communities and taxpayers.

From what I have heard about the prospective TPP agreement, I am forcefully reminded how different this agreement will be from other trade agreements that have gone before. We love NAFTA, CAFTA and the network of bilateral and plurilateral FTAs the U.S. has built over the past 30 years. They have paid tremendous dividends for our country. But it is not just for semantic reasons that the TPP is branded as a “Partnership.” rather than a “Free Trade Agreement”; the TPP goes well beyond a traditional FTA.

Continue reading the full post on Investment Policy Central.

TPP Ministers Make Progress, But Fail to Seal the Deal

Maui_sunset_resizedNegotiators from the 12 Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) parties, meeting in Maui last week, failed to hammer out the final text of a TPP agreement, although they did say they made substantial progress on a number of important issues.

According to reports, negotiators could not bridge final differences over several longstanding disagreements, including Canadian dairy market access, Japanese barriers to rice and other agricultural imports, automotive supply chain issues, and U.S. demands for strong intellectual property protections, including for a new generation of pharmaceuticals. Japanese Economy Minister Akira Amari said that trade ministers would seek to meet again before the end of August, and that only one more meeting would be necessary to finalize a TPP deal.

The U.S. Coalition for TPP, which groups a large number of leading companies and industry associations, including USCIB, issued a statement that read in part: “The TPP represents an important step toward greater cooperation and economic engagement among the 12 partners of the TPP in the Asia-Pacific region, and the United States must continue to pursue the closure of negotiations. We applaud U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and his team for their work on the TPP and we are hopeful that the progress made during this round has built the necessary momentum for the swift closure of negotiations.”

Throughout the TPP negotiations, USCIB and the coalition have emphasized that it is more important to get the most ambitious, highest-quality TPP agreement than to meet any artificial deadlines.

 

A Victory for the U.S. Trade Agenda

President Obama signs Trade Promotion Authority on June 29.
President Obama signs Trade Promotion Authority on June 29.

After going back and forth between the Senate and the House of Representatives, Trade Promotion Authority finally passed both chambers of Congress and was signed into law by President Obama on June 29. The conclusion of this legislation, along with an additional trade preferences bill that includes Trade Adjustment Assistance, represents a major victory for the pro-trade community and sets the stage for the finalization of two high standard trade deals – the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) with Pacific rim countries, and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with the European Union.

Finalizing TPA required a strong advocacy push by USCIB and other members of the Trade Benefits America Coalition, an organization of American business associations dedicated to spreading the word about the benefits of trade to U.S. jobs, growth and workers. The campaign involved many moving parts including earned media, paid media, third party engagement, grassroots activity, and consistent social media engagement. In 2015 alone, coalition members made more than 250,000 direct contacts with members of congress and their staff.

Now that TPA has passed, the business community will focus its efforts on securing a high standard TPP. TPA has given Obama the leverage he needs to close out negotiations on the free trade agreement with 11 other Asia-Pacific countries.

Read more about the trade bills President Obama signed into law on the White House Blog.

USCIB Advocates for TTIP at McCain Institute Debate

McCain_InstitueUSCIB Vice President Shaun Donnelly defended the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) at a debate hosted by the McCain Institute in Washington, D.C. on June 22. The debate, “A New Transatlantic Trade Deal: Good for America?”, focused on whether the trade deal between the United States and the European Union would be positive for American jobs, growth, labor standards and the environment.

Donnelly and former U.S. Congressman Jim Kolbe (German Marshall Fund) argued in favor of an ambitious TTIP, explaining that a free trade agreement with the EU would boost U.S. exports to $3 billion annually and increase the purchasing power of American families. They also noted that TTIP provides an opportunity for the United States and Europe to set global trade rules and provide a new template for modern trade agreements given stalled talks at the World Trade Organization.

“We face a fundamental choice…you can either recognize that globalization is here and try to deal with it and manage it, and a strong TTIP can be part of it; or we can try and deny it and turn back the clock and live in the good old days when it was a lot simpler and you could make everything in America and you didn’t have to worry about supply chains.” Donnelly said. “We have to accept reality. Nostalgia is not a strategy for competitiveness and jobs in the 21st century. TTIP is a strategy for that, and that’s what we ought to do.”

Donnelly also urged Congress to pass Trade Promotion Authority and then for the Obama administration to negotiate an ambitious TTIP that would include Investor-State Dispute Settlement, because investment is a key component of global commerce.

Watch the debate on the McCain Institute website.

Bloomberg and USCIB Hold Timely Conference on Trans-Pacific Partnership

A panel of business representatives at the Bloomberg-USCIB conference discussed the importance of key TPP elements. L-R: Jim Bacchus (Greenberg Traurig), Anissa Brennan (MPAA), Linda Dempsey (NAM) and USCIB Senior Vice President Rob Mulligan.
A panel of business representatives at the Bloomberg-USCIB conference discussed the importance of key TPP elements. L-R: Jim Bacchus (Greenberg Traurig), Anissa Brennan (MPAA), Linda Dempsey (NAM) and USCIB Senior Vice President Rob Mulligan.

Last Thursday – a momentous day for trade, as the introduction of bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) legislation in Congress sparked new life into ongoing trade negotiations – USCIB partnered with Bloomberg to convene a timely conference, “The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Setting New Rules for Trade in the 21st Century,” at the United States Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C.

Sponsored by Visa, and produced in partnership with Bloomberg Government, Bloomberg BNA and the National Foreign Trade Council, the conference brought together key players in the global trade debate, including U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman, two key members of Congress and an array of trade experts from the U.S. and other TPP negotiating parties, the business community and other areas.

Reps. Pat Tiberi (R-OH) and Sandy Levin (D-MI) from the House Ways and Means Committee offered a spirited debate of some of the most contentious aspects of the TPP negotiations, including provisions to open up the Japanese market for U.S. auto and agricultural exports, investor-state dispute settlement, and the inclusion of labor and human rights benchmarks for U.S. trade partners.

Ambassador Froman, breaking away from key Senate Finance Committee hearings to brief conference participants on the latest developments. He said negotiators were in the “final innings” of the talks, but noted that “some games go into extra innings,” and that most of the most contentious issues are yet to be fully resolved. He said progress on Trade Promotion Authority would send a positive signal to America’s trading partners, and would be “a critical tool to move the trade agreement forward.”

USCIB Senior Vice President Rob Mulligan took part in a panel discussion of business priorities for the talks, which also featured former Florida Congressman Jim Bacchus, who now heads the global practice group at Greenberg Traurig and chairs the International Chamber of Commerce’s Trade and Investment Commission.

Mulligan observed that, with the growing use of global value chains by business to reach global markets, it is critical that TPP address impediments such as localization requirements, restrictions on cross-border trade and customs barriers that impede the smooth operational of global value chains.

Other conference panels looked at critical issues remaining in the talks, views from other TPP parties, and the broader international economic implications of a TPP agreement. Additional speakers included Under Secretary of State Cathy Novelli, New Zealand Ambassador to the United States Mike Moore (former director general of the World Trade Organization), and Phil Karsting, administrator of the U.S. Foreign Agricultural Service. A number of USCIB members took part in key panel discussions. (Click here for the full agenda and list of speakers.)

USCIB is on the steering committee of the U.S. Business Coalition for TPP, which is pressing for an ambitious and market-opening agreement that can set a high bar for future trade agreements in the region and around the world.

USCIB Champions Regional Integration at APEC CEO Summit

More: Business Applauds APEC’s Work on Trade Facilitation

L-R: Hai Ling (Mastercard), Peter Robinson (USCIB), Leocadia Zak (USTDA), Peter Sykes (Dow Chemical), Leslie Griffin (UPS) and Anthony Nightingale (Jardine Matheson Holdings Limited
L-R: Hai Ling (Mastercard), Peter Robinson (USCIB), Leocadia Zak (USTDA), Peter Sykes (Dow Chemical), Leslie Griffin (UPS) and Anthony Nightingale (Jardine Matheson Holdings Limited

Thousands of delegates from around the world gathered in Beijing from November 8 to 10 for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO Summit, the most influential and high-level economic dialogue in the region. The summit brings together heads of state, business leaders and economic experts to share their views on how to promote free trade, innovation, growth and integration in the Asia-Pacific.

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson and Helen Medina, senior director of product policy and innovation, attended the summit and met with USCIB members and government officials to discuss American business priorities in the region.

Robinson hosted a bilateral discussion with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs, Charles Rivkin. Company representatives raised several concerns, including the need to move forward on the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), the importance of bilateral investment treaties, and the need to secure a high standard of intellectual property rights in TPP.

President Obama delivered a speech at the APEC Summit on Monday on U.S. engagement with the Asia-Pacific region and the value of trade and economic integration.

“In the 21st century, the pursuit of economic growth, job creation and trade is not a zero-sum game. One country’s prosperity doesn’t have to come at the expense of another’s,” Obama said. “If we work together, and act together, strengthening the economic ties between our nations will benefit all our nations. That’s true for the nations of APEC, and I believe it’s particularly true for the relationship between the United States and China.”

Global Value Chains and Trade: Strengthening APEC’s Economic Integration

USCIB organized an event, “Global Value Chains and Trade: Strengthening the Backbone for Greater Economic Integration Across APEC,” through the U.S. APEC Business Coalition. The event convened government and business leaders to discuss the role global value chains (GVCs) play in bolstering Pacific Rim economies.

“In our highly interconnected world, participation in GVCs can produce considerable gains,” said Robinson. “According to a report last year by the OECD, WTO and UNCTAD, developing economies with the fastest growing GVC participation have per-capita GDP growth rates two percent above the average. Likewise, countries that attract more foreign direct investment tend to have higher GVC participation levels and to generate more value added from trade.”

Healthy economies require solid transportation infrastructure and modern customs systems. U.S. Trade and Development Agency Director Leocadia Zak explained that USTDA has strengthened global value chains in APEC by targeting projects that secure transportation system upgrades. Customs modernization policies are critical for creating an effective global value chain that promotes international trade.

“The U.S. Trade & Development Agency has been pleased to work with public and private sector partners throughout the APEC region to modernize transportation and customs system networks,” said Zak. “This work has not only demonstrated advanced U.S. technologies, but has also led to more efficient global value chains that enable U.S. goods to flow more freely across and within APEC economies.”

The private sector, particularly logistics providers, has an important role to play in streamline trade and the flow of goods along the value chain. UPS’s senior vice president for international public policy Leslie Griffin noted that logistics providers do more than simply store and move goods, they coordinate traditional logistics competencies with manufacturing, distribution, sales and value-add services like customs clearance.

“Intensifying competition and changing customer demands for goods and services have made global value chains more complex and difficult to manage,” Griffin said. “In this environment, logistics providers have become value chain integrators.”

During the discussion, companies identified a number of obstacles that APEC economies must overcome in order to leverage the benefits of global value chains:

  • forced localization requirements that impede the flow of goods and services;
  • restrictions on cross border data flows, which limit cloud computing and e-commerce;
  • differences in customs procedures, including duplicative document requirements and complicated administrative requirements, which result in multiplied costs and time to reach the market;
  • lack of regulatory transparency and additional regulatory barriers for products or services from country to country.

Robinson also attended a “Women in the Economy” side meeting hosted by USCIB members Microsoft, Chevron and Wal-Mart in coordination with the U.S. APEC Business Coalition. APEC officials reiterated the importance of equal gender participation in the economy, and USCIB will continue to advocate for the inclusion of this issue throughout the work of APEC, as outlined in our priorities.

USCIB recently released its “2015 APEC Priority Issues and Recommendations,” which outlines policies that APEC economies can pursue towards freer trade, greater economic integration, and easier movement of goods and services across borders and along the value chain. USCIB will continue to work within APEC with our business and government partners in the coming Philippines host year to ensure that these issues remain in the agenda.

Staff contacts: Helen Medina and Rachel Spence

More on USCIB’s APEC Working Group

Business Applauds APEC’s Work on Trade Facilitation

The U.S. private sector applauded APEC’s efforts to forge ahead on initiatives to accelerate trade and economic growth through the APEC Alliance for Supply Chain Connectivity (A2C2), amid challenges surrounding implementation of the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Agreement on Trade Facilitation.

In 2010, APEC Leaders committed to achieve a 10 percent improvement by 2015 in the performance of the regional supply chain, as measured by reductions in cost, time, and uncertainty. In 2014, APEC established the A2C2 to leverage outside expertise in helping developing economies improve supply chain performance through targeted, focused capacity building and technical assistance.

In a joint statement, USCIB and the National Center for APEC called the effort “a strong example of the kind of substantive work APEC is doing to improve supply chain performance and help economies implement the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement.”

“U.S. companies and associations trading in the Asia-Pacific have valuable experience moving goods and services seamlessly, quickly, and inexpensively through the region. The A2C2 is an excellent opportunity for the U.S. private sector to lend its expertise to APEC’s supply chain initiative on an ongoing and substantive basis,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson.

Staff contact: Kristin Isabelli

More on USCIB’s Customs and Trade Facilitation Committee

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

Watch Froman’s remarks.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Why Investment Protections are Critical to Growth and Jobs

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Staff contact: Rob Mulligan

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

Now Is the Time to Stand Up for Trade and Investment

Trade is like a bicycle – it needs forward momentum to avoid falling over.

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson
USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson

Last March, President Obama issued his 2014 U.S. Trade Agenda, which outlined ambitious priorities for expanding American trade and investment around the world, in support of expanded job growth and enhanced U.S. competitiveness. Part of the trade agenda’s ambition lay in an “all of the above” approach – that is, the United States would move forward on major bilateral, plurilateral and multilateral efforts to expand cross-border commerce, while securing bipartisan support for renewed Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) in Congress. We at USCIB applauded loudly and set about drumming up private-sector support.

More than six months on, while some progress has been made, I fear that we face a number of disappointments, potential setbacks and stiff challenges that have served to undercut the administration’s ambitions and the broader cause of expanded trade. Consider these developments:

  • In July, a small group of countries led by India blocked implementation of the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement, which was agreed last December at the WTO ministerial in Bali. This has sent the organization into yet another crisis, putting the brakes on the WTO’s whole post-Bali agenda.
  • Unfounded anxiety, some might say hysteria, has sprung up in Europe over certain aspects of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), such as the same strong investor-state dispute settlement provisions that already exist in numerous U.S. and European commercial agreements. The hysteria is threatening to upend these crucial negotiations, and could complicate efforts to negotiate a U.S.-China bilateral investment treaty.
  • Several countries, including the United States, are threatening to carve out certain sensitive areas from liberalization commitments under the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), as well as in the TTIP negotiations.
  • TPA legislation remains stalled on Capitol Hill, captive to Washington’s increasingly polarized, partisan divide.

All this is deeply disappointing. Expanding trade and investment is essential for economic growth and job creation. Indeed, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and the Peterson Institute for International Economics estimate that the trade facilitation agreement alone would create 21 million new jobs worldwide. More broadly, it is increasingly clear that freeing up cross-border trade and improving conditions for FDI must be part of critical global efforts to address climate change and promote sustainable development.

After investing so much time and effort to champion the pro-trade consensus that now seems to be fraying, we in the business community have every right to be frustrated. Yet we must try to help our political leaders around the world pick up the pieces and get back to the negotiating table in Geneva, summon the courage to stand up for an ambitious approach to the TPP and TTIP negotiations, and move forward – after lengthy delays – on Trade Promotion Authority.

With that in mind, in October I joined USCIB (and ICC) Chairman Terry McGraw and ICC Secretary General John Danilovich in Geneva at the World Investment Summit. Convened by the UN Conference on Trade and Development, the summit was an important opportunity to look at how FDI can be leveraged for sustainable development, economic growth and jobs. In addition, both John and Terry have spearheaded an aggressive global campaign to help get the WTO back on track.

As this issue of International Business went to press, we joined with the OECD and its Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to organize a high-level conference in Washington, D.C. on new directions in trade and investment policy. The October 30 event showcased groundbreaking policy-related research from OECD on the rise of global value chains, trade in services and other aspects of the 21st-century global economy. We hope that the fresh ideas and new perspectives offered at the conference will help demonstrate the importance of moving forward to tackle today’s most pressing trade and investment barriers.

USCIB continues to play a leadership role pressing for strong, market-opening commitments in TPP and TTIP. We are also working closely with a broad-based business coalition to move forward on TPA. The old saying still holds: trade is like a bicycle – it needs forward momentum to avoid falling over. That is why it is more important than ever for business around the world to keep up the pressure on our political leaders to implement the Bali package, strive for ambitious, high-standards agreements with Asia and Europe, push ahead to negotiate a high-standard U.S.-China bilateral investment treaty, and get off the dime to pass meaningful Trade Promotion Authority.

Peter Robinson’s bio and contact information

Other recent postings from Peter Robinson:

What’s the Rush on Global Tax Reform? (Summer 2014)

Setting the Rules of the Road in Cross-Border Commerce (Spring 2014)

It’s Time to Clap with Both Hands on FDI (Winter 2013-2014)

Making Sure the Business Voice Is Heard in International Agencies (Fall 2013)

Ambitious 2014 US Trade Agenda Hailed

U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman is responsible for putting President Obama’s trade agenda into action. (Photo: USTR)
U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman is responsible for putting President Obama’s trade agenda into action. (Photo: USTR)

Washington, D.C., March 4, 2014 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) welcomed today’s release of President Obama’s 2014 U.S. Trade Agenda. The agenda outlines an ambitious set of priorities for expanding American trade and investment around the world, in support of expanded job growth and enhanced U.S. competitiveness.

“We agree with the president that international trade and investment play a critical role in creating jobs, promoting growth and strengthening the middle class,” said USCIB Senior Vice President Rob Mulligan.”The American business community is working hard to advance and support this agenda both at home and abroad.”

“President Obama’s trade strategy for 2014 is driven by a commitment to create jobs, promote growth, and strengthen the middle class through the creation of new export opportunities for American farmers, workers, and businesses,” said U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman. “In the coming year, USTR will continue to execute the President’s trade vision that relies on opening markets, leveling the playing field for American workers and producers, and fully enforcing our trade rights around the world.”

Mulligan said the USTR agenda dovetailed well with USCIB’s own 2014 Global Trade and Investment Agenda, Key goals in the USCIB agenda include:

  • reaching bipartisan agreement on Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) legislation
  • completing the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations
  • finalizing agreement on expansion of the Information Technology Agreement
  • making significant progress on the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) as well as the Trade in International Services Agreement negotiations, and
  • advancing discussions of a U.S.-China bilateral investment treaty.

“We are working closely with USTR and the other relevant U.S. agencies to advance this ambitious agenda across the board,” said Charles R. Johnston, chair of USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee and managing director of global government affairs at Citigroup. “In addition, USCIB will work with its overseas business partners to foster support for U.S. trade and investment goals among our trading partners.”

USCIB serves on the steering committee of the Trade Benefits America Coalition (www.tradebenefitsamerica.org), which seeks to enhance understanding among lawmakers and the public about the benefits of U.S. trade agreements and advocates for passage of Trade Promotion Authority. USCIB also plays a leading role in U.S. business coalitions on the TTIP and TPP talks and has provided industry insight to U.S. negotiators on many aspects of these negotiations.

“The most essential piece of the trade puzzle is Trade Promotion Authority,” said Johnston. “Without TPA, we cannot negotiate effectively, and Congress’s ability to help guide U.S. trade policy is limited. For these reasons, we urge the Obama administration and Congress to work together to swiftly pass effective TPA legislation.”

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 the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Organization of Employers and the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment. More at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, USCIB

+1 212.703.5043, jhuneke@uscib.org

 

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BIAC Chairman Talks Trade at Washington DC Forum

On January 31, Phil O’Reilly, the chairman of BIAC, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD, discussed trade policy and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks in remarks to the Global Business Dialogue forum in Washington, D.C.

O’Reilly, CEO of Business New Zealand, laid out broad conceptual points to guide the TPP parties. “It’s important that we don’t let today’s politics get in the way of what will be a deal that will transform the Pacific trading environment over the next 20 to 30 years,” he said.

Citing influential research from the OECD on global supply networks and trade in value-added, the BIAC chairman stated: “The world is increasingly dominated by global value chains, so that the new glue of trade is not containers going across a wharf, they are an outcome. The new glue of trade to my mind is investment.”

To read the full text of O’Reilly’s remarks, click here.

Staff contact: Rob Mulligan

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