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USTR Requests That ITC Conduct Section 332 Investigation to “Monitor and Investigate” Imports of Strawberries and Bell Peppers

Strawberries

USTR Requests That ITC Conduct Section 332 Investigation to “Monitor and Investigate” Imports of Strawberries and Bell Peppers

In a November 3, 2020 letter, U.S. Trade Representative (“USTR”) Robert E. Lighthizer requested that the International Trade Commission (“ITC”) “monitor and investigate imports of strawberries and bell peppers” pursuant to section 332(g) of the Tariff Act of 1930. Section 332 is a provision that allows USTR to ask for a fact-finding investigation by the ITC, but does not result directly in any trade relief. USTR’s request follows the September 1, 2020 announcement of an interagency plan to address the threat of increased imports of perishable fruits and vegetables to American producers.

USTR’s request to monitor and investigate imports of strawberries and bell peppers is likely a precursor to further trade actions. Such actions could include a government self-initiated section 201 case initially brought at the ITC, asking for additional quotas or tariffs, or other actions, which must then be ultimately decided by the President. This type of case is now ongoing regarding imports of blueberries.

Whether a new Biden Administration would be interested in taking up a self-initiated case like this one is unknown. However, even if a Biden Administration does not self-initiate a case, the U.S. producers also could bring various types of actions, relying in large part on the information developed by the ITC as part of this section 332 study. According to USTR itself, the ITC’s collection and analysis of information would expedite the initiation of investigations.

The products in question fall under the following categories of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States:

-Fresh or chilled strawberries: 0810.10;

-Fresh or chilled bell peppers:

-60.4015,

-60.4025,

-60.4065,

-and 0709.60.4085

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Jeffrey Neeley is a Washington-based partner with the law firm Husch Blackwell LLP. He leads the firm’s International Trade Remedies team.

Julia Banegas is an attorney in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington, D.C. office.

Camron Greer is an Assistant Trade Analyst in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington D.C. office.

exports

2020 is Ending: Will Phase One Deal Exports Hit the Mark?

You may have heard about soybeans lately. After a tumultuous year, the crop’s futures surged above $10.70 in October, in large part because of sales to China. The world’s second-largest economy bought more than 17 million tons of soybeans in the current marketing year, according to the Department of Agriculture, surpassing both 2019 and 2018 figures. This buying frenzy pushed prices to a two-year high.

Some of it can be attributed to phase one trade deal between the world’s two largest economies. In January, the United States agreed to lower tariffs on $120 billion worth of Chinese goods. In exchange, China agreed to beef up its imports by $200 billion above 2017 levels over a two year period.

The commitment included soybeans, but it extended to other products too. China committed to importing an additional $77 billion in 2020, made up of $12.5 billion in agricultural products, $32.9 billion in manufactured goods, $18.5 billion in energy products, and $12.8 billion in services. In 2021, that number will increase to $123 billion.

So how are actual exports stacking up? Will China hit those goals this year?

‘The answer is no,’ says Dr. Chad Brown, a Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. ‘The agreement itself is written to have an overall target and four sector-specific targets – agriculture, manufacturing, energy, and services. There’s a chance we could get there for agriculture, but not for energy or manufacturing.’

According to the Peterson Institute’s US-China Phase One Tracker, China is behind on purchases in each of these categories. By the end of the third quarter, the country imported $65.9 billion worth of goods. In order to reach the 2020 target, China would have to purchase another $110 billion in the last three months of the year. Forces outside of trade policies are making that difficult or impossible.

Agriculture has the most robust sales so far. Corn and pork exports both exceeded targets for the year, and cotton is on track to meet its goal. But purchases of other products, like wheat and sorghum, are nowhere near their target numbers. Even soybean sales are below target, in spite of the rally this fall. It spells trouble for agriculture exports overall. ‘You’re not going to make up lost soybean sales with pork or lobster or any of that, we just don’t sell nearly enough of that other stuff,’ Brown explains.

Sadly, manufacturing is much further behind. While PPE and semiconductor sales were healthy, automotive and aerospace products (typically some of the largest exports to China by dollar amount) were nowhere close. ‘Before the trade war, China was the second-largest export market for American vehicles, after Canada. Now, tariffs imposed on imports from China made autos more expensive. If you are making a car in the United States, it suddenly costs a lot more to do so,’ says Brown.

By the end of September, auto products had only reached a quarter of their goal. Chinese aircraft imports were little more than 10% of the pledged amount for 2020.

Energy commitments are farthest off the mark. This year, China imported $5.9 billion worth of products from the United States. That’s more than in 2017, but not ‘$200 billion commitment’ more. At $4.4 billion, crude oil purchases are at about half of where they should be to reach their goal. Meanwhile, coal and refined energy are nowhere close. As Dr. Brown explains, the commitments were made in dollar amounts, and as we are all painfully aware, oil prices have been extremely unstable this year. ‘You could pull all the oil out of Texas that exists, but if the price is either zero or negative, you’re not going to make any progress towards these purchase commitments.’

These commitment levels would have been a stretch during a typical year. But of course, 2020 has been anything but typical. As it stands, no United States industry is likely to reach its goals this year, and in 2021, the gap will only widen.

trade war

U.S.-CHINA TRADE WAR TIMELINE

Unconventional Trade Warfare

Since taking office, the Trump administration has been building its case against Chinese practices they view as unfair to American businesses, including subsidization of industrial production and requirements to transfer proprietary U.S. technologies. The Trump administration has also taken aim at the opaque connections between state-directed and strategic private enterprises, seeking to tighten oversight of Chinese investments in the United States and make examples of Chinese companies like ZTE Corporation that might be working around U.S. sanctions against Iran and North Korea.

It has been an unconventional and rapid-fire series of steps as the Trump administration deploys a variety of executive powers, U.S. trade laws, WTO proceedings, and threats. American companies and the average consumer can hardly keep track of proposed tariffs, real actions, and market reactions. Some of these measures our manufacturers and innovators have been seeking for years, but other measures they aren’t sure they want at all, or worry about the consequences of Chinese retaliation. America’s farmers are especially worried about getting caught in the crosshairs.

On January 15, the United States and China signed an unprecedented type of trade deal. If you’ve lost track of how we got here, below is a handy quick guide to recent events in this unfolding U.S.-China trade war. Download and share the graphic, updated as of October 14, 2020.

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Andrea Durkin is the Editor-in-Chief of TradeVistas and Founder of Sparkplug, LLC. Ms. Durkin previously served as a U.S. Government trade negotiator and has proudly taught international trade policy and negotiations for the last fifteen years as an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University’s Master of Science in Foreign Service program.

globalization world

The Future of International Trade: Is Globalization Dead?

In this exclusive Q&A, Global Trade Mag hears from Ted Murphy, partner with global law firm Sidley Austin, LLP, on how the international trade and globalization landscapes have changed and what companies can predict as we approach 2021. 

1. What are some of the most significant changes in the global trade landscape? 

The most significant change over the past few years has been the decline of globalization. Up until recently, much of the world was pursuing policies aimed at increasing globalization. This meant that year-after-year it was getting easier and cheaper to move goods, people and data across international borders. While globalization is not dead, the last few years has seen a rise of economic nationalism in places where it had not been prevalent previously — like the United States and the UK. Combined with the economic nationalism that has always been present in places like China, it means that globalization has been in retreat for the past several years. We see that trend continuing, at least for the short-to-medium term (i.e., walls are more likely to go up, then come down, in the short-to-medium term).

2. How can global trade players navigate the new landscape? 

The first thing global trade players need to do is recognize that the paradigm has shifted. Hoping that the past comes back is not productive. Instead, you need to embrace the flux and move forward. No one knows what the future will look like. That said, we know it won’t look like it did 4 years ago. As a result, global trade players need to embrace the uncertainty (it is a reality), throw out the old plans and create new ones – recognizing that they may need to be amended on the fly.

3. What role will technology play in international trade relationships?

This is one of the fundamental trade questions that will get answered over the next couple of years. Will we have one interconnected world, or separate spheres each with its own technology?

4. What are some tips for compliance efforts moving forward?

Trade facilitation/trade compliance will continue to have increasingly important roles within companies going forward. The last few years have shown that trade really matters to most companies and that those that ignore things like trade risk, responsible sourcing, technology transfers and other trade-related issues do so at their peril. For example, as companies realign their supply chains, it is important to understand the trade risk profile of the alternative source – e.g., is the new source country likely to find itself on the wrong end of a U.S. Section 301 investigation for currency undervaluation; is forced labor enforcement a risk; the trade sanction risks; etc. Just looking for the lowest cost supplier is not the answer.

5. How can trade players prepare now for the future? 

In the past, it was relatively smooth sailing from a trade perspective as globalization increased. Expect the future to be bumpier. I am not saying that is necessarily a bad thing – uncertainty often brings opportunity. In order to be best able to take advantage of that type of opportunity, one needs to be well-informed and a bit bold.

This article has been prepared for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, and the receipt of it does not constitute, a lawyer-client relationship. Readers should not act upon this without seeking advice from professional advisers. The content therein does not reflect the views of the firm.

_________________________________________________________________

Ted Murphy is a partner with global law firm Sidley Austin, LLP where he counsels companies on international trade and customs law and serves on the firm’s COVID-19 Task Force. He advises clients on international trade, trade policy and customs compliance issues, including actions brought under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, as well as the administration of international agreements. Mr. Murphy also represents clients before the U.S. Court of International Trade, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Office of the United States Trade Representative and the U.S. International Trade Commission. Prior to joining Sidley, he was appointed by the Secretary of Commerce and the United States Trade Representative to serve on the Industry Trade Advisory Committee on Customs Matters and Trade Facilitation (ITAC 14) for the 2010–2014 and 2014–2018 terms.

public morals

WHICH WAY IS THE MORAL TRADE COMPASS POINTING? U.S. LOSES WTO ARGUMENT THAT TARIFFS ON CHINA PROTECT U.S. PUBLIC MORALS

Tariffs as a Proxy in a Larger Economic (and Moral?) War

By July 2018, the United States and China had each fired off the first shots in a tariff war that would escalate over the next year (see TradeVistas’ timeline here).

With higher tariffs on $60 billion in its exports to the United States and staring down the barrel of tariffs on another $200 billion, China requested the establishment of a WTO dispute settlement panel. Specifically, China sought for a panel to review whether U.S. tariffs – imposed unilaterally and without WTO authorization – violated the United States’ basic obligations to provide most favored nation treatment to China according to the U.S. schedule of tariff commitments in the WTO.

The dispute was triggered by the issuance of a March 2018 report describing the findings of an investigation by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 into China’s unfair acquisition of U.S. intellectual property and technologies. In its first line of defense, the United States contends that most of the practices it reviewed as part of this investigation are not covered by existing WTO disciplines and therefore the measures it took (the tariff increases on imported goods from China) are “fundamentally not about WTO rights and obligations.”

Fast forward past the legal proceedings, the WTO panel to hear China’s claim issued its final report to the United States and China in June and it was made public on September 15.

The United States argued that, even if the panel finds it violated its WTO commitments to China, it was justified on the grounds that the tariffs were necessary to protect public morals.

It lost the argument. Here’s how. (Disclaimer: this is not a legal brief but rather a plain reading of the panel report.)

Summary of case

Going on the Moral Offense

USTR did initiate a WTO case against China focused on those practices it determined are covered by WTO disciplines and therefore could be addressed through WTO dispute settlement. But the United States also claims that the bulk of China’s practices contained in the scope of its Section 301 investigation are not addressed by WTO disciplines.

Further, the United States argues that China’s practices such as requirements upon foreign companies to transfer their technologies or license on non-market terms, and cyber-enabled theft, “undermine U.S. norms against theft and coercion and undermine the belief in fair competition and respect for innovation, all of which are key aspects of U.S. culture.” In other words, combatting them is a matter of protecting “public morals”.

First Things First

There’s an order in which a WTO panel considers the constituent parts of a case. In this case brought by China against the United States, the panel first reviewed whether the U.S. measures in question (several tariff increases covering different sets of products from China) were inconsistent with U.S. obligations. If so, the panel considers whether the inconsistency is justified as “necessary to protect U.S. public morals” under Article XX(a) of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994).

GATT XXa

The United States did not refute China’s case that the tariff measures are inconsistent with U.S. market access obligations (under Articles I:1 and II:1(a) and (b)). Therefore, the WTO panel found in favor of China on this point and moved on to consider the U.S. argument that the WTO-inconsistent tariff measures were necessary to protect U.S. public morals, within the meaning of GATT Article XX(a).

Making a Moral Case

Article XX(a) was part of the original GATT 1948 but it was not invoked even once in the subsequent almost 60 years.

It has since been argued by WTO members to justify measures designed to prevent money laundering, organized crime and gambling within a Member’s territory (a dispute between Antigua and the United States over Internet gambling), by China (unsuccessfully) to prevent the distribution of foreign movies and other audio-visual entertainment, and by the European Union to restrict imports of seals and seal products, a case in which the panel accepted that animal welfare falls under public morals but struck down the form of the measure under dispute.

Brazil sought to use the public morals exception to exempt certain domestic companies that produce television equipment from paying taxes as part of its public morals objective of “bridging the digital divide” in Brazil.

The Sum of the Parts

There’s a certain amount of deference given to WTO members to define public morals, which shift in nature and importance within societies over time.

Because the exceptions in Article XX are seen as limited and conditional, the burden lies with the WTO member invoking the exception to prove the measure indeed falls within the scope of the exception.

On the basis of this justification, WTO panels apply several “tests”: Has the WTO member justifying a measure under this exception demonstrated that the measure protects public morals? Is the measure “necessary” to achieve the stated public morals objective? Is the measure being applied in a manner that constitutes “arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination” within the meaning of Article XX?

In this case, according to the panel, the onus was on the United States to explain how its tariff measures contribute to its public morals objective as well as how the scope of WTO-inconsistent tariffs do not apply beyond what is necessary within the meaning of Article XX(a) of GATT 1994.

A Means to the End

At its core, the United States argued that tariff increases were necessary to induce a change in China’s cost-benefit analysis – in other words, the economic stakes needed to be high enough that China would be convinced to discontinue its alleged technology and intellectual property theft. Tariffs were necessary because previous forms of diplomatic and trade negotiation engagements had demonstrably failed.

The United States also argued that a ban on imports of Chinese products into the United States would represent an overly trade restrictive measure; in contrast, tariff increases are not overly trade restrictive.

Not Necessarily So

Part of the panel’s job is to judge whether the measure is a genuine means to an end. In this case, did the tariffs contribute to the public morals objective and, even if so, were WTO-consistent or less trade-restrictive alternatives available to achieve the same outcome?

Simply saying the tariffs were necessary isn’t a sufficient defense. Some quantitative or qualitative assessment must be presented to form the basis of a conclusion by the panel.

Immoral Goods?

In an interesting and important angle to the case, the European Union argued in a third-party brief that Article XX(a) requires that the risk to public morals manifest itself either in the content of the goods themselves or in the methods in which the goods were obtained or produced – that demonstrating so affords a sufficient nexus between the public morals objective and the measure restraining imports of those products.

Related to this focus on the products ensnared in the measure, China argued that the goods subject to increased tariffs went well beyond the scope of products that “may have” received the benefit of technology transfer or intellectual property theft. In their view, the measure was overly trade-restrictive and not related to protecting public morals.

In its rebuttal, the United States countered that the text of Article XX(a) does not require a direct correlation or “embodiment” between the products subject to the measure and the public morals being protected. Although the tariff measures included Chinese goods that benefit from “unfair and immoral Chinese technology transfer policies,” tariffs on goods not directly involved in these practices were included as well to reach a scope of tariff penalties more broadly commensurate with the estimated overall harm to the U.S. economy of China’s practices.

The United States also found itself defending the use of a common form of public consultation. USTR amended the scope or provided exclusions from the tariffs on the basis of public comments. However, the panel found it unclear how or whether public moral concerns factored into those decisions or whether any such exclusions would “undermine or run counter to the stated U.S. public morals objective.”

Case Not Made

Ultimately, the panel viewed the U.S. explanation for the nexus between the nature of the measure (the specific tariffs applied to specific lists of goods) and the public morals objective as insufficient. The panel ruled against the United States – in other words, the measure did not appear to be “necessary” to achieve the public morals objective.

Having concluded that necessity wasn’t proven, the panel did not compare the U.S. use of tariffs with any alternative measure or assess whether U.S. tariffs on goods from China constituted “arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination” or “a disguised restriction on international trade”. Case over.

Lighthizer quote

Moral Dilemma

The WTO panel ruling in this case may have no practical effect. The United States could appeal the outcome, but the WTO Appellate Body does not have a sufficient number of appointed members to operate, so if the United States does not agree to adopt the panel decision as it currently stands, the case is stuck in a legal limbo.

Meanwhile, tariffs on goods from China remain, and tariffs on U.S. goods to China remain. If the United States did appeal and lost, the WTO panel could authorize China to retaliate – normally in the form of tariffs. But such authorization would merely formalize the action China has already taken without WTO permission – a hypocritical outcome at best.

More important than the dueling tariffs, the United States is aggrieved that China used the WTO as a shield for its “unfair and trade-distorting technology transfer policies and practices not covered by WTO rules” and that China committed the same WTO offense of applying tariffs on U.S. imports without awaiting the outcome of its case or receiving authorization to do so. That’s having your cake and eating it too.

In concluding comments, the panel observed that the “wider context in which the WTO system currently operates reflects a range of unprecedented global trade tensions,” perhaps an oblique acknowledgement that the issues the United States raised are indeed beyond the reach of current multilateral agreements.

USTR Ambassador Robert Lighthizer thinks so. In a press statement issued the day the WTO panel report went public, Lighthizer said the panel decision, “shows that the WTO provides no remedy for [China’s] misconduct.”

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Andrea Durkin is the Editor-in-Chief of TradeVistas and Founder of Sparkplug, LLC. Ms. Durkin previously served as a U.S. Government trade negotiator and has proudly taught international trade policy and negotiations for the last fifteen years as an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University’s Master of Science in Foreign Service program.

trade

A Tipping Point in the Trade War? 4 Tips to Consider Now.

While reassured by a recommitment to the U.S.-China trade agreement, companies still need to be vigilant in protecting their supply chains from pandemic aftershocks – and election-year unpredictability.

Think back – way back – to January 2020. The U.S. and China signed the Phase 1 trade accord, agreeing to roll back tariffs, expand trade purchases and renew pledges on intellectual property.

Many global shippers felt encouraged by the prospect of improved trading days ahead. And various American businesses welcomed the chance to equalize their trade footing and to counteract China’s intellectual property practices.

While many companies continue to manage through the hefty impact of the various trade remedy measures of Sections 201, 232, and 301 of the Trade Act, there was hope that Phase 2 of the trade deal between the U.S. and China would signal even better prospects.

But then the coronavirus claimed center stage. Its supply-chain side effects dominated the global marketplace, turning it into a de facto PPE-and-sanitizer delivery system – presenting shippers and manufacturers with an entirely different set of obstacles.

Many global manufacturers and suppliers pivoted to face mask production. French winemakers turned fine wine into the finest hand sanitizer. And American companies in search of these supplies turned to new sources globally, navigating the choppy waters of U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) importing requirements and those of other government agencies in the process.

The administration’s 90-day deferral of import tax payments offered temporary relief to some companies. But for nearly eight months, manufacturers and shippers remained in a state of suspended apprehension when it came to the future of trans-Pacific trading.

Finally, on August 24, U.S. and China trade representatives officially recommitted to carrying out Phase 1 of the trade accord.

The chessboard today
Now, as the U.S. presidential election comes into view, the spotlight is once again on the global chessboard of tit-for-tat tariff moves, amplified by the Trump administration’s desire to counter the practices of U.S. trade partners and address the U.S. trade deficit.

As part of a longstanding dispute over aircraft subsidies, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) initially imposed 10% tariffs on Airbus aircraft – but increased that to 15% in March. Also announced this August, the USTR decided to maintain 15% tariffs on Airbus aircraft and threatened 25% tariffs on other European goods, such as food, wine, and spirits, including a tariff on imported French makeup and handbags, in retaliation against France’s Digital Service Tax (DST). However, no tariffs have been imposed yet as France has not implemented DST.

Trade winds have been equally tempestuous on both sides of the U.S. border. After the U.S. imposed tariffs on aluminum from Canada, Canada retaliated with its own trade penalties.

And the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which took effect this past July, was reassuring for many companies that even dubbed it the new NAFTA. While some North America cross-border shippers are still grappling with compliance and weighing potential trade gains, its changes to cross-border trade overall have been well received by many businesses.

Now, businesses are speculating on the potential supply chain effects in the months to come. Will U.S. tariffs on a long list of Chinese goods be rolled back during the next round of negotiations? That has become the $350 billion question.

Many answers, and potential changes, hinge on the upcoming presidential election.

Be ready for new rollouts
You may recall that the USTR announced – and imposed – some section 301 tariffs quickly after their announcement. While tariffs were suspended on $160 billion in Chinese goods (List 4B) – pending the success of Phase 1 of the agreement – it’s not known if they are suspended indefinitely or if these tariffs could again come into play, further spiking import costs.

Although most believe a swift post-election reversal is unlikely, it’s easy to see the two main party presidential nominees have different strategies on how they would carry out international trade and tariffs post-November. For that reason, the safest course is to be prepared for any outcome. Here’s what you should consider in the coming months to help your company prepare:

1. Speak up about exclusions
So far, the USTR has granted about 2,000 exclusions related to section 301 tariffs, and over 75 exclusions from other section tariffs – many in response to importers’ petitions. In fact, the USTR has announced exclusions to multiple product lists. And while comment periods are over for now, it’s important for companies to voice their opinion for or against tariffs as they’re proposed.

The refunds are retroactive, so some importers stand to gain millions in refunds for previously paid duties.

Since an early exclusion request can produce earlier duty exclusions, vigilance in monitoring and applying for exclusions is vital. But the submission process can be lengthy and complex, requiring businesses to record and report all import product categories that relate to each applicable tariff number or specific product. This is an instance where having a knowledgeable customs broker and trusted advisor, who you can rely on to help and provide expertise, can come in handy.

2. Reconsider drawback and deferment programs
The trade programs you ruled out in the past could be a financial boon now. For example, it may be worth revisiting duty drawback programs, which provide a refund on previously imported goods that are subsequently exported, so consider your current import/export balance. Also, consider if 301 tariffs were to subside, would continuing the program still be practical for your supply chain?

Because formal application to this program can be quite rigorous, consider handing this task off to a 3rd party expert.

You may also want to reconsider bonded warehousing or using a foreign trade zone. Companies that produce major equipment or large machinery, for example, often experience significant lag times between production and sale – incurring duty payments of $200,000 or more per machine.

If you’re not planning on selling major equipment over the next 6 months, it might make sense to import the product into a foreign trade zone and deploy duty deferment tools.

3. If you haven’t already, explore alternative sourcing or production options
The pandemic has reminded companies that diversification is key to business resilience. In practice, that may mean onboarding alternative suppliers or preparing to change production venues in the event of a coronavirus outbreak.

To protect margins as the price of Chinese goods, materials and tariffs climb, many U.S. businesses are turning to lower-priced suppliers in Vietnam and Malaysia. Not only do imports from these countries allow for the avoidance or reduction of tariffs, they can also provide the assurance of a ready workforce and steady material supply.

4. Above all, stay informed
Like most business processes, proficient supply chain management hinges on your ability to manage countless moving parts, and plan and anticipate likely change.

During a global pandemic, amid an economic downturn, and in an election year, change may be the only thing we can predict. Efficiency and preparedness have never mattered more.

Stay current on policy changes and new trade regulations. Consult the USTR website often. Sign up for automated logistics updates and trade advisories. Stay close to your trade association, like the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and other industry-specific groups. And turn to a proven 3PL before your internal logistics department becomes overwhelmed.

And then, fasten your seatbelt as we navigate the many changes on the horizon.

nuclear

NUCLEAR OPTIONS: THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION’S TRADE RESPONSE TO URANIUM PROTECTION

Rocks for Jocks

High school has started online in our household. At our dinner table the other night, we were discussing different science courses and their workloads. My husband recalled that Earth Science (before political correctness) was affectionately known as “Rocks for Jocks,” playing into a stereotype that introductory geology was an easy way to get science credits. If you’re paying attention to trade policy, it’s time to dust off the Earth Science textbooks.

Over the last few years, the national security dimensions of trade policy have come into sharper focus. It has become a lens through which a broad spectrum of trade policies is viewed, including those affecting extraction and trade in the minerals and metals mined from the earth. These materials have vast commercial and vital military applications and are the bedrock of today’s modern and emerging technologies.

Explosive Potential

The United States has had a tepid love affair with nuclear energy, yet nuclear holds an important place in the U.S. energy mix. Nearly 20 percent of U.S. electricity is generated by 96 nuclear reactors in 29 U.S. states. Nuclear accounts for more than 55 percent of U.S. carbon-free electricity.

Beyond consumer electricity, nuclear powers U.S. Naval submarines and aircraft carriers as well as spacecraft and the amazing NASA probes now roving Mars. Nuclear plants produce isotopes used in medical imaging, cancer treatments and radiation that kills bacteria in our food. Globally, advanced reactors are being used to bring fresh water to the Middle East and African countries by powering desalination facilities. It is the only carbon-free energy source that can deliver world energy supplies on a large scale.

What fuels nuclear energy is uranium, a naturally occurring radioactive material containing fissionable isotopes that once concentrated, or enriched, can produce the chemical chain reaction required to generate electricity.

Policy-Enriched Uranium

After World War II, the U.S. government sought to promote the development of the civil nuclear power industry. Nuclear generated electricity would stimulate demand for U.S.-mined uranium, which would in turn assure the supply for military needs.

In 1964, Congress amended the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 to enable private ownership of nuclear fuel. Prior to that, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission ran the only enriching operations in the free world – a large and dedicated client for U.S. uranium. To shield the U.S. uranium industry from competition as commercial nuclear operations came online, Congress prohibited the importation of foreign-sourced uranium destined for domestic end use. Enriched uranium could not be imported, but the U.S. industry could import natural uranium and enrich it for domestic use and for export. Congress estimated such restrictions would only be required for ten years until civilian demand would grow to such volumes as to sustain uranium production in the United States.

Whether those restrictions constituted a violation of U.S. obligations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade went uncontested by U.S. trading partners, the largest of which were – and still are – Canada and Australia, which boast cheaper, higher-grade sources of uranium.

The import prohibition remained in place from 1969 to 1977. It was phased out from 1977 through 1984 as demand for uranium increased and domestic mining reached capacity. The 1980s would turn out to be a heyday for U.S. uranium, its fate bound with the ups and downs of the U.S. nuclear industry. Nuclear utilities were negatively impacted by conservation efforts during the oil embargos of the late 1970s and suffered major regulatory and policy setbacks in commercial expansion following high profile accidents at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. Slowed production and plentiful stockpiles for both commercial electricity and defense uses dramatically reduced demand for newly extracted uranium.

U.S. Uranium’s Implosion

The timing of the uranium mining industry downturn coincided with a seminal free trade agreement with Canada, which is a major exporter of uranium for nuclear fuel. The 1989 U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement (a precursor to NAFTA and USCMA), exempted Canada from any restrictions the United States imposes on imported uranium.

Although the FTA incorporated GATT national security exemptions under which the United States could derogate from this obligation, Canada and the United States explicitly agreed to limit use of such exemptions in North American trade in energy goods.

The agreement effectively threw open the door to cheaper, high-grade uranium that would displace U.S. uranium. As Canada could fill the majority of U.S. demand, remaining restrictions on imports from other foreign sources would have little benefit to the U.S. uranium industry.

The U.S. industry resorted to filing its first petition to the U.S. Department of Energy under the 1962 Trade Expansion Act Section 232, which required the U.S. Energy Secretary to determine whether uranium was being imported “in such quantities and under such circumstances as to threaten to impair the national security of the United States.” If so, options would include raising tariffs to block foreign imports of uranium.

The Secretary issued a negative finding and President Reagan rejected tariffs on imported uranium. Rather than preserving national security, tariffs were believed to have the potential to disrupt critical supplies, therefore impairing it. The Reagan administration instead established a Uranium Revitalization fund – a government purchase program – to buy up unneeded resources, helping to create space in the market and restore prices for the U.S. uranium industry.

US Uranium Production Falls

The Half-Life of Industry Protection

The term “half-life” derives from nuclear physics. It describes the length of time that stable atoms survive before exponential radioactive decay occurs. Uranium-238 has a half-life of 4.5 billion years. Uranium-235 has a half-life of just over 700 million years. Trade protections for U.S. industries typically have a half-life of around 2 to 3 years.

Artificial and temporary protections (for example: tariffs on imports from foreign competitors) may provide immediate relief for the domestic industry, but that advantage quickly drops off unless the industry makes investments to improve efficiencies or other market conditions change in the domestic industry’s favor.

Since the late 1980s, U.S. nuclear energy producers have steadily increased their purchases of cheaper foreign uranium, primarily from Canada, Australia and Russia. As more uranium circulated in global markets, the U.S. government privatized its uranium enrichment operations during the 1990s, releasing more uranium into the U.S. market. Kazakhstan and producers in Africa also came online, ramping up the use of cheaper and environmentally harmful extraction techniques, exacerbating a growing glut of inventory in global markets, depressing prices and creating more strain on a struggling U.S. uranium industry.

Uranium Resources

Uranium’s Future is Bound with Nuclear

Of the 442 nuclear units in the world, the United States operates 96 nuclear reactors – one-quarter of the global total – compared with 57 in units in France, 48 units in China, and 38 units in Russia. The U.S. fleet produces more electricity from nuclear energy than any other country – two times more than France, three times more than China, and four times more than Russia.

Nuclear energy dominance, however, may be shifting hemispheres. China has 44 reactors under construction and 168 planned. India has 14 reactors under construction and Russia has 24 under construction with as many planned. In contrast, the United States has just three reactors under construction and 18 planned.

Energy expert Jane Nakano points out that, while exporting nuclear materials to supply power plants is largely a private sector endeavor in the United States (though heavily regulated to mitigate proliferation risks), both Russia and China have state-owned or directed industries and are deploying aggressive export and overseas investment strategies with both commercial and foreign policy objectives. As these countries forge ahead with global partnerships, U.S. exports of natural and enriched uranium continue to decline as a share of global exports, dropping from 29 percent in 1994 to 3.4 percent in 2019.

Global Uranium Exports

From Fission to Fizzle

Nuclear generation capacity in the United States may decrease over the next decade depending on the life of existing reactors. Recent financial losses in the U.S. nuclear sector have led to shutdowns and scaling back of investments, further reducing opportunities for U.S. uranium.

Although global demand for nuclear power is projected to grow, especially in East Asia and the Middle East, that’s not necessarily good news for uranium mining and trade.

The OECD Nuclear Energy Agency and International Atomic Energy Agency produce a biannual Red Book, assessing the state of world supply in uranium. The 2018 Red Book indicated that identified recoverable uranium resources are sufficient to power the global nuclear reactor fleet at 2016 levels of installed nuclear capacity for the next 130 years.

Uranium exploration and mine development expenditures have been declining almost everywhere in the world in response to oversupply. At the same time, nuclear plants are being run more productively on fewer uranium resources.

The impact on the U.S. uranium industry is evident in its steep decline in production output. The U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA) reported uranium mining in the United States produced 78.9 tons in 2019, representing an 88 percent drop from 2018 production of 656.8 tons. It is the lowest output recorded since 1948. For context, 2019 production contributed 0.3 percent of the uranium fuel requirements for U.S. nuclear reactors. The remainder was supplied by foreign producers.

US uranium contribution to fuel US reactors

Good Chemistry

The near-total collapse of the industry prompted the few remaining U.S. uranium mining, milling, and producing companies to file a new Section 232 petition to the Trump administration in January 2018, asserting that reliance on imported uranium constitutes a threat to U.S. national security. U.S. nuclear energy and utility companies opposed new import tariffs, saying the strain of increased costs would threaten the viability of their own operations.

Although fuel for defense purposes is adequately supplied by government stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, the Secretary of Commerce rendered a finding in favor of the uranium industry. President Trump, however, made a choice that diverged from this recommendation and from his use of Section 232 tariffs to protect the U.S. steel and aluminum industries.

Instead, the President issued a memorandum in July 2019 establishing a Nuclear Fuel Working Group to develop recommendations about how to “reinvigorate the entire nuclear fuel supply chain.” In April this year, the working group issued a Strategy to Restore American Nuclear Energy Leadership.

The first step in the plan is a throwback to the Reagan era, creating a uranium reserve through which the Department of Energy will buy uranium directly from domestic mines and contract for uranium conversion services. As for trade restrictions, the Strategy supports the Department of Commerce measures to counter uranium imports from Russia that are “dumped” in the U.S. market at below fair market prices (representing no change from current trade policy). It also explicitly enables the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to deny imports of nuclear fuel fabricated in Russia or China on national security grounds.

US Strategy

Nuclear Options

The nuclear industry may represent the same or higher strategic importance to national security as the uranium industry. They are interconnected in the same way semiconductors provide brains to your smartwatch and to military weaponry, or the way rare earths drive hybrid cars as well as armored vehicles. They are emblematic of how U.S. industries are affected by global markets regardless of whether their sales are primarily domestic.

What the administration’s approach to the uranium Section 232 petition recognizes is that import tariffs to deliver temporary protections to one domestic industry inherently harm the American buyers of those inputs and the workers in downstream industries.

And, it recognizes that national defense relies on commercial companies to sustain its technology needs. However, the government as a sole buyer cannot support innovation or sales growth for private companies. U.S. companies benefit from tapping into fast-growing foreign markets to be profitable and to reinvest in innovation. It’s a balancing act. “Nuclear options” in trade policy ultimately damage both commercial and national security interests.

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Andrea Durkin is the Editor-in-Chief of TradeVistas and Founder of Sparkplug, LLC. Ms. Durkin previously served as a U.S. Government trade negotiator and has proudly taught international trade policy and negotiations for the last fifteen years as an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University’s Master of Science in Foreign Service program.

railway rail

France, Italy, and Austria Drive the European Railroad Rail Market

IndexBox has just published a new report: ‘EU – Railway Or Tramway Track Construction Material Of Iron Or Steel – Market Analysis, Forecast, Size, Trends and Insights’. Here is a summary of the report’s key findings.

In 2019, the EU market for railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel increased by 1.9% to $3.1B, rising for the third consecutive year after two years of decline. Overall, consumption continues to indicate a relatively flat trend pattern. The most prominent rate of growth was recorded in 2017 with an increase of 9% against the previous year. Over the period under review, the market hit record highs at $3.7B in 2008; however, from 2009 to 2019, consumption remained at a lower figure.

Consumption by Country

The countries with the highest volumes of consumption of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel in 2019 were France (463K tonnes), Italy (434K tonnes) and Germany (369K tonnes), together accounting for 40% of total consumption. These countries were followed by the UK, Poland, Austria, Spain, the Netherlands, Romania, Belgium, the Czech Republic and Luxembourg, which together accounted for a further 52%.

From 2007 to 2019, the most notable rate of growth in terms of consumption of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel, amongst the main consuming countries, was attained by France, Italy, and Austria, while consumption of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel for the other leaders experienced more modest paces of growth.

In value terms, the largest iron and steel railway construction materials markets in the European Union were France ($601M), Italy ($506M) and Germany ($333M), together accounting for 47% of the total market. These countries were followed by Spain, Austria, Poland, the Netherlands, Romania, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Czech Republic and the UK, which together accounted for a further 43%.

In 2019, the highest levels of per capita consumption of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel were registered in Luxembourg (108 kg per person), followed by Austria (30 kg per person), Belgium (9.15 kg per person) and the Netherlands (8.78 kg per person), while the world average per capita consumption of iron and steel railway construction materials was estimated at 6.13 kg per person.

From 2007 to 2019, the average annual growth rate of the per capita consumption of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel in Luxembourg totaled -3.5%. In the other countries, the average annual rates were as follows: Austria (+14.8% per year) and Belgium (+0.2% per year).

Production in the EU

In 2019, production of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel increased by 1.4% to 3.2M tonnes, rising for the second consecutive year after two years of decline. Overall, production, however, continues to indicate a relatively flat trend pattern. In value terms, production of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel expanded remarkably to $5.4B in 2019 estimated at export prices.

Production by Country

The countries with the highest volumes of production of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel in 2019 were Austria (718K tonnes), Poland (406K tonnes) and Spain (387K tonnes), with a combined 48% share of total production.

From 2007 to 2019, the most notable rate of growth in terms of production of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel, amongst the main producing countries, was attained by Poland, while the production of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel for the other leaders experienced more modest paces of growth.

Imports in the EU

For the third consecutive year, the European Union recorded growth in overseas purchases of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel, which increased by 4.9% to 1.4M tonnes in 2019. Total imports indicated a temperate increase from 2007 to 2019: its volume increased at an average annual rate of +2.2% over the last twelve-year period. The trend pattern, however, indicated some noticeable fluctuations being recorded throughout the analyzed period. Based on 2019 figures, imports increased by +32.8% against 2016 indices. Over the period under review, imports attained the peak figure in 2019 and are likely to see gradual growth in years to come. In value terms, imports of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel dropped to $1.3B (IndexBox estimates) in 2019.

Imports by Country

In 2019, Germany (314K tonnes), distantly followed by Italy (173K tonnes), France (155K tonnes), the UK (118K tonnes), Poland (88K tonnes) and Belgium (86K tonnes) were the major importers of railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel, together creating 69% of total imports. The Czech Republic (59K tonnes), Sweden (55K tonnes), Spain (55K tonnes), the Netherlands (35K tonnes), Hungary (33K tonnes) and Portugal (27K tonnes) occupied a minor share of total imports.

From 2007 to 2019, the most notable rate of growth in terms of purchases, amongst the leading importing countries, was attained by Italy, while imports for the other leaders experienced more modest paces of growth.

In value terms, Germany ($271M), Italy ($201M) and France ($126M) appeared to be the countries with the highest levels of imports in 2019, with a combined 45% share of total imports.

Import Prices by Country

The import price for railway or tramway track construction material of iron or steel in the European Union stood at $993 per tonne in 2019, falling by -11.2% against the previous year. Over the period under review, the import price showed a mild curtailment.

There were significant differences in the average prices amongst the major importing countries. In 2019, the country with the highest price was Hungary ($1,402 per tonne), while the UK ($655 per tonne) was amongst the lowest.

From 2007 to 2019, the most notable rate of growth in terms of prices was attained by Hungary, while the other leaders experienced a decline in the import price figures.

Source: IndexBox AI Platform

tariffs

Court of International Trade Receives its First Complaint Against Section 301 China Tariffs

On September 10, 2020, HMTX Industries LLC, along with Halstead New England Corporation, and Metroflor Corporation (importers of vinyl tile) filed a complaint (Ct. No. 20-00177) at the Court of International Trade (CIT) challenging both the substantive and procedural processes followed by the United States Trade Representative (USTR) when instituting Section 301 Tariffs on imports from China under List 3.

The List 3 tariffs went into effect on September 24, 2018. This is the first challenge of its kind filed against the administration’s use of Section 301 Tariffs in the ongoing trade war between the United States and China.

The complaint alleges that USTR’s institution of List 3 tariffs violated the Trade Act of 1974 on the grounds that USTR failed to make a determination or finding that there was an unfair trade practice that required a remedy and moreover, that List 3 tariffs were instituted beyond the 12-month time limit provided for in the governing statute (19 U.S.C. § 2414). The complaint also argues that the manner in which in the List 3 tariff action was implemented violated the Administrative Procedures Act (APA).

According to the complainants, USTR failed to provide adequate opportunity for comments, failed to consider relevant factors when making its decision (e.g. no analysis of increased burden on U.S. commerce from unfair trade practices), and failed to connect the record facts to the choices it made by not explaining how the comments received by USTR came to shape the final implementation of List 3.

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Nithya Nagarajan is a Washington-based partner with the law firm Husch Blackwell LLP. She practices in the International Trade & Supply Chain group of the firm’s Technology, Manufacturing & Transportation industry team.

Julia Banegas is an attorney in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington, D.C. office.

Turner Kim is an Assistant Trade Analyst in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington, D.C. office.

Camron Greer is an Assistant Trade Analyst in Husch Blackwell LLP’s Washington D.C. office.

corruption

TACKLING CORRUPTION IN THE TRADING SYSTEM THROUGH A CULTURE OF INTEGRITY

No Disagreement Here

For decades, economists have extolled the virtues of the rule of law as a critical factor in leveling the playing field through a framework of rules and regulations that are easy to understand and evenly, logically and fairly applied to all participants in an economic system. This central premise is reflected in the principle of “predictability through transparency,” one of three pillars of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the global trading system. At the heart of this focus has been an emphasis on reducing the role that corruption can play in the administration of laws, function of government, conduct of business, and protection of citizen rights.

Back in an October 1996 address to the Board of Governors at the Annual Meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, then World Bank President James Wolfensohn gave a groundbreaking speech in which he described corruption as a cancer and committed the Bank to strengthen its internal controls and supporting the international fight against corruption.

“…corruption diverts resources from the poor to the rich, increases the cost of running businesses, distorts public expenditures, and deters foreign investors…it erodes the constituency for aid programs and humanitarian relief.”

– James Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, October 1996

The Heavy Toll of Corruption

Significant attention has been paid to the goal of reducing corruption, particularly for emerging economies. The World Economic Forum calculates the global cost of corruption is at least $2.6 trillion, or roughly 5 percent of global GDP. For emerging economies alone, the UN estimates that corruption costs these countries some $1.2 trillion annually through bribery, theft and tax evasion.

Cost of Corruption

It is also widely recognized that global corruption can undermine the benefits of agreements negotiated to introduce predictability and transparency into the trading system. Former WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy described corruption in the international trading system as tantamount to “a hidden increase of the cost of trade.” Within the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the global community identified the promotion of the rule of law as a key priority for development through Goal 16, which is dedicated to promote just, peaceful and inclusive societies, and to achieve this goal by 2030.

Given the consensus among stakeholders within the international trade community, the question is: how to effectively combat corruption to achieve our shared goals of rules and laws that are applied objectively, consistently and equitably to all?

Since the time of Wolfensohn’s catalyzing speech, governments, the business community, civil society and international institutions have rallied around global efforts to create initiatives and mechanisms to mitigate the scourge of corruption. Member states and international organizations drafted and signed anti-corruption conventions through the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the United Nations (UN), and established regional conventions and working groups in Africa, the Americas and Asia.

Corruption Agreements Table

A Comprehensive Approach to Dismantling Corruption

In spite of the proliferation of anti-corruption instruments in regional and international organizations, the issue of corruption persists as a challenge. Punitive measures only go so far in achieving anti-corruption aims. A more comprehensive approach to dismantling corruption centers on enhancing integrity and ethics in an effort to affect the cultural practices and norms that perpetuate corruption.

This change was reflected in the 2017 OECD Recommendation of the Council on Public Integrity that reframed the anti-corruption strategy to focus on promoting the essential societal pillar of integrity as a sustainable response to the global problem of corruption. The adoption of these recommendations was part of a deliberate shift to go beyond ad hoc efforts toward a more comprehensive and strategic approach to promoting integrity through systems, culture, and accountability.

Defining Public Integrity

The OECD defines the term public integrity as “a consistent alignment of, and adherence to, shared ethical values, principles and norms for upholding and prioritizing the public interest.” Consistent with describing public integrity as an aspirational goal (versus the punitive connotation of combatting corruption), this definition grounds the work of promoting integrity in global efforts to make government functions more effective, economies more accountable, and societies more inclusive by involving all stakeholders in the effort to improve governance and strengthen the rule of law.

In May, the OECD took the next step in publishing the OECD Public Integrity Handbook. The handbook details best practices, principles and concrete actions for promoting a culture of integrity in government functions with an emphasis on generating dialogue between business, government and civil society to promote greater stakeholder collaboration in upholding public integrity values. The report expands on the 13 public integrity recommendations articulated in 2017 and goes a step further by translating those principles into practical measures governments can implement to institute change.

The OECD describes the handbook as a roadmap to help governments identify what integrity looks like and why it is important to take a whole-of-society approach in building public trust. The handbook can thus be viewed as a toolkit that helps anti-corruption advocates undertake the hard work of creating the ‘right relationship’ between government, citizens, business, and civil society.

Public Integrity

Public Integrity is Important to Trade and Investment Flows

International organizations and governments are not the only institutions concerned about combatting corruption, creating a culture of integrity, and strengthening the rule of law.

These issues are equally significant for the private sector in an increasingly globalized world as they are determinant of the business environment. This is why trade agreements have been grounded in rule of law principles, and have incorporated transparency and anti-corruption components to instill investors with greater confidence they can compete and operate in global markets. As noted by The World Justice Project, “uneven enforcement of regulations, corruption, insecure property rights, and ineffective means to settle disputes undermine legitimate business and deter both domestic and foreign investment.”

Companies make trade and investment decisions based on where they have confidence in the integrity of public and private institutions and where there is fairness, enforcement and proper adjudication of the law. In a 2017 Business Pulse Survey conducted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Association of American Chambers of Commerce in Latin America and the Caribbean, 31 percent of respondents described the rule of law as the “most important” issue to address for business, while 45 percent of executives characterized strengthening the rule of law and fighting corruption as the most important issues to be addressed to enhance economic growth in the region.

Corruption Quote

It is this emphasis on promoting public integrity that underpinned the inclusion of an anti-corruption chapter in the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) that entered into force on July 1, 2020, representing one of the first times governments have formally committed to combat bribery and corruption in a trade agreement. The private sector has also prioritized an anti-corruption component in the bilateral trade negotiations now underway between Brazil and the United States.

Given the private sector’s interest in eliminating corruption from global trade, the U.S. Chamber recently co-hosted a public forum with the OECD entitled “The Role of Public Integrity in Promoting the Rule of Law” to examine the importance of the public integrity movement for global commerce. Julio Bacio Terracino, Acting Head of the OECD’s Public Sector Integrity Division, joined government officials, senior executives and the U.S. Chamber for a dialogue to review the OECD recommendations, discuss practical considerations outlined in the new handbook, and examine how tools like this are helpful in creating trade and investment conditions that enable business success.

Public Integrity through the Private Sector Prism

There are a number of public-private interactions the OECD has flagged as vulnerable to corruption or solicitation of bribes, notably in customs clearance and trade facilitation, public procurement, licensing and permitting processes, and public infrastructure contracting. During the forum, executives highlighted the critical role that governments play in creating the conditions for trade and investment by leveling the playing field for all actors, creating certainty, operating transparently, upholding the sanctity of contracts, and enabling access to justice.

Through its Coalition for the Rule of Law in Global Markets, the U.S. Chamber defines the concept of the rule of law through the prism of the private sector by articulating the five factors that determine the ability of any business to make good investment and operating decisions. These elements are transparency, predictability, stability, accountability and due process — each of which requires adherence to the shared ethical values, principles and norms that define public integrity.

The whole-of-society focus of the OECD Public Integrity Handbook recognizes the private sector’s role as a co-creator of the rule of law and acknowledges that all facets of society must commit and contribute to building a culture of integrity. This approach aligns with the Coalition’s vision of business working in concert with governments, civil society, and international organizations to promote remedies that will advance the rule of law.

Fostering a culture of integrity in the global trading system that enables inclusive economic growth requires all actors to take concrete steps to maintain open, transparent and meritocratic environments where there is proper enforcement and adjudication of the law. These actions include addressing structural obstacles to trade and investment, simplifying regulatory frameworks, harnessing technology to increase transparency in public functions like procurement, permitting and licensing processes, supporting trade facilitation efforts that strengthen and make customs regimes more efficient, and extending legal investment protections. It is only through this collaborative action and partnership among all stakeholders that a world where corruption is vanquished and a culture of integrity thrives can truly be possible.

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Kendra Gaither

Kendra Gaither is the Executive Director of the Coalition for the Rule of Law in Global Markets at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Over her career spanning two decades, Kendra has specialized in international trade and investment as a career diplomat with the State Department focused working in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas, and global public policy innovation through strategic partnerships at Carnegie Mellon University.

This article originally appeared on TradeVistas.org. Republished with permission.