Contact Information: CONTACTS: Jonathan Huneke USCIB +1 212 703 5043 jhuneke@uscib.org Dawn Chardonnal ICC +33 1 4953 2907 dcl@iccwbo.org
World Business Community Calls on G8 to Avoid Economic Nationalism
| Source: USCIB
ROME and NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - June 12, 2009) - The G8 summit should resist pressures
to resort to economic nationalism and should further strengthen
international cooperation to meet the challenges posed by the global
recession, climate change and product counterfeiting, the International
Chamber of Commerce (ICC) urged Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
today.
The Paris-based ICC is the largest, most representative private-sector
association in the world, with hundreds of thousands of member companies in
over 130 countries. The United States Council for International Business
(USCIB), based in New York, serves as ICC's American national committee.
"We stressed to the prime minister the importance of resisting
protectionist pressures, which would only lead to a deeper and longer world
recession," ICC Honorary Chairman Marcus Wallenberg said following the
private session.
"With the world as economically integrated as it has become over recent
decades, any lurch into economic nationalism would dislocate commercial
activity even further," Mr. Wallenberg added.
Meetings between the host of the annual G8 summit and the ICC leadership
have become traditional and allow the views of the world business community
to be presented at the highest levels. The business views were also
detailed in a six-page statement (available at http://tinyurl.com/mwa3m9),
which was given to Mr. Berlusconi at the meeting.
In addition to Mr. Wallenberg, the delegation included ICC Vice Chairman
Rajat Gupta, senior partner emeritus of McKinsey & Company, and Andrea
Tomat, chairman of ICC Italy and CEO of Lotto Sport Italia.
The ICC delegation cited the urgent need to increase trade finance and
complete the long-stalled Doha Round of trade negotiations. ICC's
statement also contains detailed business recommendations on climate change
as well as fighting counterfeiting and piracy.
USCIB promotes international engagement and regulatory prudence in support
of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development
and corporate responsibility. Its members include top U.S.-based global
companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy,
and with operations in every region of the world. With a unique global
network encompassing leading international business organizations,
including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and
regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international
trade and investment. More information is available at www.uscib.org