国际商会世界商会联合会
(2012-12-06 00:55:10)
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杂谈 |
分类: 经济-金融-资本-证券-基金 |
ICC (International Chamber of Commerce) is the voice of world
business championing the global economy as a force for economic
growth, job creation and prosperity.
Because national economies are now so closely interwoven,
government decisions have far stronger international repercussions
than in the past.
ICC - the world's only truly global business organization responds
by being more assertive in expressing business views.
ICC activities cover a broad spectrum, from arbitration and dispute
resolution to making the case for open trade and the market economy
system, business self-regulation, fighting corruption or combating
commercial crime.
ICC has direct access to national governments all over the world
through its national committees. The organization's Paris-based
international secretariat feeds business views into
intergovernmental organizations on issues that directly affect
business operations.
Setting rules and standards
Arbitration under the rules of the ICC International Court of
Arbitration is on the increase. Since 1999, the Court has received
new cases at a rate of more than 500 a year.
ICC's Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (UCP
600) are the rules that banks apply to finance billions of dollars
worth of world trade every year.
ICC Incoterms® are standard international trade definitions used
every day in countless thousands of contracts. ICC model contracts
make life easier for small companies that cannot afford big legal
departments.
ICC is a pioneer in business self-regulation of e-commerce. ICC
codes on advertising and marketing are frequently reflected in
national legislation and the codes of professional
associations.
Promoting growth and prosperity
ICC supports government efforts to make a success of the Doha trade
round. ICC provides world business recommendations to the World
Trade Organization.
ICC speaks for world business when governments take up such issues
as intellectual property rights, transport policy, trade law or the
environment.
Signed articles by ICC leaders in major newspapers and radio and TV
interviews reinforce the ICC stance on trade, investment and other
business topics.
Every year, the ICC Presidency meets with the leader of the G8 host
country to provide business input to the summit.
ICC is the main business partner of the United Nations and its
agencies.
Spreading business expertise
At UN summits on sustainable development, financing for development
and the information society, ICC spearheads the business
contribution.
Together with the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD), ICC helps some of the world's poorest
countries to attract foreign direct investment.
In partnership with UNCTAD, ICC has set up an Investment Advisory
Council for the least-developed countries.
ICC mobilizes business support for the New Partnership for Africa's
Development. At ICC World Congresses every two years, business
executives tackle the most urgent international economic
issues.
The World Chambers Congress, also biennial, provides a global forum
for chambers of commerce.
Regular ICC regional con-ferences focus on the concerns of business
in Africa, Asia, the Arab World and Latin America.
Advocate for international business
ICC speaks for world business whenever governments make decisions
that crucially affect corporate strategies and the bottom
line.
ICC's advocacy has never been more relevant to the interests of
thousands of member companies and business associations in every
part of the world.
Equally vital is ICC's role in forging internationally agreed rules
and standards that companies adopt voluntarily and can be
incorporated in binding contracts.
ICC provides business input to the United Nations, the World Trade
Organization, and many other intergovernmental bodies, both
international and regional.
For information on how to join ICC and ensure your company exerts
influence where it counts, contact ICC Membership Department in
Parisby Emailor telephone +33 (0)1 49 53 28 49 .
History of the International Chamber of Commerce
The ICC's origins
The International Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1919 with an
overriding aim that remains unchanged: to serve world business by
promoting trade and investment, open markets for goods and
services, and the free flow of capital.
Much of ICC's initial impetus came from its first president,
Etienne Clémentel, a former French minister of commerce. Under his
influence, the organization's international secretariat was
established in Paris and he was instrumental in creating the ICC
International Court of Arbitration in 1923.
ICC has evolved beyond recognition since those early post-war days
when business leaders from the allied nations met for the first
time in Atlantic City. The original nucleus, representing the
private sectors of Belgium, Britain, France, Italy and the United
States, has expanded to become a world business organization with
thousands of member companies and associations in around 120
countries. Members include many of the world's most influential
companies and represent every major industrial and service
sector.
The voice of international business
Traditionally, ICC has acted on behalf of business in making
representations to governments and intergovernmental organizations.
Three prominent ICC members served on the Dawes Commission which
forged the international treaty on war reparations in 1924, seen as
a breakthrough in international relations at the time.
A year after the creation of the United Nations in San Francisco in
1945, ICC was granted the highest level consultative status with
the UN and its specialized agencies. Ever since, it has ensured
that the international business view receives due weight within the
UN system and before intergovernmental bodies and meetings such as
the G20 and G8 where decisions affecting the conduct of business
are made.
Defender of the multilateral trading system
ICC's reach - and the complexity of its work - have kept pace with
the globalization of business and technology. In the 1920s ICC
focused on reparations and war debts. A decade later, it struggled
vainly through the years of depression to hold back the tide of
protectionism and economic nationalism. After war came in 1939, ICC
assured continuity by transferring its operations to neutral
Sweden.
In the post-war years, ICC remained a diligent defender of the open
multilateral trading system. As membership grew to include more and
more countries of the developing world, the organization stepped up
demands for the opening of world markets to the products of
developing countries. ICC continues to argue that trade is better
than aid.
In the 1980s and the early 1990s, ICC resisted the resurgence of
protectionism in new guises such as reciprocal trading
arrangements, voluntary export restraints and curbs introduced
under the euphemism of "managed trade".
Challenges of the 21st Century
After the disintegration of communism in eastern Europe and the
former Soviet Union, ICC faced fresh challenges as the free market
system won wider acceptance than ever before, and countries that
had hitherto relied on state intervention switched to privatization
and economic liberalization. As the world enters the 21st century,
ICC is building a stronger presence in Asia, Africa, Latin America,
the Middle East, and the emerging economies of eastern and central
Europe.
Today, 13 ICC commissions of experts from the private sector cover
every specialized field of concern to international business.
Subjects range from banking techniques to financial services and
taxation, from competition law to intellectual property rights,
telecommunications and information technology, from air and
maritime transport to international investment regimes and trade
policy.
Self-regulation is a common thread running through the work of the
commissions. The conviction that business operates most effectively
with a minimum of government intervention inspired ICC's voluntary
codes. Marketing codes cover sponsoring, advertising practice,
sales promotion, marketing and social research, direct sales
practice, and marketing on the Internet. Launched in 1991, ICC's
Business Charter for Sustainable Development provides 16 principles
for good environmental conduct that have been endorsed by more than
2300 companies and business associations.
Practical services to business
The first Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits came
out in 1933 and the latest version, UCP 600, came into effect in
January 1994. These rules are used by banks throughout the world. A
supplement to UCP 600, called the eUCP, was added in 2002 to deal
with the presentation of all electronic or part electronic
documents. In 1936, the first nine Incoterms® were published,
providing standard definitions of universally employed terms like
Ex quay, CIF and FOB, and whenever necessary they are revised.
Incoterms® 2010 came into force on 1 January 2011.
In 1950 the International Bureau of Chambers of Commerce (IBCC) was
created. It quickly became a focal point for cooperation between
chambers of commerce in developing and industrial countries, and
took on added importance as chambers of commerce of transition
economies responded to the stimulus of the market economy. In 2001,
on the occasion of the 2nd World Chambers Congress in Korea, IBCC
was renamed the World Chambers Federation (WCF), clarifying WCF as
the world business organization's department for chamber of
commerce affairs. WCF also administers the ATA Carnet system for
temporary duty-free imports, a service delivered by chambers of
commerce, which started in 1958 and is now operating in over 68
countries.
Another ICC service, the Institute for World Business Law was
created in 1979 to study legal issues relating to international
business. At the Cannes film festival every year, the Institute
holds a conference on audiovisual law.
The fight against commercial crime
In the early 1980s, ICC set up three London-based services to
combat commercial crime: the International Maritime Bureau, dealing
with all types of maritime crime; the Counterfeiting Intelligence
Bureau; and the Financial Investigation Bureau. A cybercrime unit
was added in 1998. An umbrella organization, ICC Commercial Crime
Services, coordinates the activities of the specialized anti-crime
services.
All these activities fulfil the pledge made in a key article of the
ICC's constitution: "to assure effective and consistent action in
the economic and legal fields in order to contribute to the
harmonious growth and the freedom of international
commerce."
国际商会的英文全称是International Chamber
ofCommerce,简称ICC,成立于1919年,总部设在巴黎,是世界上重要的民间经贸组织,是联合国(微博)的一级咨询机构。国际商会(ICC)与其他许多重要的国际组织,如世界贸易组织(WTO)、联合国贸易和发展会议(UNCTAD)、八国集团(G8)、二十国集团(G20)、世界经济合作及发展组织(OECD),欧盟(EU)等保持着长期密切的合作关系,对这些机构和组织制定的有关经济政策提出重要的意见和建议。
国际商会致力于在经济和法律领域内以有效地行动促进国际贸易和投资的发展,为全球商界提供服务。国际经贸规则制定、争议解决、政策代言是国际商会对全球商界服务的三大体系,国际仲裁、临时进出口单证系统、世界贸易信息网、出版物发行等是其服务全球商界的具体手段。这些都极大地便利和推动了国际经贸的健康发展。
国际商会在全球90多个国家设有国家委员会,拥有来自130多个国家和地区的各类型的会员单位,这些会员单位多是各国和各地区从事国际经贸活动的中坚组织。国际商会在中国的国家委员会,即国际商会中国国家委员会(ICC China)的是国际商会在中国的唯一代表机构。