The Jacques Delors Institute is a partner of the Global Trade Series organised by AIG, with the participation of Chatham House, Georgetown Law Institute of International Economic Law, Clingendael Institute, the Bertelsmann Foundation, the National University of Singapore and the International Chamber of Commerce.
Three conferences organised in 2020 in Washington, Paris and Singapore, will explore how the United States, Europe and Asia cope with this intense period of uncertainty, which generates a global trade system that is fragmenting and integrating at the same time. With US elections approaching, a new European Commission in office, and Asia grappling with geopolitical tensions, this is an important moment to bring together policymakers, business representatives and trade experts to reflect on what comes next for global trade and how a constructive agenda can be moved forward.
The Washington conference will notably welcome a keynote speech from Phil Hogan, Commissioner for trade.
Paris and Singapore conferences have been postponed to the fall 2020. Contact : Elvire Fabry, Senior Research Fellow, fabry@delorsinstitute.eu
Rupture or Reorder?
Where next for US trade policy, Europe and the Americas?
8:15 Registration & Coffee/Tea
8:40 Welcome: Darren Trigonoplos, Vice President & Head of Federal Government Affairs, AIG; Marie Kasperek, Chief Operating Officer, Director, Institute of International Economic Law
8:45 Opening Remarks: Rodrigo Yañez, Undersecretary of International Economic Relations, Chile
9:05 G2 Keynote Address: Phil Hogan, Commissioner for Trade, European Commission
Q&A Moderator: Chris Brummer, Faculty Director, Institute of International Economic Law; Agnes N. Williams, Research Professor; Professor of Law, Georgetown Law
9:55 Session 1: Boiling over or cooling down: transatlantic trade ties in an election year
How can a downward spiral in transatlantic trade ties be avoided and positive momentum be found? Is Europe taking a more muscular approach to trade, and what does it mean? Are the US and Europe moving in separate directions on international trade?
Moderator: Rem Korteweg, Senior Research Fellow, Clingendael Institute
Marjorie Chorlins, Senior Vice President for European Affairs, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Duncan Edwards, Chief Executive Officer, British American Business
Daniel Mullaney, Assistant United States Trade Representative for Europe and the Middle East, Office of the United States Trade Representative
Rupert Schlegelmilch, Director, Neighbouring countries, USA and Canada, Directorate General for Trade, European Commission
10:50 Coffee/Tea break
11:00 Session 2: Trade and Politics: Is there a pathway to consensus on trade?
What is the role of trade in the US election campaigns? What can be learned from overwhelming Congressional support for USMCA? What to expect from the next four years?
Moderator: Ana Swanson, Journalist, New York Times
Beth Baltzan, Fellow, Open Markets Institute; former Democratic Counsel to the House Ways and Means Subcommittee
Chris Barnes, Cofounder, Center for Survey Research and Analysis, University of Connecticut; Managing Director, Financial Services Research Division, Escalent
Andreas Esche, Director, Programme Megatrends, Bertelsmann Foundation
Jennifer Hillman, Professor of Practice, Georgetown Law
12:00 Session 3: Talking about the neighbourhood: what is the future for trade in the Americas?
What are the trade priorities of Canada, Brazil and other states in the Americas? What do they expect from the United States? And is trade helping or hurting equality and economic convergence in the region?
Moderator: Marianne Schneider-Petsinger, Research Fellow, US and the Americas Programme, Chatham House
Earl Anthony Wayne, Former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico; Advisory Board Co-Chair, Mexico Institute, Wilson Center
Braz Baracuhy, Minister-Counsellor, Permanent Mission of Brazil to the World Trade Organization
Nadia Bourély, Minister-Counsellor (Economic and Trade Policy), Embassy of Canada to the United States
Rufus Yerxa, President, National Foreign Trade Council
13:00 Lunch
13:30 Session 4: The G2 Debrief: Has Trade “Changed”? A Look at New and Revised Treaty Provisions
“Trade Treaty Innovations under Trump”
What substantive treaty provisions have changed in the last four years, looking across all of the trade deals struck to date in the last four years (from USMCA, bilaterals with Korea, Japan and China, to demise of WTO AB as “WTO reform” etc.)? How meaningful are changes substantively and economically—and do they comprise new innovations in the practice of international trade law?
Moderator: Joost Pauwelyn, Professor of International Law, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Visiting Professor at Georgetown Law
Kathleen Claussen, Associate Professor of Law, University of Miami School of Law; Senior Fellow, Georgetown Law’s Institute of International Economic Law
Jennifer Hillman, Professor from Practice, Georgetown Law
Simon Lester, Associate Director, Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies, Cato Institute
Clete Willems, Partner, Akin Gump; former Special Assistant to the President for International Trade, Investment, and Development, The White House
14:30 Ends
Rupture or Reorder?
Where next for US trade policy, Europe and the Americas?
8:15 Registration & Coffee/Tea
8:40 Welcome: Darren Trigonoplos, Vice President & Head of Federal Government Affairs, AIG; Marie Kasperek, Chief Operating Officer, Director, Institute of International Economic Law
8:45 Opening Remarks: Rodrigo Yañez, Undersecretary of International Economic Relations, Chile
9:05 G2 Keynote Address: Phil Hogan, Commissioner for Trade, European Commission
Q&A Moderator: Chris Brummer, Faculty Director, Institute of International Economic Law; Agnes N. Williams, Research Professor; Professor of Law, Georgetown Law
9:55 Session 1: Boiling over or cooling down: transatlantic trade ties in an election year
How can a downward spiral in transatlantic trade ties be avoided and positive momentum be found? Is Europe taking a more muscular approach to trade, and what does it mean? Are the US and Europe moving in separate directions on international trade?
Moderator: Rem Korteweg, Senior Research Fellow, Clingendael Institute
Marjorie Chorlins, Senior Vice President for European Affairs, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Duncan Edwards, Chief Executive Officer, British American Business
Daniel Mullaney, Assistant United States Trade Representative for Europe and the Middle East, Office of the United States Trade Representative
Rupert Schlegelmilch, Director, Neighbouring countries, USA and Canada, Directorate General for Trade, European Commission
10:50 Coffee/Tea break
11:00 Session 2: Trade and Politics: Is there a pathway to consensus on trade?
What is the role of trade in the US election campaigns? What can be learned from overwhelming Congressional support for USMCA? What to expect from the next four years?
Moderator: Ana Swanson, Journalist, New York Times
Beth Baltzan, Fellow, Open Markets Institute; former Democratic Counsel to the House Ways and Means Subcommittee
Chris Barnes, Cofounder, Center for Survey Research and Analysis, University of Connecticut; Managing Director, Financial Services Research Division, Escalent
Andreas Esche, Director, Programme Megatrends, Bertelsmann Foundation
Jennifer Hillman, Professor of Practice, Georgetown Law
12:00 Session 3: Talking about the neighbourhood: what is the future for trade in the Americas?
What are the trade priorities of Canada, Brazil and other states in the Americas? What do they expect from the United States? And is trade helping or hurting equality and economic convergence in the region?
Moderator: Marianne Schneider-Petsinger, Research Fellow, US and the Americas Programme, Chatham House
Earl Anthony Wayne, Former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico; Advisory Board Co-Chair, Mexico Institute, Wilson Center
Braz Baracuhy, Minister-Counsellor, Permanent Mission of Brazil to the World Trade Organization
Nadia Bourély, Minister-Counsellor (Economic and Trade Policy), Embassy of Canada to the United States
Rufus Yerxa, President, National Foreign Trade Council
13:00 Lunch
13:30 Session 4: The G2 Debrief: Has Trade “Changed”? A Look at New and Revised Treaty Provisions
“Trade Treaty Innovations under Trump”
What substantive treaty provisions have changed in the last four years, looking across all of the trade deals struck to date in the last four years (from USMCA, bilaterals with Korea, Japan and China, to demise of WTO AB as “WTO reform” etc.)? How meaningful are changes substantively and economically—and do they comprise new innovations in the practice of international trade law?
Moderator: Joost Pauwelyn, Professor of International Law, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Visiting Professor at Georgetown Law
Kathleen Claussen, Associate Professor of Law, University of Miami School of Law; Senior Fellow, Georgetown Law’s Institute of International Economic Law
Jennifer Hillman, Professor from Practice, Georgetown Law
Simon Lester, Associate Director, Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies, Cato Institute
Clete Willems, Partner, Akin Gump; former Special Assistant to the President for International Trade, Investment, and Development, The White House
14:30 Ends
USA
Washington
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
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MÉDIAS
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L’acier et l’aluminium réchauffent les relations transatlantiques

ÉVÉNEMENTS
EVENTS
Euroquestions | EU-China relations: rivals, competitors, partners? [FR]

Euroquestions | Which European response to the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)?

Académie Notre Europe – L’Europe Commerciale et de la Défense

WEBINAR | What do we need a World Trade Organization for?

WEBINAR | A European Border Carbon Adjustment proposal

Greening the EU trade policy

AmCham Confidential

Tunis, 3 may 2019 — Tunisia’s challenges and responses to threats to multilateralism

Madrid, 10 April 2019 – European Think Thank Summit

Paris, 10 January 2019 – The EU and the new silk roads

3 December 2018 – Is Brexit Reversible?

Brussels, 27 November 2018 – EU Trade Policy Day

Bordeaux, 23 November 2018 – EU trade policy: can we control globalization?

Brussels, 16 October 2018 – EU trade policy in 2019 and beyond

Paris, 15 October 2018 – Will the EU become a world power?

Paris, 10 October 2018 – What is Europe for? Myths and realities

Paris, 3 October 2018 – Beyond Trade Wars: From Free Trade to Fair Trade

Paris, 21 September 2018 – Trump, Brexit and the new challenges of European trade policy: is the European response adapted?

Paris, 12 September 2018 – Presentation of the book “L’économie mondiale 2019” of the CEPII

Brussels, 22 June 2018 – The multipolar world order, the EU and the multilateral system

Clichy, 19 June 2018 – How to make Europe the world economic leader?

Paris, 11 June 2018 – Round table on Brexit

Brussels, 8 June 2018 – EU Trade policy in a multilateral trading system under threat

Paris, 1st June 2018 – European Trade Policy

Strovolos, 1 June 2018 – Annual Lecture in Economics: Harnessing Globalisation

Berlin, 28 May 2018 – Global Solutions Summit

Paris, 16 May 2018 – Global Markets

Paris, 24 April 2018 – Trump, Brexit: Globalisation in crisis?

Paris, 12 April 2018 – France and Europe in globalisation

Beijing, 11 April 2018 – The new Reform Agenda : Government vs. the Market

Beijing, 11 April 2018 – Reform of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs)

Paris, 4 April 2018 – Brexit : last months of negotiation

Beijing, 26 March 2018 – Will the World Fight a Trade War?

Beijing, 25 March 2018 – Pursuing Opening-up on All Fronts

Beijing, 24 March 2018 – A New Agenda for the World Economy

Paris, 15 March 2018 – A year before Brexit: What to do? How to do it?

Brussels, 23 February 2018 – CEPS Idea Lab

Geneva, 19 February 2018 – Trade: Headwinds or Maelstrom?

Paris, 15 February 2018 – Green Controversy

The Hague, 25 January 2018 – Managing Globalisation – EU Trade Policy in the Trump Era

London, 18 January 2018 – Launch of the Trade Knowledge Exchange

Brussels, 30 November 2017 – The Future of EU Trade Policy

Paris, 29 November 2017 – The new Political Economy of the European trade policy

Paris, 22 November 2017 – Between free-trade and a protectionist temptation

Le Chesnay, 20 May 2017 – Trump and the future of the European trade policy

Brussels, 24 January 2017 – The Future of the Trade

Paris, 14 December 2016 – What future for international trade?

Beijing, 2 Decembre 2016 – The Challenges of World Trade

Brussels, 6 September 2016 – New generation of free trade agreements: the challenges for the future?

Alpbach, 29 August 2016 – Boosting Trade and Protecting the Earth: A Catch 22 for the 21st Century?

Paris, 5th July 2016 – Will TTIP and CETA help SMEs to get into the US and Canadian Markets?

Paris, 14 June 2016 – TTIP: a dangerous project or a partnership for the future?

London, 7 June 2016 – 2016 and the politics of trade and globalisation

Paris, 19 April 2016 – Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership – TTIP : Myths and Realities
