Trade Agreements
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As other nations race to achieve their own market-opening trade deals, the United States cannot be left behind. The U.S. Chamber is dedicated to pursuing new trade and investment agreements that uphold and improve our standard of living and our standing in the world. Trade agreements must establish high standards, protect American innovation, and be fully enforceable.
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The Interagency Labor Committee of Monitoring and Enforcement recently released guidelines for the USMCA’s Rapid Respond Labor Mechanism, including three major changes.
The U.S. must work with allies and partners to push forward a vision for digital trade that can secure opportunities for American workers, small businesses, services industries, and others.
This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the Senate Committees on Foreign Relations and on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, and the House Committees on Foreign Affairs and on Financial Services, urging protection from lawsuits for U.S. companies who have complied in good faith with sanctions on Russia.
This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the House Committee on Appropriations, on the Fiscal Year 2024 State, Foreign Operations, And Related Programs Bill.
Expediting customs procedures and cutting red tape at borders could be a valuable win in the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework talks.
No two other regions in the world are as deeply integrated as the U.S. and Europe.
The world is charging ahead in pursuit of new market-opening trade agreements, but in recent years Washington policymakers have been sitting on the sidelines. Here is why America must lead on trade.
Business groups urge the Biden administration to address the EU’s discriminatory digital regulatory agenda with the same tenacity that European officials have deployed in raising their concerns with elements of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).