The Corporate Co-optation of the UN
Corporate Europe Observatory
The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) represents the largest transnational
corporations on Earth, including General Motors, Novartis, Bayer and Nestle. The
ICC, which for many years has pushed for global economic deregulation within the
World Trade Organization (WTO), the G-7 (now the G-8, with the inclusion of
Russia) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD),
now has its sights set on the United Nations.
"The way the United Nations regards international business has changed
fundamentally. This shift towards a stance more favorable to business is being
nurtured from the very top", ICC Secretary General Maria Livanos Cattaui wrote
in an International Herald Tribune column this February. Cattaui quoted UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan in saying that the time is ripe for consultation
between the UN and business.
The UN's pro-business shift was heralded by a February 9 meeting of 25 ICC
business leaders with a heavyweight UN delegation headed by Kofi Annan. The ICC
delegation included representatives of Coca Cola, Unilever, McDonalds, Goldman
Sachs and Rio Tinto Zinc. Following the meeting, the ICC and the Secretary
General issued a joint statement declaring that "broad political and economic
changes have opened up new opportunities for dialogue and cooperation between
the United Nations and the private sector" and committing the two entities to
"forge a close global partnership to secure greater business input into the
world's economic decision-making and boost the private sector in the least
developed countries." The industry representatives used the occasion to call for
"establishing an effective regulatory framework for globalization."
At the February consultation, the ICC and the UN's Center for Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) agreed to co-produce a series of investment guides to
provide "comparative information on investment opportunities" in the world's 48
"least developed'" countries, 38 of which are African.
A March 1998 joint ICC/UNCTAD survey of 198 Ttransnational corporations
(TNCs) revealed that 34 percent of European firms and 19 percent of US and
Japan-based companies plan to increase investment activities in Asia. A senior
UNCTAD spokesperson explained the attraction: "the lower costs for
multinationals in the most affected countries."
Geneva Business Dialogue
The ICC's Geneva Business Dialogue (GBD), set for September 23-24, will "bring
together the heads of international companies and the leaders of international
organizations so that business experiences and expertise is channeled into the
decision-making process for the global economy," according to an ICC press
release.
The ICC boasts that the meeting "is welcomed at the highest level of the
World Trade Organization, the United Nations system and other international
bodies." GBD attendees will include EU Commissioner Yves-Thibault de Silguy, WTO
Director-General Renato de Ruggiero, high-level officials from the World Bank
and the Industrial Standards Organization, as well as presidents, prime
ministers and other top ministers from the US, Finland, Hungary, Thailand and
Switzerland. Business will be represented by CEOs from Unilever, ICI,
Mitsubishi, Goldman Sachs, Lyonnaise des Eaux, Norsk Hydro, Siemens, BASF, Shell
and many other global corporations. The high-level UN attendees will include
UNCTAD Secretary-General Rubens Ricupero and UN Under-Secretary General Vladimir
Petrovsky. Secretary-General Annan will address the GBD via satellite.
Maucher's Ambitions
The ICC bid for a "partnership" with the UN is the result of ICC President
Helmut Maucher's concern over the growing impact of environmental and human
rights NGOs within the UN system. In one of his first interviews as ICC
president, Maucher (who is also a leader of the European Roundtable of
Industrialists) warned: "We have to be careful that they [the environmental and
human rights activists] do not get too much influence".
The ICC, "as the only organization qualified to speak for every business
sector in all parts of the world," is pushing for the implementation of "a
framework of global rules" which it plans to help draft. "Governments have to
understand," Maucher argues, "that business is not just another pressure group
but a resource that will help them set the right rules".
Maucher's ambitions for the ICC include formal status within the WTO: "We
want neither to be the secret girlfriend of the WTO, nor should the ICC have to
enter the World Trade Organization through the servants' entrance."
Shared Vision?
The UN seems to have given up worrying about the growing economic dominance of
transnational corporations. Until 1993, the UN still had its Center on
Transnational Corporations (UNCTC) which carried out research for the Commission
on Transnational Corporations, an intergovernmental body with the mandate of
developing a Code of Conduct for TNCs.
Corporations were extremely hostile to the UNCTC, which also developed
environmental guidelines for TNCs and favored investment sanctions against South
Africa during apartheid. In 1993, the UNCTC was dismantled as part of a
'reorganization', and replaced by UNCTAD. UNCTAD, however, does not address the
regulation of TNC activities, but rather works closely with them in order to
stimulate foreign investment in the Third World. Work on the Code of Conduct has
stopped entirely.
Despite its grandiose claims, the ICC does not represent all businesses -
only the largest transnational corporations. The interests of these footloose
global players differ significantly from those of local and regional businesses
oriented towardl ocal markets.
It is wrong for corporations (which are supposed to compete, adapt and
diversify) to organize themselves into a global political monopoly Instead of
calling for "global regulation," corporations should be required to respect
local, national and global rules shaped by democratically elected governments
assisted by citizens organizations.
Corporate Observatory Europe, c/o A SEED Europe Office, PO Box 92066 1090 AB
Amsterdam, The Netherlands; e-mail;
website.