| | Bureau of Economic and Business AffairsThe Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs (EB) formulates and carries out U.S. foreign economic policy, integrating U.S. economic interests with our foreign policy goals so that U.S. firms and investors can compete on an equal basis with their counterparts overseas. It implements American economic policy in cooperation with U.S. companies, U.S. Government agencies, and other organizations. Under the direction of Assistant Secretary E. Anthony Wayne, the bureau negotiates agreements with foreign governments and advances U.S. positions in such international organizations as the International Monetary Fund or World Trade Organization. EB officers:
- Work with the World Trade Organization to establish fair rules of international trade
- Lead U.S. negotiations on bilateral civil aviation treaties
- Negotiate bilateral and regional investment treaties in partnership with USTR
- Combat bribery in international commerce;
- Negotiate debt relief with debtor countries;
- Coordinate issues related to economic sanctions; and
- Foster energy security.
The EB Bureau's organizational structure consists of five units, each headed by a Deputy Assistant Secretary:
- Energy, Sanctions and Commodities (EB/ESC);
- International Communications and Information Policy (EB/CIP);
- International Finance and Development (EB/IFD);
- Trade Policy and Programs (EB/TPP);
- Transportation Affairs (EB/TRA).
Civil and Foreign Service officers and support staff bring a wide variety of educational and private sector backgrounds to offices in Washington, DC. They develop U.S. policy, administer programs, negotiate, and represent the Department before Congress, U.S. business and industry, and international organizations. Overseas, embassy economic officers lay the groundwork for negotiations, report on economic trends and the commercial climate, and maintain constant contact with foreign governments to represent U.S. interests. | | Highlights | Multilateral Cooperation Case Study: IP and the Global Agenda Assistant Secretary Wayne's remarks at the Transatlantic Policy Network Autumn Strategy Meeting.
U.S. Response to South Asia Earthquake
Assistant Secretary Wayne (Nov. 2): "[W]e are committed not only to stand beside Pakistan at this time of tragedy but ... to working with and standing with Pakistan in the long run as they are both rebuilding [and] also as they continue their very important efforts to build their economy up and create prosperity and stability over the longer term." [full text; more on earthquake]
2005 ACE Winners The Secretary of State announced the 2005 ACE winners on November 2 at an awards ceremony at the State Department.
Challenges of Kazakhstan Assistant Secretary Wayne's address at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to discuss the future of Kazakhstan, its potential, and its challenges.
U.S. Signs Open Skies Aviation Agreement with Mali Under Secretary for Economic, Business, and Agricultural Affairs Shiner and Mali Ambassador Abdoulaye Diop signed an Open Skies Aviation Pact on October 17.
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