|
COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF FEBRUARY 16,1995 PSA#1285ANNUAL REPORT ON DISCRIMINATORY GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT PRACTICES UNDER
TITLE VII OF THE 1988 TRADE ACT Title VII of the 1988 Trade Act
requires that the Administration report annually to the Congress not
later than April 30 on discriminatory foreign government procurement
practices. A Federal Register notice was published on February 7 to
solicit public comment regarding instances of discrimination
encountered by U.S. companies. The office of the U.S. Trade
Representative, Department of Commerce and other interested trade
agencies would like to encourage broader trade community participation
in the information gathering phase of the Title VII review. All
interested parties are invited to provide a description of any
discrimination encountered in responding to foreign government
procurement opportunities. To be identified under Title VII for
purposes of consultations and negotiations, a country must be: (1) a
signatory to the GATT Government Procurement Code and be in violation;
(2) a signatory or non-signatory, maintain a significant pattern or
practice of discrimination in the procurement of products or services
from the United States, cause identifiable harm to U.S. suppliers and
be a significant supplier of products and services to the U.S.
Government; (3) a non-signatory, fail to enforce transparent and
competitive procurement procedures equivalent to those in the Code and
be a significant supplier of products and services to the U.S.
Government; or (4) a non-signatory, fail to maintain and enforce
effective prohibitions on bribery and other corrupt practices in
government procurement and be a significant supplier of products and
services to the U.S. Government. Current signatories to the Code other
than the United States are: Canada, the member states of the European
Union (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Ireland, Italy, Luxemburg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and
the United Kingdom), Hong Kong, Israel, Japan, Singapore and
Switzerland. Identification of specific instances of bias is critical
to meeting the ``identifiable harm'' criteria set out in the statute
for (2) above. Additionally, the criteria in (3) and (4) concerning
transparent procedures and anti-bribery prohibitions will be examined
for the first time in the 1995 review since they arise from amendments
to Title VII contained in the Uruguay Round implementing legislation.
Therefore, information in these areas will be particularly important
to build a record for use in this and future Title VII reviews.
Companies with information to share are requested to mail or fax a
written description of the specific practices or discrimination
encountered to Elena Bryan, Office of the United States Trade
Representative, 600 17th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20506; Fax (202)
395-3911 by March 10, 1995. Submissions containing proprietary
information should be marked ``Business Confidential.'' Each submission
should provide, in order, the following general information: (1) The
party submitting the information, (2) the foreign country or countries
that are the subject of the submission and the government entities
whose practices are being identified, and (3) the U.S. products or
services affected by the practices or discrimination. Discrimination or
non-competitive practices could include notification of procurements
without allowing adequate time for response, use of technical
specifications to deny foreign suppliers bidding opportunities and use
of local sole sourcing where competitive procedures could have been
conducted. Thank you for your participation. Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0395 19950215\SP-0001.MSC)
SP - Special Notices Index Page
|
|