CSI Electronic Commerce, Information Technology& Telecommunications Working Group
RecommendationsonElectronic Commerce
Electronic Commerce Recommendations
The Coalition of Service Industries (CSI) represents the interests of the dynamic American services sector. The services sector now represents 75% of U.S. GDP. The great bulk of international commerce on-line encompasses all elements of the service sector. This includes telecommunications, information technology, media and publishing, financial services, transportation, travel and tourism, retailing, and the professional services: accountancy, architecture and engineering, consulting, research, and legal and medical services. The Coalition of Service Industries' Electronic Commerce Working Group includes a wide range of companies and associations in these industries, all of them interested in the growth of electronic commerce. The Working Group has developed a set of recommendations that CSI hopes will shape U.S. policy in international fora. The CSI recommendations identify the criteria we believe necessary for the development of a healthy environment that will permit electronic commerce to flourish globally.
Open Markets a Prerequisite
Open markets are essential for the fullest expression of the potential of electronic commerce. These markets will grow in ways that no government can anticipate. Premature or unnecessary government regulation risks quashing the electronic commerce market's phenomenal potential for discovery, innovation and expansion by creating disincentives for creativity and investment.
Free Flow of Information
The unimpeded flow of information through the Internet(1) should be facilitated and protected. This flow should be over networks free to interconnect to enable non-discriminatory access to data flows from other networks.
Interoperability
Networks must be able to interoperate, enabling all interested users to communicate, no matter where the computer or network operator is located.
Privacy Protection
The full development of Electronic Commerce requires the free flow of data, and it requires consumer confidence that personal data will be protected. Business is wholly committed to this objective. It can best be achieved by a balanced approach that recognizes different national legal systems, including laws, industry self-regulation, privacy enhancing technologies and differing cultural standards. Such a balanced approach should ensure that data protection regimes are not applied in a discriminatory manner, are not used to limit market access, or to impede competition.
Convergence: Telecommunications, Information Technology & Electronic Commerce
The inextricable linkage between telecommunications, information technology, electronic commerce and the Internet must be facilitated by governments and international organizations. Full development of electronic commerce absolutely requires unfettered access to information technology, value added services, and all network technologies operating in a highly competitive environment.
Telecommunications Liberalization
We believe the WTO Agreement on Telecommunications already includes Internet services. Efforts to limit the Agreement's application as excluding certain electronic commerce services should be countered. In addition, it is necessary to secure full implementation of the WTO Telecommunications Agreement in order to promote the development of the telecommunications infrastructure on which electronic commerce depends. Countries acceding to the WTO should make substantive telecommunications commitments that include at a minimum: a date certain for full liberalization, phased removal of foreign ownership restrictions, and adoption of the Telecommunications Agreement Reference Paper in its entirety. Pro-competitive regulatory principles contained in the Telecommunications Agreement Reference Paper should, as they are implemented overtime engender access to the necessary developing infrastructure and networks and should preclude anti-competitive behavior by governments or monopolies. Furthermore, the Telecommunications Agreement (which includes the Reference Paper) should be cited as the baseline standard in all sub-regional free-trade agreements.
Electronic Authentication
A private sector developed framework for the authentication of commitments made electronically should be established to facilitate electronic commerce and to be used as the basis for negotiations of multilateral agreements or international standards regarding electronic authentication or in bilateral "reciprocity" agreements. The framework for electronic authentication should enhance user trust, stimulate the growth of electronic commerce nationally and globally, and promote a competitive environment for the development of electronic authentication.
GATS
The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) is the basic instrument establishing the rights of services suppliers to compete freely in each others' markets. It applies to all services (except those supplied by governments) regardless of the means of delivery - whether by person, mail, telephone, Internet or other proprietary network. Thus a charge on the electronic export of a service by the importing country would not be permitted if that would violate a member's commitments under the GATS. While the GATS currently covers a broad range of services generally, including telecommunications and financial services, the scope and substance of the commitments under the GATS agreement should be widened to cover as much of the services sector as possible.
Market-Based Solutions
Full realization of the potential of electronic commerce requires resolution of a number of cross-industry issues. Ill-conceived public policy or unresolved private concerns about data protection, cryptography, authentication, content, and intellectual property protection can inhibit the growth of electronic commerce. Resolution of these issues should be derived from the marketplace. Aside from fundamental market access and national treatment commitments that can be addressed in the WTO, industry self-regulation and the development of market-based solutions are the most effective way to address these important concerns.
Jurisdiction, Liability, Enforcement
While business to business electronic commerce is burgeoning based on private contract law, an impediment to the development of business to consumer electronic commerce is found in the issue of jurisdiction, that is, which country's laws apply to an electronic transaction. We advance as a basis for discussion the following tenets regarding jurisdiction.
Choice of LawThe parties to an electronic contract or transaction should be permitted to choose which national (or in the case of federal systems, which local) body of law will govern the contract.
Prudential ConsiderationsTransborder commerce in certain industries such as financial services are covered by prudential supervisory rules, which may apply also to electronic commerce. Industry representatives will work with their government regulators to resolve prudential issues in a manner that will promote global electronic commerce.
Mode of SupplyWhere the parties fail to specify the law governing an electronic contract or transaction, the default should be the laws and regulations of the country of the supplier of a service. A consumer from country A purchasing an electronically delivered service supplied from country B, in general, should be considered to have virtually left country A and traveled to country B to buy the service. This would be identified as "consumption abroad" or mode of supply 2 under the GATS(2). Were the law of the consumer's country to apply to electronic commerce, the growth of transborder electronic commerce would be slowed to a funereal pace. Complying with the vastly different regulatory regimes of more than 150 trading countries would be extraordinarily costly for a large multinational corporation, and probably impossible for smaller and mid-size businesses.
AdvertisingAdvertising a service on a web site should not be considered a direct advertisement in a foreign country, and thus should not be subject to the laws of that country. A company's web site advertisement is like a billboard in cyberspace.
Consumer Protection
Government ActionGovernments cannot be asked to forego protection of consumers for the sake of electronic commerce, and of course they wouldn't do so. We suggest that governments develop protection of the rights of their consumers in consultation with the private sector and address international electronic commerce consumer protection issues through:
Reaching bilateral or multilateral agreements mutually recognizing the validity of countries' consumer protection laws.
Negotiating multilateral agreements based on market-driven private sector standards of consumer protection for electronic transactions.
Providing direct assistance to consumers in obtaining redress in foreign jurisdictions, or developing arrangements with other countries for mutual assistance.
Educating consumers about differences in consumer protection among countries.
Business ActionFor their part, companies should promote consumer confidence in electronic transactions. In addition to complying with the consumer protection laws and regulations of the supplier's jurisdiction, companies should:
Develop market-driven standards for consumer protection.
Disclose the applicable jurisdiction on their web sites.
Comply with all applicable agreements to which their national government is signatory.
Disclose voluntary participation in organizations that address consumer concerns.
Provide information on how consumers can pursue a complaint.
Refrain from false and misleading statements regarding consumer protections.
Conclusion
The private sector should continue to lead the expansion of electronic commerce in order to spur innovation, and where governments do intervene, they should do so only to support the development of a vibrant electronic marketplace. Private and public sector efforts to establish open markets will attract investment capital for the development of infrastructure critical to electronic commerce. Therefore, in keeping with these recommendations, we seek government assistance in support of the development of a fair, transparent, and competitive electronic marketplace.
1. For simplicity, the term "Internet" is used to "convey all computer data networks and hundreds of applications such as the World Wide Web and e-mail that run on those networks, even though some electronic commerce activities may take place on proprietary or other networks that are not technically part of the Internet" from A Framework for Global Electronic Commerce, The White House, July 1, 1997.
2. In the GATS, "the modes of supply are essentially defined on the basis of origin of the service supplier and consumer, and the degree and type of territorial presence which they have the moment the service is delivered. In both modes 1 and 2, the supplier is not present within the territory of the Member (Electronic Commerce and the Role of the WTO, World Trade Organization, May, 1998)." Mode 2 is defined as "Consumption abroad, whereby consumers consume services abroad, sometimes by physically moving to the location of the suppliers, as in the case of tourism services, or by sending their property abroad, as in the case of ship repair services" from Electronic Commerce and the Role of the WTO, World Trade Organization, May, 1998.
Researcher : Mehdi Sadeghi
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Summer /27/006
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