Breadcrumb

Remarks by Ambassador Katherine Tai at the 2022 SelectUSA Investment Summit

WASHINGTON – United States Trade Representative Katherine Tai today delivered remarks at the 2022 SelectUSA Investment Summit hosted by the U.S. Department of Commerce and International Trade Administration. 

In her remarks, Ambassador Tai shared how the Biden Administration is creating new trade partnerships to promote sustainable, resilient economic growth for all workers. 

Ambassador Tai's remarks as prepared for delivery are below:

Hello, everyone.  Thank you, Deputy Secretary Graves, for that kind introduction.  Let me begin by thanking Secretary Raimondo, Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade Marisa Lago, and the teams at the Department of Commerce and International Trade Administration for organizing and hosting this year’s summit.
 
At the first-ever SelectUSA Investment Summit in 2013, then-President Obama made it clear that his top priority for the summit – and the SelectUSA Initiative more broadly – was to create good-paying American jobs and strengthen and broaden the middle class.  In his remarks, he told the audience that day:
 
So you should find out why there’s no substitute for those proud words: “Made in America.”   And here’s three more words: “Select the USA.”  When you do, you’ll find some of the world’s best workers, some of the world’s most innovative entrepreneurs.  You’ll find a government, and a President who is committed to helping you create more good jobs for the middle class, and helping you succeed well into the 21st century. 
 
Nine years later, these words still hold true and President Biden has crafted an agenda designed to grow the economy from the bottom up and the middle out.
 
Trade is a key part of this effort – and can create new opportunities for workers and help sustain a predictable environment for businesses of all sizes to invest in.
 
For example, in March I attended an event to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement.
 
Over the last 10 years, that Agreement has strengthened the investment ties between our two countries, and last year, SK Siltron announced a three-year plan to invest $300 million in Bay County, Michigan.  That investment will double the number of people they employ in the state.  It will create good-paying jobs and provide manufacturing and R&D capabilities of advanced materials for electric vehicles. 
 
However, while there are many success stories like this, after two years of the COVID-19 pandemic and the illegal, unprovoked war by Russia against Ukraine, it is clear that we face serious vulnerabilities in our global supply chains and need to update the rules that govern global trade and investment.
 
This is a sentiment that is shared by almost all of my counterparts abroad.  Today, I’d like to update you on our efforts to forge new partnerships and trade arrangements that promote resilience and facilitate sustainable and inclusive economic growth that benefits all of our workers and our planet.
 
The Biden Administration is committed to economic engagement with partners in the Indo-Pacific – one of the most dynamic regions of the world that is also of strategic importance to the United States.
 
Last month, I joined President Biden in Tokyo to launch the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity, which now includes 13 partners from across the region.  A few weeks ago, seeking to build on that momentum, I convened a meeting of the IPEF trade ministers to discuss our trade pillar.
 
In the trade pillar, we will be working to negotiate commitments in the following areas: labor, environment, digital economy and emerging technology, trade facilitation, agriculture, competition policy, transparency and good regulatory practices, and development and economic cooperation.
 

  • For trade facilitation, we will pursue accelerated implementation of the WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement, including adopting provisions on digitalization of trade facilitation measures. 
     
  • In the digital space, we are looking to address discriminatory practices in the digital economy.  We will explore new provisions that promote consumer trust, freedom of access to information, development of resilient and secure digital infrastructure, and the trusted flow of data across borders. 
     
  • For labor, we are seeking to include high standard labor provisions to implement and enforce internationally recognized worker rights, promote corporate accountability, and cooperate on emerging labor issues in the digital economy. 
     
  • On the environment, we seek trade-related environmental commitments and provisions that can measurably contribute to improving environmental sustainability and address our common climate-related challenges. 
     
  • We also seek to promote transparency and good regulatory practices, with the aim of public access to information about regulatory actions in order to facilitate review and comment.

In addition to IPEF, we have also launched the U.S.-Taiwan Initiative on 21st Century Trade.  Under the auspices of the American Institute in Taiwan and the Taipei Economic Cultural Representative Office, we are developing concrete, meaningful ways to strengthen our trade and investment relationship with Taiwan.
 
That relationship is rooted in shared values and a joint commitment to promote inclusive economic growth for our workers and our businesses. 
 
Yesterday, our Deputy United States Trade Representative Sarah Bianchi welcomed officials to Washington, D.C. to further discuss this initiative.
 
Our next steps include developing and agreeing on a roadmap for negotiations so we can reach high-standard commitments and outcomes in key areas.
 
Beyond the Indo-Pacific region, we have stepped up our engagement in many other areas, most recently at the World Trade Organization.
 
During the WTO’s 12th Ministerial Conference earlier this month, the United States helped produce breakthroughs on key issues, including:

  • An extension of a moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions;
     
  • A multilateral agreement to prohibit subsidies for those engaged in illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing; and
     
  • A Ministerial Declaration on food insecurity and a commitment to examine how we can facilitate safe agricultural trade to feed a growing global population.

We are also building on our bilateral engagement with our Transatlantic partners. Last year, we reached an understanding in the Boeing-Airbus dispute and adopted a framework to resolve the Section 232 steel and aluminum trade disputes that removed or avoided more than $20 billion in tariffs – without surrendering our principles and interests.
 
Lowering those tensions helped us begin negotiations on a global arrangement with the EU. This will be the world’s first sectoral arrangement on steel and aluminum trade to tackle emissions and non-market excess capacity.
 
We also recently concluded the second ministerial meeting of the U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council.
 
All of this is to say our work is just beginning, but we know we can’t do this work alone. Many of the businesses here today represent a critical link connecting the government to the private sector to our ability to foster growth in our economy and in the global economy.
 
As we continue to develop the initiatives I described today, as well as roll out on new ones, my team and I will rely on your counsel and knowledge to help ensure that our policies and goals support American workers, businesses and families. 
 
I hope you enjoy the rest of the summit.  Thank you.
 

###