Transcript Slide 1

Business Ethics for APEC SMEs:
What we have achieved and What remains to be done
Lynn Costa
Project Overseer
U.S. Department of Commerce
Presentation to the APEC SME Working Group
Nusa Dua (Bali)
August 4 – 5, 2013
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Overview:
“Business Ethics for APEC SMEs” initiative
 Small & Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are the engine of economic
growth and will continue to serve as a key driver in the APEC region’s
economic expansion as long as they are able to operate, trade, and
innovate in ethical business environments.
 As a result, the Business Ethics for APEC SMEs initiative was launched
under the APEC SME Working Group in 2010.
 The initiative was led by the United States, co-sponsored by 16 APEC
economies (Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Hong Kong China,
Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, The
Philippines, Singapore, Chinese Taipei, Thailand, and Vietnam), and
strongly supported by the APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC).
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What have we achieved?
APEC Principles for codes of business ethics in three sectors, setting the
highest ethical standards for the region, each developed by experts from
government, industry and academia
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Endorsement by APEC Ministers (Foreign and Trade
Ministers) in the U.S. APEC Host Year
“We applaud the decision of the APEC SME
Ministers at Big Sky, Montana in May 2011 to
endorse the Kuala Lumpur Principles for Medical
Device Sector Codes of Business Ethics. This set of
principles for the region’s medical devices industry
is the first of its kind, and will improve the quality of
patient care, encourage innovation, and promote
the growth of SMEs that produce medical devices.
We also congratulate the work of the APEC SME Working Group in establishing voluntary
sets of ethics principles for the biopharmaceutical sector (the Mexico City Principles) and
the construction and engineering sector (the Hanoi Principles). We endorse these three sets
of principles and look forward to further APEC efforts to ensure that these principles have
a practical impact for small and medium-sized companies.”
-- November 2011, Honolulu, Hawaii
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Support by APEC Leaders (Heads of State) in the
Russia APEC Host Year
Corruption is “...a tremendous barrier to economic growth, the
safety of citizens, and to the strengthening of economic and
investment cooperation among APEC…We will also support the
efforts of respective member economies to build capacity to
combat corruption…by encouraging the implementation of high
standard codes of ethics.”
-- November 2012, Vladivostok
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Capacity building from 2012 – 2013
to implement the principles
Formation of a network of over 100
ethics trainers, spanning all three
sectors and 21 economies!
April 22-24, 2012
Brunei Darussalam
APEC workshop to assist industry
associations to draft codes aligned
with The KL Principles
Jan/Feb Mar/Apr
2012
2012
May/
June
2012
July 10-11, 2012
Taipei, Chinese Taipei
APEC workshop to assist industry
associations to draft codes aligned
with The Mexico City Principles
July/
Aug
2012
Sep/
Oct
2012
Nov/
Dec
2012
Jan/
Feb
2013
August 26 – 30, 2013
KL, Malaysia
APEC Train-the-Trainer Workshop
hosted by Malaysian AntiCorruption Academy
March/
April
2013
May/
June
2013
July/
Aug
2013
April 2012 – today
Monitoring programs and mentor teams in all three sectors are progressing
implementation of codes of ethics in preparation.
Sept/
Oct
2013
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Making Tools Available to
Facilitate Code Adoption & Best Practices
Making Tools Available to
Communicate Best Practices
Making Tools Available to
Implement Good Governance
Results?
Medical device sector
• New codes of ethics are being developed by industry associations in at
least 6 APEC economies (Chile, China, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines and
Singapore).
• Existing codes of ethics are being replaced with higher standard
versions by industry associations in at least 3 APEC economies (Russia,
Mexico and Indonesia).
Biopharmaceutical sector
• New codes are being developed by industry associations in at least 6
APEC economies (China, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines, Chinese Taipei and
Vietnam), joining with numerous industry associations spanning 19
APEC economies previously in alignment with the APEC Principles.
Case study: Peru
• COMSALUD (Committee of Health Products & Related Sciences) of the
Lima Chamber of Commerce was the first medical device association
to align a code with the APEC principles in 2012.
• The National Pharmaceutical Industry Association (ADIFAN) is actively
developing a code aligned with the APEC principles in conjunction with
the Latin American Association of Pharmaceutical Industries (ALIFAR).
• Peru held a 10,000 person integrity march in Lima using the APEC
principles as the foundation.
Case study: Malaysia
• Malaysia’s two medical device industry associations (MMDA & AMMI)
and two biopharmaceutical industry associations (MOPI & PhAMA)
now each have a code in place aligned with the APEC principles.
• The Association of Malaysian Medical Industries (AMMI) also held a
large, multi-stakeholder forum on 11 July to showcase its new code
and to support its implementation.
And alignment with ASEAN
• Participation by Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar in the KL Train-the-
Trainer (7 of the other 10 ASEAN members are also APEC members).
Case study: Taipei
• The Department of Health and Food & Drug Administration of Chinese
Taipei launched in 2013 a formal multi-stakeholder dialogue, with
support from the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Agency Against
Corruption, to implement the APEC principles across the economy’s
medical device and biopharmaceutical sectors.
• The Deputy Minister of the Department of Health has been charged
to lead this formal dialogue.
APEC leading the way globally
• The Americas Competitiveness Forum,
with 34 member countries across the
Western Hemisphere, plans to use the
model we created in APEC to launch a
business ethics initiative in 2014.
• The Latin American Association of
Pharmaceutical Industries (ALIFAR) is
pursuing a code aligned with the APEC
principles, which would bring the APEC
principles to 400 companies across 15
countries, representing 90 percent of the
region’s biopharmaceutical sector.
Outreach to stakeholders KEY to fostering
ethical environments
Healthcare Stakeholder Awareness High
Level Meeting
Nusa Dua -- Sept 3, 2013
• Included representatives from:
• Heads of physician groups, medical
associations, hospital associations, boards of
medicine, and health insurance companies
• Ministries of health and economy
• Health regulators
• Government medical councils
• Industry
• Anti-corruption authorities
What remains to be done
Feedback from SMEs, their industry associations, governments
and key stakeholders is that:
They APPLAUD APEC and the APEC SME Working Group for
taking leadership in this key area facing SMEs
BUT…
SUSTAINED capacity building, ongoing
dialogue, and high-level support is crucial.
We therefore propose holding the
first APEC Business Ethics Forum in 2014
•
A three day forum to facilitate regional cooperation, identify
common problems and practical solutions and sustain the
momentum that has been created through the Business Ethics for
APEC SMEs initiative launched in 2010.
•
Concept note was submitted for APEC funding on Sept 4th
•
Please let Lynn Costa know if you are interested in helping to shape
the first APEC Business Ethics Forum in 2014!
Thank you to our amazing
experts and co-chairs!