International

More than 95% of consumers live outside the United States. Selling more U.S.-made goods and services around the world is crucial to American jobs and will help businesses small and large grow. Expanding trade also enhances the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturers while boosting the buying power of American families. The International Affairs Division of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce leads the business community’s efforts to shape global policy.
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Why Major World Leaders Meet with the Chamber Every YearThe U.S. Chamber, unmatched in its advocacy efforts on the international stage, meets with top government officials from around the world to discuss investment, innovation, trade, and economic growth.
By Sean Hackbarth
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Learn about the International Affairs Division
Around the globe, the U.S. Chamber advocates for free enterprise, competitive markets, and rules-based trade and investment as the path to economic opportunity and prosperity for all. We work every day to break down barriers to trade and investment, open new markets for American exports and investments, and make sure there's a level playing field for U.S. companies.
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- Gita Gopinath joins The Call ahead of IMF meetings as global risks rise.Premier annual forum convenes senior U.S. and Japanese leaders to strengthen commercial ties.Mark Sobel, U.S. Chairman at OMFIF and former U.S. representative to the IMF joins The Call to discuss why Argentina keeps stumbling into crisis, the risks of Washington’s latest bailout, and why the peso still matters for the country’s future.There must be a comprehensive policy reset of the EU's Digital Markets Act, due to its discriminatory impact on U.S. firms, harm to consumers, and enforcement challenges.Tariffs are having a real and devastating impact on thousands of small businesses across the nation — and on all Americans — as uncertainty, rising costs and cancellations are hitting home.Without transparent, harm-based methodologies and credible assurances against discriminatory effects, every big fine risks becoming a flashpoint in the transatlantic relationship.Brazil should heed the cautionary tale of Europe’s Digital Markets Act as it advances its own digital markets bill.The U.S. Chamber of Commerce hosted a series of events and meetings during the 80th UN General Assembly in New York, including engagements with heads of state, to address key global challenges and highlight the pivotal role of American business in providing solutions.The meeting took place on the margins of the 80th Session of the UN General Assembly in New York and focused on U.S.-Türkiye partnerships across key industries.





























