Timmons Talks Trade, Tariffs, Democracy in Washington, D.C.
U.S. competitiveness on the world stage, trade agreements, intellectual property, democracy and regulatory certainty鈥攖hese were just some of the topics 17吃瓜在线 President and CEO Jay Timmons covered in a with POLITICO鈥檚 Doug Palmer during the 2024 Washington International Trade Conference.
- The meeting was attended by senior U.S. trade officials and foreign ambassadors and hosted by the Washington International Trade Association in Washington, D.C.
Safeguarding IP: With the World Trade Organization鈥檚 13th Ministerial Conference coming up later this month, Timmons discussed the damage that would result from one of the meeting鈥檚 expected agenda items: an expansion of a 2022 TRIPS waiver on IP rights to include COVID-19 therapeutics and diagnostics.
- 鈥淚ntellectual property is truly the lifeblood of manufacturing,鈥 said Timmons, who met with WTO Director-General Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and WTO Deputy Director General Angela Ellard in Geneva last March to discuss the waiver.
- Manufacturers 鈥渨ork hard, and it鈥檚 always been kind of a given from the U.S. perspective that intellectual property protections would be front and center. 鈥 Obviously, we want to facilitate the growth of manufacturing in other areas of the world, too. But 鈥 [it] is a giant leap too far if therapeutics and diagnostics are included in the waiver.鈥
- American agreement to the expanded waiver, Timmons said, would be tantamount to the federal government telling manufacturers in the U.S., 鈥淏y the way, we want you to invest in developing more innovations here in this country if we鈥檙e just going to turn around and give them away.鈥
听Trade and tariffs: If the U.S. wants to remain competitive, we must negotiate a trade agreement now鈥攁nd pass the Miscellaneous Tariff Bill, Timmons told Palmer.
- 鈥淭rade is really the recipe for peace and the recipe for working together harmoniously,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檇 like to see more trade agreements. We haven鈥檛 seen one negotiated here in the United States for over 10 years鈥攁nd the rest of the world, quite frankly, is eating our lunch when it comes to negotiating these agreements.鈥
- The U.S., which has been operating without an MTB for more than three years, 鈥渘eed[s] MTB to not just meet our economic goals and not just feed the supply chains of manufacturers, but also to meet our national security objectives.鈥
Democracy vs. autocracy: Timmons鈥攚ho last July led the American business community delegation to Cancun, Mexico, for meetings ahead of the third U.S.鈥揗exico鈥揅anada Agreement 鈥淔ree Trade Commission鈥濃攕tressed the importance of the USMCA to underpinning democratic values worldwide.
- 鈥淭his agreement is incredibly important to our national security, and it is important to our place in the world,鈥 Timmons continued. 鈥淲e need to expand the relationship, whether it鈥檚 trade or other relationships here in North America, and we need to embrace the relationships and our allies around the world鈥攊n Europe and Australia and New Zealand and Japan and other areas鈥攂ecause we are facing a choice 鈥 between free market economies and democracies and command economies and autocracies, and I want to strengthen the former, not allow the latter to bloom.鈥
Other needs: Timmons talked about other manufacturing priorities for the current administration and the next.
- 鈥淲e need regulatory certainty that gives business leaders the ability to plan for the future,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e [also] need to invest in workforce incentives. All of those and infrastructure, which we have done, and we continue to do. You can鈥檛 just open up the trading system and not expect capital to flow outside of our borders if you don鈥檛 have the right policies internally.鈥
17吃瓜在线 in the news: Read POLITICO Pro鈥檚 coverage of the conference and Timmons鈥 interview and .