Increased concern about national security has led the U.S. government to more aggressively enforce regulations governing imports, exports, and related areas. This enforcement has resulted in record fines and damaging publicity for leading U.S. and international companies. At the same time, efforts to negotiate a growing number of free trade agreements are creating new opportunities and risks for companies worldwide.
Compliance with regulations governing international trade should be a necessary component of internal legal auditing programs, even for those businesses that engage in limited import and export trade. International trade considerations also can be an important facet of due diligence reviews in acquisitions and other transactions.
The rules governing international trade are complex and sometimes counterintuitive. For example, although export control requirements generally apply to military items and high technology "dual use" goods, even commonplace items like hammers and nails are controlled to certain parties and destinations. While specific issues under these rules should be discussed with counsel, a basic ability to "spot" international trade issues in the legal audit and due diligence contexts can benefit companies in significant ways, such as:
Set forth below are brief summaries of the primary U.S. legal regimes governing international trade, along with some preliminary questions and examples that may help identify potential issues under these rules.
Import Requirements
U.S. customs law imposes substantial responsibilities on persons or firms that are the "importer of record" of goods, including the obligations to make accurate customs declarations and to otherwise exercise "reasonable care" in the customs context. Violations of these requirements can, depending on the circumstances, result in substantial criminal and civil penalties, including the possible seizure of the imported goods.
Basic inquiries in the customs context might include the following:
Trade Agreements
Multilateral trade agreements, such as the North American Free Trade Agreement ("NAFTA"), and various trade preference programs, such as the Generalized System of Preferences ("GSP"), provide duty-free or reduced duty treatment for eligible goods as well as other advantages for goods and services from participating countries. Receipt of these benefits are, however, contingent on a variety of requirements, including highly specific rules of origin. The ongoing negotiation of new trade agreements, including the agreement to establish Free Trade Area of the Americas ("FTAA") in the Western Hemisphere and the Central American Free Trade Agreement ("CAFTA"), also will present new opportunities and risks for many companies.
Basic inquiries in the trade agreements context might include the following:
Export Controls
The United States maintains about 20 different export control regimes. Those most likely to affect our clients cover exports of commercial items that have potential military value, "defense articles," related data and related services, and nuclear equipment and data. Depending on its classification, which usually can be ascertained by referring to the applicable set of regulations, an exported item can require a license to a variety of foreign destinations. Licensing can be complex and time consuming, particularly if license processing is delayed because the initial application is incomplete. Following are two examples of situations where the need for an export license could be overlooked:
Penalties for violation of export rates can be severe, including not only fines and prison terms, but also loss of all export privileges for the guilty company, sometimes for a period as long as 20 years.
Trade Embargoes
The United States has maintained a complex and ever-changing system of trade embargoes since World War I, although the current statutory basis for most of the embargo system dates from the late 1970s. Currently embargoed countries include Cuba, Iran, Libya, and Sudan. Formerly sanctioned countries include North Korea (which is under consideration for reimposition of sanctions), Iraq, Yugoslavia, and Vietnam. Burma, Syria, and Angola also are currently subject to less than full embargo sanctions in certain product areas. The Cuban embargo applies to foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies; the other embargoes apply only to U.S. companies, goods and citizens and residents. This is a complicated and ever-changing area. Consider the following:
It is therefore essential that in international acquisition situations, the target's markets and their relation to the U.S. embargo system, be thoroughly understood.
Foreign Payment
U.S. companies have been dealing with criminal sanctions for foreign payments since the passage of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act ("FCPA") in 1977. Over the last quarter century, responsible U.S. companies have devised sophisticated systems for performing due diligence on prospective agents and consultants and educating their employees on FCPA compliance. Companies in the rest of the industrialized world did not begin to address the issue of overseas payments until 1997, with the promulgation of the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Public Officials in International Business Transactions. Consequently, companies making acquisitions of overseas entities, particularly those that have historically been independent or owned by European or other non-U.S. interests, run the risk of acquiring foreign payment problems and the attendant liabilities. A couple of examples illustrate this serious potential problem:
Antiboycott Compliance
The United States maintains two separate–and sometimes inconsistent–regulatory regimes that penalize conduct cooperating with the Arab boycott of Israel. Violation of the Commerce Department's antiboycott regulations can lead to substantial fines and, in serious cases, prison terms or loss of corporate export privileges. Violation of the Treasury Department's rules can lead to loss of a company's foreign tax credit, Subpart F benefits, and FSC benefits for an entire year.
Conclusion
In view of the complexity of these and other international trade-related rules and the serious penalties that can be imposed for violations, a detailed knowledge of these requirements is critical, particularly in the legal audit and due diligence contexts.