


Regulations must be followed for all exports. Use this section as a primer to familiarize yourself with the licenses, standards, and legal considerations that may apply to your product(s).
Export Licenses – Learn when you need an export license and from whom iBecome familiar with the various government programs designed to help your company finance its export transactions, and give it the capital to carry out its export operations.
We recommend that you review this information and then contact your local Commercial Service Trade Specialists to discuss how these programs can help you achieve your international sales goals.
Financing
Do you need working capital loans? Does your foreign buyer need financing to buy your products? Do they prefer lease financing? Check out the U.S. Government International Financing Programs.
Insurance
The U.S. Government offers U.S. companies Insurance and Risk Mitigation policies that cover export transactions and for overseas investments. Coverage includes losses for non-payment, currency inconvertibility, asset expropriation and political violence.
Grants
The U.S. Government provides grants to U.S. firms to conduct feasibility studies on infrastructure projects and to train the foreign business commun
Business enterprises looking for guidance on how to operate in accordance with modern standards of corporate accountability and ethics need look no further than this comprehensive guide to business ethics.
Designed as a training tool for enterprises operating in countries that have just recently transitioned to a market economy, Business Ethics will also be useful to decision-makers in any organization that is seeking to design and implement a business ethics program that conforms to global standards.
The 10 chapters of Business Ethics are organized into five sections that answer the questions:
What is a responsible business enterprise?
What constitutes a business ethics program?
How is a business ethics program structured?
How is a business ethics program put into practice?
How can responsible business conduct be achieved?
Numerous practical examples drawn from successful European and American companies are located throughout the text. Worksheets and checklists in each chapter provide guided exercises for students, ensuring that the book is equally appropriate as part of a training program or for self-study.
Fully indexed, Business Ethics also contains an extensive bibliography, a glossary that explains the basic terminology of business ethics, and—in its nine appendices—numerous examples of business ethics policies adopted by various countries and organizations.
According to Peter Eigen, chairman of Transparency International, Business Ethics "is an excellent, comprehensive, and easy-to-use manual on business ethics. Business people, governments, and civil society organizations ready to fight corruption will welcome this practical guide."
(May 2004; xxv, 347 pages; ISBN 0-16-051477-0)
Availability
Online: PDF Format (2.8MB)
Print: Superintendent of DocumentsStock Number: 003-009-00731-3Price: $49.00
Reprint: National Technical Information ServiceOrder Number: PB2004-104959Paper, CD, microfiche, or electronic download
Popular Titles
Trade Finance Guide, 2008 editionElectric Current AbroadBusiness Ethics: A Manual for Managing a Responsible Business Enterprise in Emerging Market EconomiesProtect Your Intellectual Property; Stop Trade in Fakes
Recent Titles
Top U.S. Export Markets; Free Trade Agreement and Country Fact SheetsAssessing Trends and Policies of Foreign Direct Investment in the United StatesClean Technology: An Exporter's Guide to IndiaClean Technology: An Exporter's Guide to China
Periodicals and Newsletters
BISNIS Bulletin Energy and Environmental Export News Export America magazine archive 2000-2004 International Trade UpdateSABIT Exchange
ity and government officials on U.S. business practices, regulatory reform and other economic development activities.
n order to ship your products from the United States. Export licenses are issued for individual transactions determined by the product, the country, the end-use and the end-user.
Foreign Standards and Certification Information - Be aware of product standards, certification requirements, electricity regulations, packaging and recycling laws and quality expectations if you want to sell your product in foreign markets.
Legal Considerations – Learn of issues related to contract claus
designed to help U.S. companies, especially small and medium-sized enterprises, learn the basics of trade finance so that they can turn their export opportunities into actual sales and achieve the ultimate goal of getting paid—especially on time—for those sales. Concise, two-page chapters offer the basics of numerous financing techniques, from open accounts, to forfaiting, to government assisted foreign-buyer financing.
(April 2008, 32 pages)
Availability
Online: The Trade Finance Guide is available in PDF format as a complete document and as individual chapters.Complete Guide Introduction Chapter 1 Methods of Payment in International TradeChapter 2 Cash-in-AdvanceChapter 3 Letters of CreditChapter 4 Documentary CollectionsChapter 5 Open AccountChapter 6 Export Working Capital FinancingChapter 7 Government-Guaranteed Export Working Capital Loan ProgramsChapter 8 Export Credit InsuranceChapter 9 Export FactoringChapter 10 ForfaitingChapter 11 Government Assisted Foreign Buyer FinancingChapter 12 Foreign Exchange Risk Management
Reprint: National Technical Information ServiceOrder Number: To come Paper, CD, microfiche, or electronic downloades, intellectual property, legal disputes, anti-boycott laws, and more.
Economic Sanctions – Learn how the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) at the U.S. Department of Treasury enforces economic sanctions on specific countries based on U.S. foreign policy and national security goals, which are set forth by Congress.
When exporting, it is essential to be aware of the various regulations that pertain to your product(s). Online training and our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page are available to further assist you in preparing to export.
Export Licenses – Learn when you need an export license and from whom iBecome familiar with the various government programs designed to help your company finance its export transactions, and give it the capital to carry out its export operations.
We recommend that you review this information and then contact your local Commercial Service Trade Specialists to discuss how these programs can help you achieve your international sales goals.
Financing
Do you need working capital loans? Does your foreign buyer need financing to buy your products? Do they prefer lease financing? Check out the U.S. Government International Financing Programs.
Insurance
The U.S. Government offers U.S. companies Insurance and Risk Mitigation policies that cover export transactions and for overseas investments. Coverage includes losses for non-payment, currency inconvertibility, asset expropriation and political violence.
Grants
The U.S. Government provides grants to U.S. firms to conduct feasibility studies on infrastructure projects and to train the foreign business commun
Business enterprises looking for guidance on how to operate in accordance with modern standards of corporate accountability and ethics need look no further than this comprehensive guide to business ethics.
Designed as a training tool for enterprises operating in countries that have just recently transitioned to a market economy, Business Ethics will also be useful to decision-makers in any organization that is seeking to design and implement a business ethics program that conforms to global standards.
The 10 chapters of Business Ethics are organized into five sections that answer the questions:
What is a responsible business enterprise?
What constitutes a business ethics program?
How is a business ethics program structured?
How is a business ethics program put into practice?
How can responsible business conduct be achieved?
Numerous practical examples drawn from successful European and American companies are located throughout the text. Worksheets and checklists in each chapter provide guided exercises for students, ensuring that the book is equally appropriate as part of a training program or for self-study.
Fully indexed, Business Ethics also contains an extensive bibliography, a glossary that explains the basic terminology of business ethics, and—in its nine appendices—numerous examples of business ethics policies adopted by various countries and organizations.
According to Peter Eigen, chairman of Transparency International, Business Ethics "is an excellent, comprehensive, and easy-to-use manual on business ethics. Business people, governments, and civil society organizations ready to fight corruption will welcome this practical guide."
(May 2004; xxv, 347 pages; ISBN 0-16-051477-0)
Availability
Online: PDF Format (2.8MB)
Print: Superintendent of DocumentsStock Number: 003-009-00731-3Price: $49.00
Reprint: National Technical Information ServiceOrder Number: PB2004-104959Paper, CD, microfiche, or electronic download
Popular Titles
Trade Finance Guide, 2008 editionElectric Current AbroadBusiness Ethics: A Manual for Managing a Responsible Business Enterprise in Emerging Market EconomiesProtect Your Intellectual Property; Stop Trade in Fakes
Recent Titles
Top U.S. Export Markets; Free Trade Agreement and Country Fact SheetsAssessing Trends and Policies of Foreign Direct Investment in the United StatesClean Technology: An Exporter's Guide to IndiaClean Technology: An Exporter's Guide to China
Periodicals and Newsletters
BISNIS Bulletin Energy and Environmental Export News Export America magazine archive 2000-2004 International Trade UpdateSABIT Exchange
ity and government officials on U.S. business practices, regulatory reform and other economic development activities.
n order to ship your products from the United States. Export licenses are issued for individual transactions determined by the product, the country, the end-use and the end-user.
Foreign Standards and Certification Information - Be aware of product standards, certification requirements, electricity regulations, packaging and recycling laws and quality expectations if you want to sell your product in foreign markets.
Legal Considerations – Learn of issues related to contract claus
designed to help U.S. companies, especially small and medium-sized enterprises, learn the basics of trade finance so that they can turn their export opportunities into actual sales and achieve the ultimate goal of getting paid—especially on time—for those sales. Concise, two-page chapters offer the basics of numerous financing techniques, from open accounts, to forfaiting, to government assisted foreign-buyer financing.
(April 2008, 32 pages)
Availability
Online: The Trade Finance Guide is available in PDF format as a complete document and as individual chapters.Complete Guide Introduction Chapter 1 Methods of Payment in International TradeChapter 2 Cash-in-AdvanceChapter 3 Letters of CreditChapter 4 Documentary CollectionsChapter 5 Open AccountChapter 6 Export Working Capital FinancingChapter 7 Government-Guaranteed Export Working Capital Loan ProgramsChapter 8 Export Credit InsuranceChapter 9 Export FactoringChapter 10 ForfaitingChapter 11 Government Assisted Foreign Buyer FinancingChapter 12 Foreign Exchange Risk Management
Reprint: National Technical Information ServiceOrder Number: To come Paper, CD, microfiche, or electronic downloades, intellectual property, legal disputes, anti-boycott laws, and more.
Economic Sanctions – Learn how the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) at the U.S. Department of Treasury enforces economic sanctions on specific countries based on U.S. foreign policy and national security goals, which are set forth by Congress.
When exporting, it is essential to be aware of the various regulations that pertain to your product(s). Online training and our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page are available to further assist you in preparing to export.
No comments:
Post a Comment