Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), (in French: Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques, OCDE) is an international organisation of those developed countries that accept the principles of representative democracy and a free market economy. It originated in 1948 as the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (OEEC), led by Frenchman Robert Marjolin, to help administer the Marshall Plan for the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. Later its membership was extended to non-European states, and in 1961 it was reformed into the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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[edit] Objectives and action
The organization provides a setting where governments can compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practice and co-ordinate domestic and international policies. The mandate of the OECD is very broad, as it covers all economic, environmental and social issues.
It is a forum where peer pressure can act as a powerful incentive to improve policy and implement “soft law” — non-binding instruments that can occasionally lead to binding treaties.
Exchanges between OECD governments flow from information and analysis provided by a secretariat in Paris. The secretariat collects data, monitors trends, and analyzes and forecasts economic developments. It also researches social changes or evolving patterns in trade, environment, agriculture, technology, taxation and other areas. The OECD is also known as a premium statistical agency, as it publishes highly-comparable statistics on a very wide number of subjects.
Over the past decade, the OECD has tackled a range of economic, social, and environmental issues while further deepening its engagement with business, trade unions and other representatives of civil society. Negotiations at the OECD on taxation and transfer pricing, for example, have paved the way for bilateral tax treaties around the world.
Among other areas, the OECD has taken a role in co-ordinating international action on corruption and bribery, creating the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, which came into effect in February 1999.
The OECD has also constituted a task force on spam[1], which submitted a detailed report, with several quite useful background papers on spam problems in developing countries, best practices for ISPs and email marketers etc appended.
The OECD's headquarters are at the Château de la Muette in Paris.
[edit] Structure
The OECD's structure revolves around 3 major bodies.
- The OECD member countries, each represented by a delegation led by an ambassador. Together, they form the council.
- The OECD Secretariat, led by the Secretary-General (currently Angel Gurria). The Secretariat is organized in directorates. There are some 2,500 agents in the OECD Secretariat.
- The OECD committees, one for each work area of the OECD. Committee members are subject-matter experts from member and non-member countries. The committees commission all the work on each theme (publications, task forces, conferences, and so on). The committee members then relay the conclusions to their capitals.
[edit] OECD Secretariat
- Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and Local Development
- Centre for Tax Policy and Administration
- Development Co-operation Directorate
- Directorate for Education
- Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs
- Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs
- Directorate for Science, Technology and Industry
- Economics Department
- Environment Directorate
- Public Governance and Territorial Development Directorate
- Statistics Directorate
- Trade and Agriculture Directorate
[edit] General Secretariat
- Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members
- International Futures Programme
- Directorate for Legal Affairs
- Office of the Auditor-General
[edit] Executive Directorate
[edit] Publica Affairs and Communication
[edit] Other Bodies
- Centre for Educational Research and Innovation
- European Conference of Ministers of Transport
- Development Centre
- Sahel and West Africa Club
- International Energy Agency
- Nuclear Energy Agency
[edit] Committees
Representatives of the 30 OECD member countries meet in specialised committees to advance ideas and review progress in specific policy areas, such as economics, trade, science, employment, education or financial markets.
There are about 200 committees, working groups and expert groups. Some 40 000 senior officials from national administrations go to OECD committee meetings each year to request, review and contribute to work undertaken by the OECD secretariat. Once they return home, they have online access to documents and can exchange information through a special network.
[edit] Members
There are currently thirty full members; of these, 24 (marked with *) are described as high-income countries by the World Bank in 2005.
Founding members (1961): | |
Joined later (listed chronologically with year of admission): | |
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The European Commission is participating in the work of the OECD, alongside the EU Member States. For more information on OECD's work related to its member countries, visit OECD's country Web sites[2]
[edit] OECD publishing
The OECD publishes books, statistics, working papers and reference materials.
[edit] OECD books
The OECD releases between 300 and 500 books each year. Most books are published in English and French. The OECD flagship titles include:
- The OECD Economic Outlook, published twice a year. It contains forecast and analysis of the economic situation of the OECD member countries.
- The Main Economic Indicators, published monthly. It contains a large selection of timely statistical indicators.
- The OECD Factbook, published yearly. The Factbook contains more than 100 economic, environmental and social indicators, each presented with a clear definition, tables and graphs. It is freely accessible online.
- OECD in Figures, published yearly. A pocket-sized book full of the latest OECD statistics.
- OECD Observer, an award-winning magazine with six issues a year. News, analysis, commentaries and data on global economic, social and environmental challenges. Contains book reviews and special section listing the latest OECD books, plus ordering information.
- The OECD Communications Outlook and OECD Information Technology Outlook, which rotate every year. They contain forecasts and analysis of the communications and information technology industries in OECD member countries and non-member economies.
All OECD books are available on SourceOECD and on the OECD online bookshop.
[edit] OECD Statistics
All OECD activities are backed-up by statistics, and given the variety of OECD activities, it is a very good source of comparable statistics. OECD statistics are available under several forms:
- As interactive databases on SourceOECD,
- As static files or dynamic database views on the OECD Statistics portal,
- and as StatLinks. In most OECD books, there is a url below every table and graph, which links to the underlying data.
[edit] OECD Working Papers
There are 15 working papers series published by the various directorates of the OECD Secretariat. They are available on SourceOECD as well as on many specialised portals.
[edit] OECD Reference works
The OECD is also responsible for the Model Tax Convention or the OECD Guidelines for the Testing of Chemicals, two continually-updated documents which are de facto standards.
[edit] OECD List of Unco-operative Tax Havens
The OECD periodically releases an amended 'blacklist' of countries it considers uncooperative in the drive for transparency of tax affairs and the effective exchange of information, officially called "The List of Unco-operative Tax Havens".
March 2004 OECD Blacklist: Andorra, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Marshall Islands, Monaco
April 2002 OECD Blacklist: Andorra, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Marshall Islands, Monaco, Nauru, Vanuatu
June 2000 OECD Blacklist: Anguilla, Andorra, Antigua, Aruba, Bahamas, Bahrain, Barbados, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Cook Islands, Dominica, Gibralter, Granada, Guernsey/Sark/Alderney, Isle of Man, Jersey, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Monaco, Monserrat, Nauru, Netherlands Antilles, Niue, Panama, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Seychelles, Tonga, Turks and Caicos Islands, US Virgin Islands, Vanuatu, Samoa
[edit] Relations with non-members
24 non-members currently participate as regular observers or full participants in OECD Committees. About 50 non-members engaged in OECD working parties, schemes or programmes. The OECD conducts a policy dialogue and capacity building activities with non-members (Country Programmes, Regional Approaches and Global Forums) to share best policy practices and to bear on OECD's policy debate. The CCNM(Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members) develops and oversees the strategic orientations of the OECD’s global relations with non-members.
[edit] Future enlargement
By May 2007 (or some time after that), new members could be admitted to join the OECD. Countries considered may include Israel, Russia, Chile and the remaining EU members: Bulgaria, Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Romania and Slovenia. [3] [4]
In 1996, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania made a joint declaration concerning their co-operation with the OECD, including their future membership in the Organisation. Slovenia applied for membership on 14 March 1996, Malta on 24 September 2005.
Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) has observer status on three OECD committees and two working parties, but due to its controversial status as a state, its membership prospect is unclear.
[edit] Personnel policy
As an international organisation the terms of employment of OECD staff are not governed by the laws of the country in which their offices are located. Agreements with the host country safeguard the organisation's impartiality with regard to the host and member countries. Hiring and firing practices, working hours and environment, holiday time, pension plans, health insurance and life insurance, salaries, expatriation benefits and general conditions of employment are managed according to rules and regulations proper to the OECD. In order to maintain similar working conditions to similarly-structured organisations, the OECD participates as an independent organisation in the system of co-ordinated European organisations, whose other members include NATO, the Western European Union and the European Patent Office.
[edit] See also
- PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment)
- Frascati Manual
- Trade bloc
- Competition regulator
- Transfer pricing
- SourceOECD
- Good Laboratory Practice
- German Marshall Fund
[edit] External links
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- OECD's Web sites on member countries
- OECD Anti-Bribery Convention
- Biosecuritycodes.org A detailed site on Biosecurity and Biosecurity codes created by the OECD International Futures Program.
- Text of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
- OECD page on OEEC
- OECD's Factbook presenting comparative economic, environmental and social data from the world's largest economies
- OECD Antispam Task Force Report presenting an eight pronged set of measures for countering spam
- Video interview of OECD economists on the rise of India and China, and its consequences for Africa
- The OECD Observer
- The German Marshall Fund of the United States - Strengthening Transatlantic Cooperation
- The German Marshall Fund Blog - Expert Commentary
- OECD's 2004 "List of Unco-operative Tax Havens"
- The OECD's Dishonest Campaign Against Tax Competition: A Regress Report
[edit] Sources
- ^ OECD-Antispam
- ^ OECD-Members
- ^ NZ Herald OECD takes first step to admit new members, by Anna Willard. 12 May 2006
- ^ International Herald Tribune OECD setting the stage to admit new members, by James Kanter. 10 May 2006
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