Yesterday, the European Commission presented the long-awaited supply chain law. The directive goes further than German law. It relates to the entire value chain. Thanks to a liability clause, victims have easier access to EU courts. Nevertheless, the text contains some weaknesses. For example, EU states can determine their own sanctions, which could lead to fragmentation of the internal market. An overview.
By Charlotte Wirth
An estimated 25m people are working in conditions that fall under the definition of forced labor: working against their will and under threat, intimidation, or coercion. According to ILO, 16m work in the private sector, often at the bottom of long supply chains.
By Redaktion Table
City clusters are China’s new administrative units to break local barriers and promote regional integration. Market integration and transportation inter-connectivity will be the two major policy focuses for the next five years, with land and labor reform measures to be first piloted in major city clusters. MNCs operating in China need to review synergies across their locations in China from the lens of the city cluster policies. They also need to pay close attention to the policy dynamics and coordinated regulatory enforcement within this “expanded” administrative boundary.
By Amelie Richter
The EU Commission will present its long-awaited supply chain law on Wednesday – without an import ban on items produced with forced labor. The Chair of the Trade Committee in the European Parliament, Bernd Lange (SPD), is not happy about this. He now expects a separate EU law to ban such imports, which then simply has to be accepted by the Chinese. Lange speaks with Amelie Richter about the impact the supply chain law will have on trade with China.
By Amelie Richter