The
TransAtlantic Business Dialogue (TABD) was established by the US government and
European Union in 1995 as the official business sector advisory group for EU and US officials on trade and investment issues. The purpose of the TABD was to foster an ongoing dialogue between business and government at the highest levels. It had become clear to both governments that international business maintains a unique and indispensable perspective on
trade liberalization, and that it was necessary to create an official forum that allowed these transatlantic businesses to come together in a single setting where they would be able to address their mutual concerns.
Meetings and conferences The first TABD conference was held in Seville, Spain in 1995 and concluded in the creation of working groups on standards and regulatory issues, trade liberalization, investment, and third country relations. As it was the first time that the private sector held an official role in determining EU/US public policy, the Seville conference signified a milestone in
transatlantic trade relations.
US Secretary of Commerce Ronald Brown convened the conference along with
European Commission Vice President Sir
Leon Brittan and Commissioner Dr.
Martin Bangemann, and it was met with enthusiasm across the transatlantic business community. The last TABD program meeting took place in January in Davos/Switzerland in the margins of the
World Economic Forum. Government guests and speakers included Irish Prime Minister
Enda Kenny,
OECD Secretary General
Ángel Gurría and
Michael Froman, Assistant to President Barack Obama and US Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economic Affairs.
Founding of the TABC The TABC was founded 1 January 2013, in a merger of the existing
Transatlantic Business Dialogue (1995) and the
European-American Business Council (EABC), founded in 1997 as the successor of the
European Community Chamber of Commerce in the United States. == Transatlantic Business Dialogue (TABD) ==