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OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises: Text, Commentary and Clarifications, 2001

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Summary

The OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (the Guidelines) are recommendations addressed by governments to multinational enterprises. They provide voluntary principles and standards for responsible business conduct consistent with applicable laws. The Guidelines aim to ensure that the operations of these enterprises are in harmony with government policies, to strengthen the basis of mutual confidence between enterprises and the societies in which they operate, to help improve the foreign investment climate and to enhance the contribution to sustainable development made by multinational enterprises. The Guidelines are part of the OECD Declaration on International Investment and Multinational Enterprises the other elements of which relate to national treatment, conflicting requirements on enterprises, and international investment incentives and disincentives.

Source
Issuer

OECD

Year

2001

Region

International

Issuer (type)

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (International)

Instrument type

Guidelines

Disclosure instrument

Yes

Geographical scope

International

Mandatory or voluntary

Voluntary

Text analysis

    • Low 0.37%
    • Low 0.00%
    • E focus: energy, environment, environmental management, pollution, conservation
    • S focus: collective bargaining, compensation, discrimination, employment conditions, employment practices, human capital, human rights, intellectual property, working time, children
    • G focus: audit, bribery, corruption, internal control, accountability
    • Finance, Management, Manufacturing, Professional services, Public administration