Association of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce

Association of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce
Founded about 1872
Type Advocacy group
Focus Business advocacy
Location
Area served
Germany Germany
European Union European Union
United States United States
Method trade promotion
Political lobbying
Key people
Prof. Dr. Hans Heinrich Driftmann, President of DIHK
Dr. Martin Wansleben, Chief Executive of the DIHK
Website DIHK
AHK USA

Association of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce (German: Deutscher Industrie- und Handelskammertag, DIHK). The DIHK is a German 'chamber,' similar to an English guild but is required under German law and provides political influence of a trade union. This organization was formerly known as the Deutscher Industrie- und Handelstag or DIHT.

DIHK

In Germany, 'Chambers of Commerce and Industry' is an organization for 80 'chambers' who represents companies within the German state. The DIHK provides over 'three million entrepreneurs' or association members, representing small kiosks and shops to larger commercial companies, with political influence. DIHK has its headquarters in Berlin, a major office in Brussels and representative offices throughout Europe.[1]

Association members are under German Chamber of Commerce compulsory or public law model, enterprises of certain sizes, types, or sectors are obliged to become members of the chamber. This model is common in European Union countries (France,[2] Germany, Italy, Spain), but also in Japan. Main tasks of the chambers are foreign trade promotion, vocational training, regional economic development, and general services to their members. The chambers were given responsibilities of public administration in various fields by the state which they exercise in order management. The chambers also have a consultative function; this means the chambers must be consulted whenever a new law related to industry or commerce is proposed.[1][3]

In Germany, for over 150 years, the chambers of commerce and industry (IHK - Industrie- und Handelskammer) and the chambers of skilled crafts (HwK - Handwerkskammer) are public statutory bodies with self-administration under the inspectorate of the state ministry of economy. Enterprises are members by law according to the chamber act (IHK-Gesetz) of 1956. Because of this, such chambers are much bigger than chambers under private law. IHK Munich, the biggest German chamber of commerce, has 350,000 member companies.[4] Germany also has compulsory chambers for "free occupations" such as architects, dentists, engineers, lawyers, notaries, physicians and pharmacists. Exceptions are skilled craftsmen, freelancers and agricultural businesses.[1][5]

AHK USA

Logo of AHK USA

German American Chambers of Commerce is a bilateral trade organization promoting German and German-American businesses within the United States and worldwide in 90 countries and 130 locations. The AHKs throughout the world are under the 'DEinternational' brand name.[6]

The GACCs represent about 2,500 members in the United States under the abrieviation AHK USA. In German this is; Deutsch-Amerikanische Handelskammer or AHK. It has offices in Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia and San Francisco with a liaison office to the Representative of German Industry and Trade in Washington D.C.[6]

The GACC Consulting Services Department's goal is to assist and support German companies with USA market entry and expansion. They do this by providing "events, such as networking receptions, economic forums, members only events, Industry specific conferences, business luncheons, seminars" including lobbying the American government agencies.[6] They also provide companies with market analysis, marketing concepts, legal and tax assistance, business representation, and Trade show support.[7]

The GACC publishes various articles, journals and reports. These include, but are not limited to:[8]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trade unions.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Deutscher Industrie und Handelskammertag (2012). "'Chambers of Commerce and Industry'". DIHK. Deutscher Industrie und Handelskammertag. Retrieved September 24, 2012. See also:Who we are
  2. André-Pierre Nouvion, Chambres de commerce et d'industrie - Encyclopédie juridique Dalloz - Répertoire de droit commercial, 2005
  3. "Markus Pilgrim and Ralf Meier, Chamber Primer" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-01-07. Retrieved 2011-12-21.
  4. "IHK München". Retrieved 31 August 2010.
  5. Overview of DIHK
  6. 1 2 3 Deutsch-Amerikanische Handelskammer (2012). "German American Chambers of Commerce". AHK USA. Deutscher Industrie und Handelskammertag. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  7. Deutsch-Amerikanische Handelskammer (2012). "German American Chambers of Commerce - Market entry USA". AHK USA. Deutscher Industrie und Handelskammertag. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  8. Deutsch-Amerikanische Handelskammer (2012). "German American Chambers of Commerce - Publications". AHK USA. Deutscher Industrie und Handelskammertag. Archived from the original on July 20, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.