By
Stephanie Condon
Thursday, March 26 2009 11:43 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/business/0,39044229,62052574,00.htm
About 100 technology executives, including dozens of high-level officers and
CEOs, met with White House officials and congressional leaders Wednesday to
discuss ways the tech industry can help turn around the economy and the
legislative agenda they say is needed to make that happen.
Cisco CEO John Chambers, Hewlett-Packard Executive Vice President Mike
Holston, and Solazyme CEO Jonathan Wolfson were some of the executives brought
together in Washington by TechNet, a bipartisan political network of CEOs from
the "innovation" economy. The organization unveiled its 2009 policy agenda,
which includes some proposals already under way such as support for green
technologies and increased broadband infrastructure, as well as more
controversial issues like immigration reform and patent reform.
The tech executives first met with a bipartisan group of congressmen,
followed by a meeting with members of the Senate Democratic Steering Committee,
including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senators John Kerry, Maria Cantwell, and Dick Durbin. They also met
with a group of Senate Republicans, as well as House Republicans led by Rep.
Eric Cantor. There was also a meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other House Democrats.
At the White House, the executives met with officials including White House
Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett, National Economic Council Director Larry
Summers, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change Carol Browner,
and Tom Kalil, the associate policy director for the White House Office of
Science and Technology Policy.
The American Reinvestment and Recovery Act has enabled the Obama
administration and Congress to address some issues relevant to the tech
community, like health information technology and energy efficiency, but there
needs to be "continued follow-through both from our side and their side", said
Chris Hankin, senior director of federal government affairs for Sun
Microsystems.
The executives also appealed to the politicians to resist protectionist
policies spurred by concern over U.S. job growth. U.S. President Barack Obama's budget
proposal, for instance, would limit multinational corporations' ability to defer
U.S. taxes on profits earned abroad until the profits are brought back to the
United States. The administration estimates it can raise US$210 billion over 10
years by collecting those taxes.
"There's concern that would put us at a competitive disadvantage" since
other countries have the same tax deferral policy, said Betsy Mullins, TechNet's
vice president of government and political affairs.
With over 70 percent of the industry's sales overseas, "what does that do to
your sales, your ability to grow, and to create new jobs?" she asked.
This article was first published as a blog post on CNET News.