Direct Investment Surveys: BE-12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct Investment in the United States, 58953-58955 [2022-21113]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 188 / Thursday, September 29, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
Volume 1, Revision 24, dated March 27,
2020.
(iii) Section 05–15—Instrument Systems,
Chapter 5, ABNORMAL PROCEDURES,
Bombardier CRJ Series Regional Jet Model
CL–600–2E25 (Series 1000) AFM, CSP D–
012, Revision 23, dated February 14, 2020.
(iv) Section 05–15—Instrument Systems, of
Chapter 5, ABNORMAL PROCEDURES, of
MHI RJ Model CL–600–2B19 AFM, CSP A–
012, Volume 1, Revision 74, dated July 3,
2020.
(3) For service information identified in
this AD, contact MHI RJ Aviation Group,
Customer Response Center, 3655 Ave. des
Grandes-Tourelles, Suite 110, Boisbriand,
Que´bec J7H 0E2 Canada; North America tollfree telephone 833–990–7272 or direct-dial
telephone 450–990–7272; fax 514–855–8501;
email thd.crj@mhirj.com; internet mhirj.com.
(4) You may view this service information
at the FAA, Airworthiness Products Section,
Operational Safety Branch, 2200 South 216th
St., Des Moines, WA. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA, call
206–231–3195.
(5) You may view this service information
that is incorporated by reference at the
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For information on
the availability of this material at NARA,
email fr.inspection@nara.gov, or go to:
archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibrlocations.html.
Issued on June 2, 2022.
Christina Underwood,
Acting Director, Compliance & Airworthiness
Division, Aircraft Certification Service.
Editorial note: This document was
received for publication by the Office of the
Federal Register on September 23, 2022.
[FR Doc. 2022–21014 Filed 9–28–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
15 CFR Part 801
[Docket No. 220922–0196]
RIN 0691–AA93
Direct Investment Surveys: BE–12,
Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States
Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The final rule amends
regulations of the Department of
Commerce’s Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) to set forth the reporting
requirements for the 2022 BE–12,
Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States. The
BE–12 survey is conducted every five
years; the prior survey covered 2017.
The benchmark survey covers the
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Sep 28, 2022
Jkt 256001
universe of foreign direct investment in
the United States and is BEA’s most
detailed survey of such investment. For
the 2022 BE–12 survey, BEA will make
changes in data items collected, the
design of the survey forms, and the
reporting requirements for the survey to
satisfy changing data needs and to
improve data quality and the
effectiveness and efficiency of data
collection.
DATES: This final rule is effective
October 31, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kirsten Brew, Chief, Multinational
Operations Branch, Direct Investment
Division (BE–49), Bureau of Economic
Analysis, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 4600 Silver Hill Road,
Washington, DC 20233; phone (301)
278–9152; or via email at Kirsten.Brew@
bea.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final
rule amends 15 CFR part 801 to set forth
the reporting requirements for the BE–
12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States. Under
this final rule 15 CFR 801.10 is modified
to clarify the timing of this benchmark
survey. The next BE–12 survey will
apply to the 2022 fiscal reporting year,
and will be conducted once every five
years thereafter, for reporting years
ending in 2 and 7.
BEA conducts the BE–12 survey
under the authority of the International
Investment and Trade in Services
Survey Act (22 U.S.C. 3101–3108).
The BE–12 survey covers the universe
of foreign direct investment in the
United States in terms of value and is
BEA’s most detailed survey of such
investment. Foreign direct investment
in the United States is defined as the
ownership or control, directly or
indirectly, by one foreign person
(foreign parent) of 10 percent or more of
the voting securities of an incorporated
U.S. business enterprise or an
equivalent interest in an unincorporated
U.S. business enterprise, including a
branch.
The purpose of the BE–12 survey is to
obtain universe data on the financial
and operating characteristics of U.S.
affiliates and on positions and
transactions between U.S. affiliates and
their foreign parent groups (which are
defined to include all foreign parents
and foreign affiliates of foreign parents).
These data are needed to measure the
size and economic significance of
foreign direct investment in the United
States, measure changes in such
investment, and assess its impact on the
U.S. economy. Such data are generally
found in enterprise-level accounting
records of respondent companies. These
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
58953
data are used to derive current universe
estimates of direct investment from
sample data collected in other BEA
surveys in non-benchmark years. In
particular, they serve as benchmarks for
the quarterly direct investment
estimates included in the U.S.
international transactions, international
investment position, and national
income and product accounts, and for
annual estimates of the foreign direct
investment position in the United States
and of the activities of the U.S. affiliates
of foreign companies.
Description of Changes
The final rule amends the regulations
(15 CFR part 801) and the survey forms
for the BE–12 survey. These
amendments include changes in data
items collected, the design of the survey
forms, and the reporting requirements
for the survey.
BEA adds, deletes, and modifies some
items on the BE–12 survey forms. The
following items will be added to the
BE–12 survey:
(1) A question to collect the city of
each foreign parent and ultimate
beneficial owner (UBO) on all forms.
(2) The balance sheet and income
statement sections on the BE–12A form
will be modified to separately collect
the investment in, and income from, (a)
‘‘unconsolidated U.S. affiliates’’ and (b)
‘‘foreign entities,’’ which were
previously collected as a combined
total.
(3) Supplemental sections A and B,
which collect identification information
on business enterprises owned by the
U.S. affiliate, will be modified on all
BE–12 forms to request more
information on the reasons the U.S.
business enterprises changed since the
last report. This will include options for
‘‘newly acquired’’ or ‘‘newly
established’’ if an enterprise is being
reported on a supplement for the first
time, and options to report U.S.
business enterprises that had a name
change, were sold, merged or liquidated.
A follow-up question will be added
requesting the date of the corporate
change for new enterprises.
(4) Questions will be added on the
BE–12A form to collect sales data for
certain service types where there is no
clear link between the industry of sales
and the type of services supplied. These
service types are (1) intellectual
property (IP) rights and (2) advertising.
(5) Questions will be added to collect
sales data on the BE–12A form related
to the provision of selected services
generally recognized as prevalent in the
digital economy. These selected services
are (1) cloud computing and data
storage and (2) digital intermediation
E:\FR\FM\29SER1.SGM
29SER1
58954
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 188 / Thursday, September 29, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
services. In addition, checkboxes will be
added to the BE–12A for respondents to
identify the percentage of their sales of
services delivered remotely, sales of
services that were digitally ordered, and
sales of goods that were digitally
ordered, along with checkboxes to
identify if this information was sourced
from their accounting records or from
recall/general knowledge.
The final rule also eliminates the
following items from the benchmark
survey:
(1) Expensed petroleum and mining
expenditures from the BE–12A form.
(2) Commercial property from the
state schedule of the BE–12A and BE–
12B forms.
(3) Part III of the BE–12A and BE–12B
forms, which collects information on
investment and transactions between
the U.S. affiliate and the affiliated
foreign group, will be scaled back to
include only the following items:
(1) Foreign parent ownership and
classification information
(2) A question on reverse investment
(3) Intercompany debt balances for
U.S. affiliates with less than $60 million
in assets, sales, or net income.
The final rule will also modify the
survey forms to improve question
wording, layout, and instructions.
On July 1, 2022, BEA published a
notice of proposed rulemaking that set
forth revised reporting criteria for the
BE–12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign
Direct Investment in the United States
(87 FR 39411). No comments on the
proposed rule were received.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of E.O.
12866.
Executive Order 13132
This final rule does not contain
policies with federalism implications
sufficient to warrant preparation of a
federalism assessment under E.O.
13132.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information in this
final rule was submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
pursuant to the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44
U.S.C. 3501–3520 (PRA). OMB
approved the information collection for
the 2022 Benchmark Survey of Foreign
Direct Investment in the United States
under OMB control number 0608–0042.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of
the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Sep 28, 2022
Jkt 256001
to the requirements of the PRA unless
that collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
The BE–12 survey is expected to
result in the filing of reports from
approximately 26,400 U.S. affiliates.
The respondent burden for this
collection of information will vary from
one company to another. The estimated
average time per respondent is 10.5
hours, including time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
Thus, the total respondent burden for
this survey is estimated at 276,441
hours, compared to 249,625 hours for
the previous (2017) benchmark survey.
An increase in the number of foreignowned companies accounts for nearly
all of the increase in the estimated
respondent burden, while the addition
of new questions and the deletion of
previous questions had a marginal
impact on the estimated respondent
burden.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in the final rule
should be sent to both BEA via email at
Kirsten.Brew@bea.gov, and OMB, Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA), Paperwork Reduction Project
0608–0042, Attention PRA Desk Officer
for BEA, via email at OIRA_
Submission@omb.eop.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Chief Counsel for Regulation,
Department of Commerce, certified at
the proposed rule stage to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business
Administration, under the provisions of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5
U.S.C. 605(b), that this final rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the
certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
No comments were received regarding
the certification or the economic impact
of the rule. Therefore, a final regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required and
none has been prepared.
List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 801
Economic statistics, Foreign
investment in the United States,
International transactions, Multinational
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
enterprises, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Paul W. Farello,
Associate Director of International
Economics, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
For reasons set forth in the preamble,
BEA amends 15 CFR part 801 as
follows:
PART 801—SURVEY OF
INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES
BETWEEN U.S. AND FOREIGN
PERSONS AND SURVEYS OF DIRECT
INVESTMENT
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 801 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 15 U.S.C. 4908; 22
U.S.C. 3101–3108; E.O. 11961 (3 CFR, 1977
Comp., p. 86), as amended by E.O. 12318 (3
CFR, 1981 Comp. p. 173); and E.O. 12518 (3
CFR, 1985 Comp. p. 348).
■
2. Revise § 801.10 to read as follows:
§ 801.10 Rules and regulations for BE–12,
Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States.
A BE–12, Benchmark Survey of
Foreign Direct Investment in the United
States, will be conducted once every
five years and covers years ending in 2
and 7. BEA will describe the proposed
information collection in a public notice
and will solicit comments accounting to
the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501–3520).
All legal authorities, provisions,
definitions, and requirements contained
in §§ 801.1 and 801.2 and 801.4 through
801.6 are applicable to this survey.
Specific additional rules and regulations
for the BE–12 survey are given in
paragraphs (a) through (e) of this
section. More detailed instructions are
given on the report forms and
instructions.
(a) Response required. A response is
required from persons subject to the
reporting requirements of the BE–12,
Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States,
contained in this section, whether or not
they are contacted by BEA. Also, a
person, or their agent, contacted by BEA
about reporting in this survey must
respond in writing pursuant to this
section. This may be accomplished by
filing a properly completed BE–12
report (BE–12A, BE–12B, BE–12C, or
BE–12 Claim for Not Filing).
(b) Who must report. A BE–12 report
is required for each U.S. affiliate (except
certain private funds as described in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (3) of this
section), that is, for each U.S. business
enterprise in which a foreign person
(foreign parent) owned or controlled,
directly or indirectly, 10 percent or
more of the voting securities in an
E:\FR\FM\29SER1.SGM
29SER1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 188 / Thursday, September 29, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
incorporated U.S. business enterprise,
or an equivalent interest in an
unincorporated U.S. business
enterprise, at the end of the business
enterprise’s fiscal year that ended in the
calendar year covered by the survey.
Certain private funds are exempt from
reporting on the BE–12 survey. If a U.S.
business meets ALL of the following 3
criteria, it is not required to file any BE–
12 report except to indicate exemption
from the survey if contacted by BEA:
(1) The U.S. business enterprise is a
private fund;
(2) The private fund does not own,
directly or indirectly through another
business enterprise, an ‘‘operating
company’’—i.e., a business enterprise
that is not a private fund or a holding
company—in which the foreign parent
owns at least 10 percent of the voting
interest; and
(3) If the foreign parent owns the
private fund indirectly (through one or
more other U.S. business enterprises),
there are no U.S. ‘‘operating companies’’
between the foreign parent and the
indirectly-owned private fund.
(c) Forms to be filed. (1) Form BE–12A
must be completed by a U.S. affiliate
that was majority-owned by one or more
foreign parents (for purposes of this
survey, a ‘‘majority-owned’’ U.S.
affiliate is one in which the combined
direct and indirect ownership interest of
all foreign parents of the U.S. affiliate
exceeds 50 percent) if, on a fully
consolidated basis, or, in the case of real
estate investment, on an aggregated
basis, any one of the following three
items for the U.S. affiliate (not just the
foreign parent’s share) was greater than
$300 million (positive or negative) at the
end of, or for, its fiscal year that ended
in the calendar year covered by the
survey:
(i) Total assets (do not net out
liabilities);
(ii) Sales or gross operating revenues,
excluding sales taxes; or
(iii) Net income after provision for
U.S. income taxes.
(2) Form BE–12B must be completed
by:
(i) A majority-owned U.S. affiliate if,
on a fully consolidated basis, or, in the
case of real estate investment, on an
aggregated basis, any one of the three
items listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section (not just the foreign parent’s
share), was greater than $60 million
(positive or negative) but none of these
items was greater than $300 million
(positive or negative) at the end of, or
for, its fiscal year that ended in the
calendar year covered by the survey.
(ii) A minority-owned U.S. affiliate
(for purposes of this survey, a
‘‘minority-owned’’ U.S. affiliate is one
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Sep 28, 2022
Jkt 256001
in which the combined direct and
indirect ownership interest of all foreign
parents of the U.S. affiliate is 50 percent
or less) if, on a fully consolidated basis,
or, in the case of real estate investment,
on an aggregated basis, any one of the
three items listed in paragraph (c)(1) of
this section (not just the foreign parent’s
share), was greater than $60 million
(positive or negative) at the end of, or
for, its fiscal year that ended in the
calendar year covered by the survey .
(3) Form BE–12C must be completed
by a U.S. affiliate if, on a fully
consolidated basis, or, in the case of real
estate investment, on an aggregated
basis, none of the three items listed in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section for a U.S.
affiliate (not just the foreign parent’s
share), was greater than $60 million
(positive or negative) at the end of, or
for, its fiscal year that ended in the
calendar year covered by the survey.
(4) Any U.S. person that is contacted
by BEA concerning the BE–12 survey,
but is not subject to the reporting
requirements, must file a BE–12 Claim
for Not Filing. The requirement in this
paragraph (c)(4) is necessary to ensure
compliance with reporting requirements
and efficient administration of the Act
by eliminating unnecessary follow-up
contact.
(d) Aggregation of real estate
investments. All real estate investments
of a foreign person must be aggregated
for the purpose of applying the
reporting criteria. A single report form
must be filed to report the aggregate
holdings, unless written permission has
been received from BEA to do
otherwise. Those holdings not
aggregated must be reported separately
on the same type of report that would
have been required if the real estate
holdings were aggregated.
(e) Due date. A fully completed and
certified Form BE–12A, BE–12B, BE–
12C, or BE–12 Claim for Not Filing is
due to be filed with BEA not later than
May 31 of the year after the year covered
by the survey (or by June 30 for
reporting companies that use BEA’s
eFile system).
[FR Doc. 2022–21113 Filed 9–28–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–06–P
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
58955
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
15 CFR Part 801
[Docket No. 220923–0197]
RIN 0691–AA92
Direct Investment Surveys: BE–13,
Survey of New Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States
Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule amends
regulations of the Department of
Commerce’s Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) to set forth the reporting
requirements for the BE–13, Survey of
New Foreign Direct Investment in the
United States (‘‘BE–13 survey’’). The
BE–13 survey collects information on
the acquisition or establishment of U.S.
business enterprises by foreign
investors, and information on
expansions by existing U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies. The data collected
through the survey are used to measure
the amount of new foreign direct
investment in the United States and
ensure complete coverage of BEA’s
other foreign direct investment
statistics. BEA will change the reporting
requirements of the survey to reduce
respondent burden, simplify reporting,
and increase the efficiency of the data
collection. This mandatory BE–13
survey is required from persons subject
to the reporting requirements, whether
or not they are contacted by BEA.
DATES: This final rule is effective
October 31, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ricardo Limes, Chief, Direct
Transactions and Positions Branch (BE–
49NI), Bureau of Economic Analysis,
U.S. Department of Commerce, 4600
Silver Hill Road, Washington, DC
20233; email Ricardo.limes@bea.gov or
301–278–9659.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BE–
13, Survey of New Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States, is a
mandatory survey conducted by BEA
under the authority of the International
Investment and Trade in Services
Survey Act (22 U.S.C. 3101–3108).
The purpose of the BE–13 survey is to
collect data on the acquisition or
establishment of U.S. business
enterprises by foreign investors and the
expansion of existing U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies to establish a new
facility where business is conducted.
The data collected on the survey are
used to measure the amount and
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\29SER1.SGM
29SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 188 (Thursday, September 29, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 58953-58955]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-21113]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
15 CFR Part 801
[Docket No. 220922-0196]
RIN 0691-AA93
Direct Investment Surveys: BE-12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign
Direct Investment in the United States
AGENCY: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The final rule amends regulations of the Department of
Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) to set forth the reporting
requirements for the 2022 BE-12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct
Investment in the United States. The BE-12 survey is conducted every
five years; the prior survey covered 2017. The benchmark survey covers
the universe of foreign direct investment in the United States and is
BEA's most detailed survey of such investment. For the 2022 BE-12
survey, BEA will make changes in data items collected, the design of
the survey forms, and the reporting requirements for the survey to
satisfy changing data needs and to improve data quality and the
effectiveness and efficiency of data collection.
DATES: This final rule is effective October 31, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kirsten Brew, Chief, Multinational
Operations Branch, Direct Investment Division (BE-49), Bureau of
Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, 4600 Silver Hill Road,
Washington, DC 20233; phone (301) 278-9152; or via email at
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule amends 15 CFR part 801 to
set forth the reporting requirements for the BE-12, Benchmark Survey of
Foreign Direct Investment in the United States. Under this final rule
15 CFR 801.10 is modified to clarify the timing of this benchmark
survey. The next BE-12 survey will apply to the 2022 fiscal reporting
year, and will be conducted once every five years thereafter, for
reporting years ending in 2 and 7.
BEA conducts the BE-12 survey under the authority of the
International Investment and Trade in Services Survey Act (22 U.S.C.
3101-3108).
The BE-12 survey covers the universe of foreign direct investment
in the United States in terms of value and is BEA's most detailed
survey of such investment. Foreign direct investment in the United
States is defined as the ownership or control, directly or indirectly,
by one foreign person (foreign parent) of 10 percent or more of the
voting securities of an incorporated U.S. business enterprise or an
equivalent interest in an unincorporated U.S. business enterprise,
including a branch.
The purpose of the BE-12 survey is to obtain universe data on the
financial and operating characteristics of U.S. affiliates and on
positions and transactions between U.S. affiliates and their foreign
parent groups (which are defined to include all foreign parents and
foreign affiliates of foreign parents). These data are needed to
measure the size and economic significance of foreign direct investment
in the United States, measure changes in such investment, and assess
its impact on the U.S. economy. Such data are generally found in
enterprise-level accounting records of respondent companies. These data
are used to derive current universe estimates of direct investment from
sample data collected in other BEA surveys in non-benchmark years. In
particular, they serve as benchmarks for the quarterly direct
investment estimates included in the U.S. international transactions,
international investment position, and national income and product
accounts, and for annual estimates of the foreign direct investment
position in the United States and of the activities of the U.S.
affiliates of foreign companies.
Description of Changes
The final rule amends the regulations (15 CFR part 801) and the
survey forms for the BE-12 survey. These amendments include changes in
data items collected, the design of the survey forms, and the reporting
requirements for the survey.
BEA adds, deletes, and modifies some items on the BE-12 survey
forms. The following items will be added to the BE-12 survey:
(1) A question to collect the city of each foreign parent and
ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) on all forms.
(2) The balance sheet and income statement sections on the BE-12A
form will be modified to separately collect the investment in, and
income from, (a) ``unconsolidated U.S. affiliates'' and (b) ``foreign
entities,'' which were previously collected as a combined total.
(3) Supplemental sections A and B, which collect identification
information on business enterprises owned by the U.S. affiliate, will
be modified on all BE-12 forms to request more information on the
reasons the U.S. business enterprises changed since the last report.
This will include options for ``newly acquired'' or ``newly
established'' if an enterprise is being reported on a supplement for
the first time, and options to report U.S. business enterprises that
had a name change, were sold, merged or liquidated. A follow-up
question will be added requesting the date of the corporate change for
new enterprises.
(4) Questions will be added on the BE-12A form to collect sales
data for certain service types where there is no clear link between the
industry of sales and the type of services supplied. These service
types are (1) intellectual property (IP) rights and (2) advertising.
(5) Questions will be added to collect sales data on the BE-12A
form related to the provision of selected services generally recognized
as prevalent in the digital economy. These selected services are (1)
cloud computing and data storage and (2) digital intermediation
[[Page 58954]]
services. In addition, checkboxes will be added to the BE-12A for
respondents to identify the percentage of their sales of services
delivered remotely, sales of services that were digitally ordered, and
sales of goods that were digitally ordered, along with checkboxes to
identify if this information was sourced from their accounting records
or from recall/general knowledge.
The final rule also eliminates the following items from the
benchmark survey:
(1) Expensed petroleum and mining expenditures from the BE-12A
form.
(2) Commercial property from the state schedule of the BE-12A and
BE-12B forms.
(3) Part III of the BE-12A and BE-12B forms, which collects
information on investment and transactions between the U.S. affiliate
and the affiliated foreign group, will be scaled back to include only
the following items:
(1) Foreign parent ownership and classification information
(2) A question on reverse investment
(3) Intercompany debt balances for U.S. affiliates with less than
$60 million in assets, sales, or net income.
The final rule will also modify the survey forms to improve
question wording, layout, and instructions.
On July 1, 2022, BEA published a notice of proposed rulemaking that
set forth revised reporting criteria for the BE-12, Benchmark Survey of
Foreign Direct Investment in the United States (87 FR 39411). No
comments on the proposed rule were received.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 13132
This final rule does not contain policies with federalism
implications sufficient to warrant preparation of a federalism
assessment under E.O. 13132.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information in this final rule was submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) pursuant to the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520 (PRA). OMB
approved the information collection for the 2022 Benchmark Survey of
Foreign Direct Investment in the United States under OMB control number
0608-0042. Notwithstanding any other provisions of the law, no person
is required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA unless that collection displays a currently
valid OMB control number.
The BE-12 survey is expected to result in the filing of reports
from approximately 26,400 U.S. affiliates. The respondent burden for
this collection of information will vary from one company to another.
The estimated average time per respondent is 10.5 hours, including time
for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering
and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection of information. Thus, the total respondent burden for this
survey is estimated at 276,441 hours, compared to 249,625 hours for the
previous (2017) benchmark survey. An increase in the number of foreign-
owned companies accounts for nearly all of the increase in the
estimated respondent burden, while the addition of new questions and
the deletion of previous questions had a marginal impact on the
estimated respondent burden.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in the
final rule should be sent to both BEA via email at
[email protected], and OMB, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA), Paperwork Reduction Project 0608-0042, Attention PRA
Desk Officer for BEA, via email at [email protected].
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Chief Counsel for Regulation, Department of Commerce, certified
at the proposed rule stage to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Small
Business Administration, under the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here. No comments were received
regarding the certification or the economic impact of the rule.
Therefore, a final regulatory flexibility analysis is not required and
none has been prepared.
List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 801
Economic statistics, Foreign investment in the United States,
International transactions, Multinational enterprises, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Paul W. Farello,
Associate Director of International Economics, Bureau of Economic
Analysis.
For reasons set forth in the preamble, BEA amends 15 CFR part 801
as follows:
PART 801--SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES BETWEEN U.S.
AND FOREIGN PERSONS AND SURVEYS OF DIRECT INVESTMENT
0
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR part 801 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 15 U.S.C. 4908; 22 U.S.C. 3101-3108;
E.O. 11961 (3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 86), as amended by E.O. 12318 (3
CFR, 1981 Comp. p. 173); and E.O. 12518 (3 CFR, 1985 Comp. p. 348).
0
2. Revise Sec. 801.10 to read as follows:
Sec. 801.10 Rules and regulations for BE-12, Benchmark Survey of
Foreign Direct Investment in the United States.
A BE-12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct Investment in the
United States, will be conducted once every five years and covers years
ending in 2 and 7. BEA will describe the proposed information
collection in a public notice and will solicit comments accounting to
the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520).
All legal authorities, provisions, definitions, and requirements
contained in Sec. Sec. 801.1 and 801.2 and 801.4 through 801.6 are
applicable to this survey. Specific additional rules and regulations
for the BE-12 survey are given in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this
section. More detailed instructions are given on the report forms and
instructions.
(a) Response required. A response is required from persons subject
to the reporting requirements of the BE-12, Benchmark Survey of Foreign
Direct Investment in the United States, contained in this section,
whether or not they are contacted by BEA. Also, a person, or their
agent, contacted by BEA about reporting in this survey must respond in
writing pursuant to this section. This may be accomplished by filing a
properly completed BE-12 report (BE-12A, BE-12B, BE-12C, or BE-12 Claim
for Not Filing).
(b) Who must report. A BE-12 report is required for each U.S.
affiliate (except certain private funds as described in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (3) of this section), that is, for each U.S. business
enterprise in which a foreign person (foreign parent) owned or
controlled, directly or indirectly, 10 percent or more of the voting
securities in an
[[Page 58955]]
incorporated U.S. business enterprise, or an equivalent interest in an
unincorporated U.S. business enterprise, at the end of the business
enterprise's fiscal year that ended in the calendar year covered by the
survey. Certain private funds are exempt from reporting on the BE-12
survey. If a U.S. business meets ALL of the following 3 criteria, it is
not required to file any BE-12 report except to indicate exemption from
the survey if contacted by BEA:
(1) The U.S. business enterprise is a private fund;
(2) The private fund does not own, directly or indirectly through
another business enterprise, an ``operating company''--i.e., a business
enterprise that is not a private fund or a holding company--in which
the foreign parent owns at least 10 percent of the voting interest; and
(3) If the foreign parent owns the private fund indirectly (through
one or more other U.S. business enterprises), there are no U.S.
``operating companies'' between the foreign parent and the indirectly-
owned private fund.
(c) Forms to be filed. (1) Form BE-12A must be completed by a U.S.
affiliate that was majority-owned by one or more foreign parents (for
purposes of this survey, a ``majority-owned'' U.S. affiliate is one in
which the combined direct and indirect ownership interest of all
foreign parents of the U.S. affiliate exceeds 50 percent) if, on a
fully consolidated basis, or, in the case of real estate investment, on
an aggregated basis, any one of the following three items for the U.S.
affiliate (not just the foreign parent's share) was greater than $300
million (positive or negative) at the end of, or for, its fiscal year
that ended in the calendar year covered by the survey:
(i) Total assets (do not net out liabilities);
(ii) Sales or gross operating revenues, excluding sales taxes; or
(iii) Net income after provision for U.S. income taxes.
(2) Form BE-12B must be completed by:
(i) A majority-owned U.S. affiliate if, on a fully consolidated
basis, or, in the case of real estate investment, on an aggregated
basis, any one of the three items listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section (not just the foreign parent's share), was greater than $60
million (positive or negative) but none of these items was greater than
$300 million (positive or negative) at the end of, or for, its fiscal
year that ended in the calendar year covered by the survey.
(ii) A minority-owned U.S. affiliate (for purposes of this survey,
a ``minority-owned'' U.S. affiliate is one in which the combined direct
and indirect ownership interest of all foreign parents of the U.S.
affiliate is 50 percent or less) if, on a fully consolidated basis, or,
in the case of real estate investment, on an aggregated basis, any one
of the three items listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this section (not just
the foreign parent's share), was greater than $60 million (positive or
negative) at the end of, or for, its fiscal year that ended in the
calendar year covered by the survey .
(3) Form BE-12C must be completed by a U.S. affiliate if, on a
fully consolidated basis, or, in the case of real estate investment, on
an aggregated basis, none of the three items listed in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section for a U.S. affiliate (not just the foreign parent's
share), was greater than $60 million (positive or negative) at the end
of, or for, its fiscal year that ended in the calendar year covered by
the survey.
(4) Any U.S. person that is contacted by BEA concerning the BE-12
survey, but is not subject to the reporting requirements, must file a
BE-12 Claim for Not Filing. The requirement in this paragraph (c)(4) is
necessary to ensure compliance with reporting requirements and
efficient administration of the Act by eliminating unnecessary follow-
up contact.
(d) Aggregation of real estate investments. All real estate
investments of a foreign person must be aggregated for the purpose of
applying the reporting criteria. A single report form must be filed to
report the aggregate holdings, unless written permission has been
received from BEA to do otherwise. Those holdings not aggregated must
be reported separately on the same type of report that would have been
required if the real estate holdings were aggregated.
(e) Due date. A fully completed and certified Form BE-12A, BE-12B,
BE-12C, or BE-12 Claim for Not Filing is due to be filed with BEA not
later than May 31 of the year after the year covered by the survey (or
by June 30 for reporting companies that use BEA's eFile system).
[FR Doc. 2022-21113 Filed 9-28-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-06-P