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"Hungary: the Profitable Way Into Europe"
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A Luncheon Seminar
featuring
H.E. András Simonyi
Ambassador of Hungary to the U.S.
Barnabas Nemeth
Trade Commissioner of Hungary
Robert C. Knuepfer, Jr.
Baker & McKenzie
(former managing partner of the Budapest office)
Also, remarks by Sherrie Schilleci, Export
Sales
Coordinator with Reliagene Technologies, Inc.
(DNA analysis
& services) on a Louisiana
company’s experience in
Hungary.
| Note: The
speakers will be available for individual consultations
following the luncheon. |
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
- 12:00 Noon - 2:00 p.m.
- (11:30 a.m. networking reception
and Hungarian wine tasting)
The luncheon will feature Hungarian cuisine.
Plimsoll Club, 30th Floor, WTC
(Free validated parking in the WTC Garage)
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WHY HUNGARY?
Hungary is a strategic crossroads for trade in Europe,
pivotally located within relative proximity to numerous
consumable markets. It sits in the heart of the European Union
– to the west the world’s economic super powers, and
economically developing nations to the south and east.
Hungary is an export market itself and serves as a central
distribution point for the region providing access to some 500
million consumers. As a result, the growth of bi-lateral trade
between the U.S. and Hungary has been extremely dynamic and has
grown tenfold in the past decade. In fact, Hungary is the only
country in Central and Eastern Europe where the USA is the
leading investor, making it one of the hottest markets for U.S.
investment abroad.
For more information, visit The Hungarian Investment and
Trade Development Agency (ITDH) website at www.itdh.hu
H.E. András Simonyi became the Ambassador of Hungary
to the United States in 2002. From 2001 to 2002, he ran his own
consulting company, Danison Ltd. From 1999 to 2001 he became the
first Hungarian Permanent Representative on the NATO Council and
represented Hungary on the NAC during the Kosovo campaign. From
1995 to 1999 Amb. Simonyi headed the Hungarian NATO Liaison
Office in Brussels, where he was a key player in preparing
Hungarian membership in NATO and was a member of the delegation
to negotiate Hungary’s accession to the Alliance. From 1992 to
1995 Amb. Simonyi was Deputy Chief of Mission at the Mission of
Hungary to the European Communities and NATO in Brussels. From
1991 to 1992 he was Deputy Chief of Mission in the Hague. In
1989 he joined the Foreign Ministry to work with the so-called
Central European Initiative aka Pentagonale as a personal
assistant to the present foreign minister László Kovács. He
also headed the Nordic department of the Ministry. Ambassador
Simonyi was also Hungary’s representative to the Western
European Union Council for five years. He is also a frequent
lecturer on security issues, trans-Atlantic relations, the
problems of military reform, and NATO enlargement. He has
published numerous articles on the accession process to NATO,
trans-Atlantic relations and European security, and the war on
terror.
Since 2001, Barnabas Nemeth has been the Commercial
Counselor/Trade Commissioner to the U.S. in New York, member of
the Embassy of the Republic of Hungary, and representative of
the ITDH (The Hungarian Investment and Trade Development
Agency). From 1996 to 2001, he was the Director for Coordination
for the Hungarian Investment and Trade Development Agency (ITDH)
in charge of creating business strategy and plan, system
development of informatics in trade and investment development,
and coordination with foreign institutions (e.g. WTO/ITC, UNIDO,
TDA, OPIC, EXIM BANK, etc.). Mr. Nemeth was a Commercial
Counselor for the Hungarian Embassy in Washington from 1991 to
1996. From 1982 to 1991, he was Deputy Director General for the
Ministry of International Economic Relations, Division of
Economics, Ministry of Trade, in charge of foreign trade
analysis and strategy, and trade liberalization. Mr. Nemeth
attended College for Foreign Trade and Economics and the
Budapest University of Technical Sciences.
Robert C. Knuepfer, Jr. is a Partner and Attorney for
the law firm of Baker & McKenzie. His practice focus is
corporate and commercial transactions, specializing in mergers,
acquisitions and corporate finance, with focus on international
investment between the U.S. and Eastern Europe. He is past chair
of the firm’s Europe & Middle East Practice Group. From
1992-1995, he was chairman of the Central Europe and CIS
Practice Group and the managing partner of the Budapest office
of Baker & McKenzie. Mr. Knuepfer serves on the Advisory
Board of the Kellogg Graduate School of Management (Northwestern
University), and is an adjunct assistant professor at
Northwestern where he teaches project finance and international
business transactions. He received his J.D. (law review) and MBA
degrees from Northwestern University, and a B.A. degree from
Denison University (Phi Beta Kappa).
- In Cooperation With
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- Ark-La-Tex Regional Export & Technology Center
- Baton Rouge Center for World Affairs
- Consular Corps of New Orleans
- French-American Chamber of Commerce
- Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Louisiana
- International Freight Forwarders and
Customs Brokers Association of New Orleans
- International Trade Council/Red River Region
- Le Centre International de Lafayette
- Louisiana
International Trade Center/SBDC
- Louisiana District Export Council
- Louisiana Tax Free Shopping
- Louisiana Technology Council
- Loyola College of Business Administration
- Propeller Club, Port of New Orleans
- World Affairs Council of New Orleans
- World Trade Club of Greater New Orleans
Cost: $30 for members of the sponsoring
organizations and companies. $35 for non-members.
Registration and prepayment are
required by November 16, 10:00 a.m.
(cancellation notice required by
November 16, 10:00
a.m.)
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If you are a WTC member, the registration fee can
be charged to your account number noted on the registration
form.
All registrations on this site are done over a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) line.
Click here
for driving directions to the WTC.
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