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New Zealand proposes security fees
Mon Jul 19, 2004
The JOURNAL of COMMERCE ONLINE
WASHINGTON -- New Zealand customs officials have proposed security
fees on vessels and import and export cargo to defray the added cost
of security measures.
The proposal issued on Monday would allow New Zealand Customs to
collect NZ$352 (US$232) for every report of inbound ocean cargo and
NZ$30 (US$19.77) for inbound air cargo. Customs would collect
NZ$11.25 for each outbound vessel cargo report, and NZ$3.75 for
outbound air cargo. Customs also would collect NZ$22 for each import
entry, and NZ$5.75 for each export entry.
Participants in the Secure Exports Partnership would have reduced
export fees of NZ$4. If the government approves, the new fees would
go into effect Dec. 1.
--
R.G. Edmonson
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
EXECUTIVE
OFFICE OF THE
PRESIDENT
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20508
JULY
23, 2004
Dominican Republic to Join Central American Nations in Free Trade
Agreement With United States
Agreement to Be
Signed August 5 in Washington
WASHINGTON – U.S. Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick announced
today that the Dominican Republic will enter into a free trade
agreement with the United States and five countries of Central America
on Thursday, August 5, 2004, in Washington, DC. Zoellick will sign on
behalf of the United States and Secretary for Commerce and Industry
Sonia Guzman will sign for the Dominican Republic. Trade ministers
from Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua will
sign on behalf of their nations, resulting in an agreement among the
seven countries that will be known as the United States-Dominican
Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA). The new
agreement builds on the recently signed United States – Central
America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA).
“Adding
the ‘DR’ to the CAFTA also adds to the compelling economic logic of
the CAFTA, by expanding the size of the market covered by the
agreement by more than one-third. Our DRCAFTA trading partners make up
the second-largest market for U.S. exports in Latin America, behind
only Mexico,” said Zoellick. “The DR-CAFTA will also fulfill a vision
of expanded economic opportunity and trade put forward by President
Bush, and continues the strong momentum of recent months in advancing
our free trade agenda.”
Zoellick
notified Congress on August 4, 2003 of the Administration’s intent to
negotiate an FTA with the Dominican Republic. Negotiations were
launched in January 2004 and concluded on March 15. President Bush
formally notified Congress of his plan to sign an FTA with the
Dominican Republic on March 25.
The DR-CAFTA
is a regional trade agreement among all seven signatories, and will
contribute to further regional integration. The Administration plans
to submit a single legislative package to Congress to implement the
new trade agreement with the five Central American countries and the
Dominican Republic.
Combined
total goods trade between the U.S. and the original five CAFTA
countries was $23.6 billion in 2003. The addition of the Dominican
Republic represents an additional $8.7 billion in annual two-way
trade, for a combined total trade relationship of approximately $32
billion.
Eighty
percent of DR-CAFTA imports already enter the United States duty free
under the Caribbean Basin Initiative, Generalized System of
Preferences and Most Favored Nation programs; the DR-CAFTA will
provide reciprocal access for U.S. products and services.
The
United States has completed FTAs with nine countries – Australia,
Bahrain, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Morocco and Nicaragua - over the past eight months.
Negotiations are under way with Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Panama,
Thailand, and the five nations of the Southern African Customs Union (SACU).
New and pending FTA partners, taken together, would constitute
America’s third largest export market and the sixth largest economy in
the world.
The
United States has FTAs in force with Israel, Canada and Mexico
(NAFTA), Jordan, Chile and Singapore.
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