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International Trade & Trade Policy Trade Facilitation Effects of Trade: -Economies of scale. -Market and business risk diversification. -Strengthening of competitive capabilities. Trade Barriers
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Facilitators of International Trade International Trade and Economic Development Organizations Government Organizations Other Institutions and Procedures Facilitating International Trade
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International Trade/Development Organizations World Trade Organization International Monetary Fund (IMF) Development Banks – e.g., World Bank United Nations Organizations
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Government Organizations Facilitating International Trade United States Agencies US Agency for International Development (USAID) US Department of Commerce Export-Import Bank of the United States State and Local Government Agencies Department of State Small Business Administration Department of Agriculture
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Non-government Organizations that Facilitate International Trade Commercial banks Export intermediaries Chamber of commerce and trade associations American chambers of commerce abroad International trade consultants and other advisors
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Other Institutions and Procedures Facilitating International Trade Trade Agreements: e.g., Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) market access; investment; services; government procurement; dispute settlement; agriculture; intellectual property rights; subsidies, antidumping and countervailing duties; and competition policy. Economic Blocs: e.g., Mercosur – Southern Common Market Agreement
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Barriers to International Trade: Boycotts, Embargos, Sanctions Boycotts ban on all goods associated with a particular company and/or country Embargos Prohibits all business deals with the target country; affects third parties Sanctions Punitive trade restrictions applied by a country or group against another country for noncompliance
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Other Trade Barriers Import Policies: Tariffs - taxes/duties levied against imported goods. Exchange Permits - due to rationing of host country currencies; permit allows exchange for U.S. $ Quotas - limits quantity of goods allowed in the host country Import Licenses - like quota, but on a case-by-case basis Standards: health, quality, safety, labeling, certification Other Voluntary Agreements - reciprocal limits between 2 countries to avoid penalties Other Restrictions - e.g.., language laws, product labels, religious conventions, etc..
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Example: Honduras Trade Restrictions 15% tariff on finished goods Exchange Permit required Strict sanitary standards; Sanitary permit required Label law; labels must include sanitary registration number
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