Economy July 17, 2018 - 11:37 am

Haiti aims to slap 40% tariffs on Dominican Republic

Santo Domingo.- Dominican Republic’s Foreign Ministry is negotiating with the World Trade Organization (WTO) a more favorable solution to bilateral trade with Haiti, a nation that aims to raise tariffs by up to more than 40% on some goods, taking advantage of their condition of impoverished nation (MFN and PMA) and their entry into the Caribbean Common Market (Caricom) as a full member.

Currently, Haiti charges considerably low tariffs in relation to the Common External Tariff that Caricom charges to third countries, in this case the Dominican Republic.

For the first time Port-au-Prince presented its intention to charge Caricom’s tariffs by means of a notification to the WTO, on January 10, 2017.

The talks have been taking place during all the while and two weeks ago the issue was discussed at the meeting of the WTO’s Council Trade of Goods, which was reportedly a commission of the Dominican Foreign Ministry.

COVID-19

April 30, 2024 - 10:04 am

SeNaSa hires more than 1,500 doctors

April 26, 2024 - 9:23 am

Pro Consumidor clears rice brands of harmful metals

April 22, 2024 - 1:21 pm

Ney Arias Lora Hospital and CMD appeal ruling

April 15, 2024 - 8:40 am

Cyber attack exposes Covid-19 vaccination records in Dominican Republic

MOST READ

World

Seven countries to contribute mission agents to Haiti

Tourism

Cuba shows interest in exploring opportunities in Dominican tourism

Local

Scientific study reveals oil generation potential in Dominican Republic’s basins

Tourism

Hyatt to add 1,000 rooms in Dominican Republic with two new hotels

MORE NEWS

Local

ICC Entrepreneurship Center to foster international trade in the Dominican Republic

Local

EDESUR Dominicana unveils Operational Plan for 2024 Elections

Economy

DGII records RD$94,760 million collection in April

Tourism

US Consul affirms: Dominican Republic is a safe tourist destination