Dominican Republic becomes sixth member of CAFTA

The Dominican Republic has become the latest nation to join the U.S.-Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), whose members already include Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. Under the agreement, the Dominican Republic would be permitted to export a small amount of sugar to the U.S. Meanwhile, 80 percent of American-made consumer and industrial goods will become duty-free in the Dominican Republic, and all tariffs will be eliminated within 10 years. The one exception is agricultural goods. Under the agreement, about half of U.S. farm exports to the Dominican Republic will become duty free right away-the remainder will be phased in over the next 20 years.

According to the U.S. Trade Representative's office, the Dominican Republic's membership in the CAFTA represents an additional $8.7 billion of the total $32 billion in trade that the pact generates.

Highlights from the USTR's "Free Trade With Central America":

  • The U.S. exported $9 billion in goods to the five CAFTA countries in 2001, about the same as U.S. exports to Russia, India, and Indonesia combined. American exports to the region have been growing, up 42 percent since 1996.

  • The U.S. is the main supplier of goods and services to Central American economies: 40 percent of total goods imported by Central America come from the United States.

  • Key exports to the region include machinery and equipment; chemicals and plastics; foodstuffs including apples, corn, wheat and rice; textiles and apparel; and paper.

  • Seventy-eight percent of U.S. exporters to the region are small- and medium-sized businesses, and such firms generate nearly half of U.S. export value to Central America.
You must register or login in order to post comments.

Multimedia

Videos

Image Galleries

Extreme Logistics

Extreme Logistics profiles the various ways that specialized cargo is transported around the world under demanding time, temperature, and handling requirements.

Podcasts

Why ERP software won't work for the global supply chain

For the past 30 years companies have tried and failed to apply their ERP software to automate their supply chains. ERP was designed to work within a single company, not across companies. New cloud platforms apply a radically different information model to the supply chain and put entire value chains on the same information page.

 



 

Presented by: GT Nexus

More Podcasts

THE MAGAZINE

World Trade 100 Magazine

February 2012 Cover

2012 February

Check out the February 2012 World Trade 100
TABLE OF CONTENTS SUBSCRIBE

Export Controls

Will the U.S. government's reform of Export Controls affect your business?
See Poll Results Poll Archive

WT100 STORE

world-class-warehousing.gif
World-Class Warehousing and Material Handling, 1st Edition

Filled with proven operational solutions, it will guide managers as they develop a warehouse master plan, one designed to minimize the effects of supply chain inefficiencies as it improves logistics accuracy and inventory management - and reduces overall warehousing expense.

More Products

Clear Seas Research

Clear Seas ResearchWith access to over one million professionals and more than 60 industry-specific publications,Clear Seas Research offers relevant insights from those who know your industry best. Let us customize a market research solution that exceeds your marketing goals.

Smoother Moves Calculator

Pacer Smoother Moves CalculatorPacer has designed a unique and easy-to-use tool to help you determine the potential dollar savings and carbon emission reductions generated by using Pacer intermodal services versus trucking.

STAY CONNECTED

Facebook Twitter