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The following table shows the tariff rate, in percentages, according to United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), [1] World Trade Organization, [2] and World Bank. [ 3 ] UNCTAD indicators are based on MFN (Most Favoured Nation) and effectively applied import tariff rates for major categories of non-agricultural and non-fuel ...
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Switzerland imported $279.2 billion worth of goods in 2018. 63.1% of those imports come from other European nations, with 20.7% from Asian countries, and 8.8% from North America. The top ten imports (2018) include: Gems and precious metals (31% of imports) Pharmaceuticals (10.7% of imports) Machinery- computers (7.2%) Vehicles (5.6%)
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Philippines (signed on 7 September 2023) Singapore (entered in to force on 2 March 2006) Turkey (entered in to force on 1 May 2013) United Arab Emirates (signed on 14 October 2023) United Kingdom (entered in to force on 1 January 2021) United States (see South Korea–US Free Trade Agreement) (entered in to force on 1 March 2012)
A tariff binding is a ceiling above which a member country cannot apply a tariff, thus representing the maximum tariff than can be applied by a member. The NAMA negotiators have opted in favour of a formula approach to tariff reductions rather than a linear approach. The Swiss formula, which has been propounded by the developed countries such ...
A very low tariff country with a rate T old of 2.3% would move to a T new rate of about 2.1%. Mathematically, the Swiss formula has these characteristics: As T old tends to infinity, T new tends to A, the agreed maximum tariff; As T old tends to 0, T new tends to T old i.e. no change in tariffs as it is already low; When T old is equal to A ...