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' Tariff Association '). Full name and marketing name: Shows the official name first in one of the four languages of Switzerland, followed by the marketing name, if any, in guillemets. Regions: Areas included in the respective tariff network. Population: The number of residents connected to the network (as of 2007). [3]
Global map of countries by tariff rate, applied, weighted mean, all products (%), 2021, according to World Bank.. This is a list of countries by tariff rate.The list includes sovereign states and self-governing dependent territories based upon the ISO standard ISO 3166-1.
It was established in December 2004 from the merger of the Bäre-Abi and Frosch-Abo tariff networks. [1] The Zig-Zag network merged into Libero in 2014. With the merger of the Tarifverbund Berner Oberland [ de ] ("BeoAbo"), covering the Bernese Oberland , in December 2019, the network covers the entire canton of Bern.
Economists have estimated that Swiss economic output could be reduced by 1% if severe amplification effects like a trade war broke out or companies started relocating to avoid tariffs.
A clear exception was seen in the exports of Swiss war materials, they increased by 6% in March 2023, but they only account for 0.25% of total Swiss exports. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] [ 19 ] On 18 September 2023, SNB unexpectedly left the deposit rate unchanged at 1.75% and as a result, the Swiss franc depreciated in relation to the USD, which is crucial ...
Less than a month after Washington announced plans to quadruple duties for Chinese EVs to 100%, Brussels said it would combat excessive subsidies with additional tariffs ranging from 17.4% for BYD ...
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 ...
The Tarifverbund A-Welle was created on 12 December 2004, when the previous tariff associations for Olten and Aargau merged. Initially the tariff network applied only to season tickets and passes, but it was expanded on 13 December 2009 to include single tickets as well as day and multi-trip tickets.