Regional News>Belize
to liberate Jamaican beer
- Financial Gleaner
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Belize has promised to unveil by next month's summit of CARICOM leaders
a programme for dismantling its special tariff on imports, which Jamaica
complains keeps its beer out of the Central American country.
Senior Jamaican trade officials were unavailable yesterday for comment
on Belize's latest proposal for its Revenue Replacement Duty (RRD), a
long-standing contentious matter within CARICOM, against which Jamaica's
foreign trade minister, Dr Ken Baugh, hit out at last month's meeting
in Guyana of the community's committee on trade and economic development
(COTED).
Baugh had aired Jamaica's frustration over Belize's frequently missed
deadlines for removing the special tariff, which can add up to nine per
cent in additional duties on the cost of imports.
Enjoying Privileges
In return, Jamaica, and CARICOM generally, received an undertaking from
Belize, that it would report at the July 4 summit of leaders on its moves
at "implementing a treaty compatible revenue measure" that would
address the country's fiscal issues and consistent with the privileges
it enjoys under Article 164 of the CARICOM treaty.
Trade officials take the undertaking to mean that any tariff measure
related to additional imports from CARICOM would similarly apply to domestically
produced goods.
What was not immediately clear, was how this move would impact the waiver
that was provided by COTED under Article 164, which allows CARICOM's lesser
deve- loped countries to be granted, for a specific periods, waivers of
the community's rules of origin regulations "to promote the deve-
lopment of an industry".
There is a view, some trade sources suggest, that Belize abused the terms
and conditions under which it was allowed to suspend the rules of origin,
creating the basis of the spat with Jamaica. The waiver is to expire in
2011.
Although Belize will report to CARICOM as a whole on its programme, Jamaican
business sources say that the Belizean government has undertaken to keep
Kingston constantly informed on the progress of its efforts.
However, Kingston says that at the Guyana COTED meeting other trade ministers
had emphasised to Belize that it was their obligation to remove the RRD
extended to all products produced in CARICOM.
"That admonition found its way into the formal internal report of
the meeting," explained a source.
business@ gleanerjm.com
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
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