industries; a tariff or a quota. The choice between one or the other is likely to depend on several different concerns. One concern is the revenue effects. A tariff has an immediate advantage for governments in that it will automatically generate tariff revenue (assuming the tariff is not prohibitive). Quotas may or may not generate revenue depending on how the quota is administered. If a quota is administered by selling quota tickets (i.e.‚ import rights) then a quota will generate government revenue
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Import Quotas and Tariffs First of all I am going to explain to you what import quotas and tariffs are: Import Quotas= Limit on the quantity of a good that can be Imported Tariffs= Taxes on imported goods Import quotas and tariffs are used to enable the domestic industry to enjoy higher profits in the way that they keep domestic price of a product above world levels. Without a quota or a tariff a country will import a good when its world price is below the price that would prevail domestically
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444 Cases E ot nearly a decade‚ the EU and the United I States were engaged in a heated trade dispute over bananas. The EU had introduced tariffs and quotas that discriminated in favor o[ bananas grown in former European colonies and dependencies located in the Caribbean and Africa. The new rules were favorable to the European-based banana companies‚ whose production was heavily located in these preferced regions. However‚ the new rules were disadvantageous to the U.S.-based companies‚
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Gelgelu 11 February 2013 The Protectionism Effect: Tariffs‚ Quotas‚ and Subsidies The most common way to protect one’s economy from import competition is to implement a tariff: a tax on imports. Generally speaking‚ a tariff is any tax or fee collected by a government. Sometimes the term “tariff” is used in a nontrade context‚ as in railroad tariffs. However‚ the term is much more commonly used to refer to a tax on imported goods. Tariffs have been applied by countries for centuries and have
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Who benefits from a tariff or quota? TARIFFS Benefits 1. Local government through increased revenues. 2. Domestic business due to the fact that it would allow them to lower the cost of their products compared to their foreign counterparts. Loses 1. Government-Not setting quotas would make it difficult for the government to control the number of imports coming in. 2. Foreign business whose products would need to be sold at a higher cost due to the tariffs compared to domestic
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How do government tariffs impact on imported goods? What are the pros and cons of these tariff and what are the likely future trends. Tariff is tax that a government collects on goods coming into a country. It is a tax which is levied on imports across national boundaries or other geographical regions and exports in a few cases (Lv‚ 2000). Originally‚ applying tariffs was first based on financial purpose‚ so it is a regular but most significant source of fiscal revenue to governments. Generally
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Tariff and Non-tariff Barriers When foreign countries can enter a home country and sell product for less than the people usually see this as a great trade opportunity. However‚ if that product is manufactured in the home country then the home country not only loses revenue from sales on that product but the economic impacts can run even deeper. With no need to manufacture that product companies will no longer need to purchase the raw materials or hire the employees necessary to maintain the demand
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Tariff Barriers to Trade Tariffs are taxes that government imposes on commodities‚ one of the methods that governments used to control economic activity. There are two identified reasons why would government impose tariffs to imported goods. Firstly‚ they are an important source of income for the government. Secondly‚ tariffs can protect the local industries that face competition from imported goods by imposing tariffs on imported goods. Tariffs are effective and widely used to protect the
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Import Policies‚ Tariffs and Restrictions: Kenya and Vietnam Multinational Corporate Environment Southern New Hampshire University Alexis LeGrand October 2014 Import Policies‚ Tariffs and Regulations: Kenya Capitol: Nairobi Major Import Suppliers $451 Million Language: English/Swahili Population: 45‚010‚056 24% 27% Currency: Kenyan Shilling (KES) GDP (PPP): $125.7 billion Per Capita: $2‚790 92nd Largest Supplier of good imports India UAE Saudi Arabia South Africa Japan China Major Import
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International Trade is the branch of economics concerned with the exchange of goods and services with foreign countries. In the context of globalization‚ International trade has become an even more important topic now that so many countries have begun to move from state-run to market-driven economies. Tariff and non-tariff barriers play a large part in this process. Tariff Barriers Tariffs are among the oldest forms of government economic intervention. They are most commonly used as taxes on imports
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