Category: Trade

  • Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – February 17-22, 2020

    Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – February 17-22, 2020

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of February 17-22, 2020! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world from the past week.

    THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS

    Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) held their 31st Intersessional Meeting in Barbados February 18-19, 2020. The Prime Minister of Barbados, the Honourable Mia Amor Mottley, Q.C; MP, chaired the proceedings. The communique from the meeting may be found here.

    To watch the press conference concluding the 31st Intersessional Meeting please see here:

    REGIONAL NEWS

    Barbados unveils one-stop investment guide

    UNCTAD: As Barbados prepares to host the 15th UNCTAD quadrennial conference in October, it has become the latest Caribbean country to launch an online investment guide (iGuide). Read more

    WTO advocate argues Bahamas never to join

    Bahamas Tribune: A prominent World Trade Organisation (WTO) advocate yesterday said he doubts The Bahamas will ever join, adding: “You can lead a horse to water but can’t make it drink”. Read more

    Minister: No Wto Membership ‘For At Least Five Years’

    Bahamas Tribune: A Cabinet minister yesterday said full Bahamian membership of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) “cannot happen for at least within the next five years”. Read more

    Barbados off EU grey list

    Nation News: Barbados is off the grey list, which means this country is completely cleared and is no longer being seen as a non-cooperative jurisdiction for tax purposes within the global International Business sector. Read more

    CARICOM wants inter-governmental tax body to set standards, rules

    CARICOM: CARICOM Heads of Government have reiterated the call for the creation of an “appropriate intergovernmental tax body with the adequate means and powers to set standards and rules” which support an equitable and universal approach to an international tax governance infrastructure. Read more

    SG posits all-inclusive approach to strengthening CARICOM

    CARICOM: Building a Caribbean Community (CARICOM) that is hardened to shocks requires an approach that embraces the talents, skills and resources of all actors of society, CARICOM Secretary-General said recently. Read more

    Fixed roaming rates for CARICOM countries coming soon

    Loop News Barbados: The Barbadian Prime Minister announced that Grenadian Prime Minister, Keith Mitchell and a team from the Caribbean Single Market Economy (CSME) have been working with regional telecommunication operators to implement a fixed roaming rate for CARICOM states. Read more

    T&T, B’dos working together on CSME

    Trinidad Express: BARBADOS and Trinidad and Tobago will be working together to put certain protocols in place to get the wheels of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) moving faster in 2020. Read more

    Castor Oil Sector Banking On $500m Gov’t Investment

    Jamaica Gleaner: Jamaica’s castor oil sector is barely earning from exports, and is seen as woefully underperforming its potential, but its producers are regrouping. Read more

    Consumers and the coronavirus: The implications for Jamaica

    Jamaica Observer: Despite reports by the World Health Organization (WHO) last week that the number of cases of the deadly novel coronavirus being recorded on a daily basis in China is “stabilising”, concerns expressed by manufacturers and retailers suggest there will be a domino effect to consumers. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    EU budget: Talks end amid stand-off between ‘frugal’ and other nations

    BBC: An EU budget summit ended without agreement on Friday following a stand-off between wealthy “frugal” member states and other countries. Read more

    EU proposes rules for artificial intelligence to limit risk

    AP: The European Union unveiled proposals Wednesday to regulate artificial intelligence that call for strict rules and safeguards on risky applications of the rapidly developing technology. Read more

    Boeing asks lawmakers to suspend preferential tax rate

    Fortune: Washington state lawmakers introduced bills Wednesday, at The Boeing Co.’s request, to suspend the aerospace giant’s preferential business and occupation tax rate unless the United States and European Union reach an agreement on their long-running international trade dispute that would allow the lower tax rate. Read more

    Michel Barnier: UK can’t have Canada trade deal with EU

    BBC: The UK cannot have the same trade deal with the EU as Canada, according to the bloc’s chief negotiator. Read more

    UK unveils ‘iconic,’ blue post-Brexit passports, made by a French-Dutch company in Poland

    CNN: The British government has unveiled the country’s new, blue post-Brexit passports, hailing the return of an “iconic” document that became a thorny issue during the UK’s protracted departure from the European Union. Read more

    UK-EU trade tensions descend into ‘slide war’

    The Guardian: Two sides of negotiations issue flurry of documents through social media. Read more

    Trade Minister inaugurates seven working group to prepare country for AfCFTA

    Ghanaweb: The Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Alan Kyerematen, has inaugurated seven Technical Working Groups (TWGs) to spearhead the development of the country’s national programmes of action for Boosting Intra-African Trade (BIAT). Read more

    Does the Kenya-US free trade deal signal Nigeria’s fall from grace?

    The Africa Report: Nigeria has not managed to convince international investors – including those in the US – that it should be first in line for a post-AGOA deal. Read more

    Indo-US trade deal: The ball is now in Washington’s court

    Economic Times: Trump said his country is “not treated very well by India” but the US is “doing a very big trade deal with India”. Read more

    China to refund US trade war tariffs on some medical devices amid coronavirus outbreak

    South China Morning Post: China said on Friday it would refund tariffs already paid on a list of 55 US-made products including medical devices, engine components and timber products. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below:

  • Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – February 10-16, 2020

    Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – February 10-16, 2020

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of February 10-16, 2020! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world from the past week.

    THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS

    The USTR published a report reiterating its past critiques of the now defunct WTO Appellate Body.

    Coming up this week, CARICOM Heads of Government will meet in Barbados February 18-19 for their 31st Inter-sessional Meeting. Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, who was scheduled to attend, had to cancel at the last minute due to address current infrastructure disruptions.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    European Union, CDB Launch Standby Facility for Capacity Building

    The Voice: The EU and CDB today launched a new round of the Standby Facility for Capacity Building. Read more

    Can the Caribbean end its brain drain?

    The Voice (UK): In recent years, concerns have been growing that the Caribbean region is losing a high percentage of its skilled population. Here, Lyndon Mukasa examines the origins and possible solutions to this exodus of top talent. Read more

    Remittance fees too high in the Caribbean

    Trinidad Express: Remittance fees are too high in the Caribbean, says economist Marla Dukharan. “Remittance fees in the Caribbean are nearly double those of Central America, which is also another heavily dependent region on remittances. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    New ACP-EU Partnership: Moving forward towards a new partnership fit for the future

    Modern Diplomacy: Today, new impetus was given to the post-Cotonou negotiations on a new agreement between the EU and African, Caribbean and Pacific countries (ACP) as the two chief negotiators agreed on the way forward. Read more

    Cambodia: EU Partially Suspends Trade Preferences

    Human Rights Watch: The European Commission on February 12, 2020, announced the partial suspension of Cambodia’s preferential trade preferences with the European Union after the government failed to address serious human rights concerns, Human Rights Watch said today. Read more

    UK to outline post-Brexit trade vision as France warns both sides could ‘rip each other apart

    Euronews: The British government is to outline its vision for a trade deal with the EU in Brussels on Monday, as both sides crank up the rhetoric ahead of the start of formal post-Brexit talks next month. Read more

    UK government spent £500,000 on travel to Brexit negotiations

    The Guardian: Huge bill on travel to and from Brussels reflects Theresa May’s drawn-out approach to negotiations. Read more

    EU Parliament approves EU-Vietnam free trade and investment protection deals

    Europarl: The EU-Vietnam trade agreement, the “most modern and ambitious agreement ever concluded between the EU and a developing country”, got Parliament’s backing on Wednesday. Read more

    Trump: Time to negotiate ‘very seriously’ with EU on trade

    Euractiv: President Donald Trump said Monday (10 February) the time has come to pursue trade negotiations with the European Union which he said imposes “incredible” barriers to US goods. Read more

    Iran-EU Trade Down 71.5%

    Financial Tribune: Iran exported €701.14 million worth of commodities to EU, indicating a 92.59% fall, and imported €4.52 billion in return to register a 49.16% year-on-year decline. Read more

    ‘Pakistan-Turkey Free Trade Agreement talks in April’

    AA: Top Pakistani commerce official says 2 sides agreed to begin long-awaited FTA negotiations in April. Read more

    A reform-or-die moment’: Why world powers want to change the WTO

    CNBC: The United States, Europe and China have clashed over trade policy for several years and tensions could continue for decades without serious reform, experts have told CNBC. Read more

    Explained: What does India’s removal from USTR list of developing countries mean?

    Indian Express: Until February 10, 2020, India was on the USTR’s list of developing countries, making it eligible for preferential treatment against CVD investigations and de minimis thresholds. It will no longer get this benefit. Read more

    Coronavirus Threatens to Blow Up Trump’s Energy Trade Deal With China

    Foreign Policy: The goals were never realistic, but now Beijing has good reason to back away from its purchase commitments to Washington. Read more

    Pompeo in Senegal: Africa caught in US-China trade war

    Al Jazeera: The US is sending mixed messages to the continent, they want to do business, but are not open to all African countries. Read more

    Kenya will be in breach of EAC, AfCFTA rules in proposed trade deal with America

    The East African: Kenya’s proposed free trade deal with the US has put it in the crosshairs as critics say the planned bilateral agreement would be a breach of regional and continental trade protocols. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below:

  • Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – January 12-18, 2020

    Caribbean Trade and Development News Digest – January 12-18, 2020

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of January 12-18, 2020! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world from the past week.

    THIS WEEK’S HIGHLIGHTS

    This was a busy week for trade news. The US-China phase one deal was signed. While it does not address all of the issues affecting US-China trade relations, it attempts a first crack at it. The full text of the Agreement may be accessed here.

    The US is one step closer to ratification of the revised USMCA. The US Senate’s approved revised US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) by an overwhelming vote of 89 to 10, and the bill now goes to the President for signature.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    ACP EU CARICOM Workshop Set for Saint Lucia

    The Voice: Regional and international quality professionals from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the European Union (EU) will gather in Saint Lucia next week as three days of discussions and training focussed on strengthening regional trade, get underway at the Coco Palm Resort, Rodney Bay, Castries. Read more

    Trade between Cuba and Russia grows in 2019

    On Cuba News: In 2019, commercial exchange between Cuba and Russia exceeded 500 million dollars, Cuban ambassador in Moscow Gerardo Peñalver Portal said to Sputnik. Read more

    TT moves to improve cross-border trade

    Newsday: A new port technology platform will help to improve this country’s trading across borders, said Trade Minister Paula Gopee-Scoon. Read more

    Paula pushes pan grant

    Newsday: Trade Minister Paula Gopee-Scoon told Newsday she was very pleased at Friday’s talks with Pan Trinbago president Beverly Ramsey-Moore and University of Trinidad and Tobago governor Prof Clem Imbert to promote her ministry’s new $5 million grant-facility to make steel pans. Read more

    TT Chamber CEO praises non-energy export growth

    Newsday: Chamber of Industry and Commerce CEO Gabriel Faria said the chamber is pleased with growth in non-energy exports. “This shows the benefit collaboration can bring,” he said. Read more

    UK and TT strengthen trade ties

    Newsday: British High Commissioner Tim Stew has urged local companies to engage with the UK companies which were brought in by the Department for International Trade (DIT) for the UK Defence and Security Trade Mission. Read more

    Rum-makers report rising sales

    Barbados Today: One of Barbados’ main rum producers is reporting a major turn around in its export business, which climbed over 80 per cent in the last three years. Read more

    Local Manufacturers Welcome Article 164 Implementation

    The Voice: Many St Lucians may be unaware of the January 1, 2020 implementation of Article 164 of the RTC. Read more

    Jamaica import bill rises by 6.5% in the first nine months of 2019

    Jamaica Observer: Jamaica’s imports for January to September 2019 were valued at US$4,816.5 million, an increase of 6.5 per cent when compared to US$4,520.4 million which was spent for the similar period in 2018 according to the International Merchandise Trade (IMT) Bulletin released recently by the Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN). Read more

    Imports from the OECS, Haiti and Belize to attract zero percent tariff rate

    St Lucia News Online: A decision by CARICOM is set to benefit less developed countries (LDCs) of CARICOM including Saint Lucia. Read more

    Solving Jamaica’s Export Challenges

    Jamaica Gleaner: The export of Jamaican goods and services has long been recommended as the pillar on which the country can drive real and consistent growth while positively impacting many of Jamaica’s socio-economic challenges. Read more

    JMEA expresses concerns after release of import-export figures

    Jamaica Observer: Following the issuing of the Statistical Institute of Jamaica (STATIN) report on the state of the country’s imports and exports situation for the period January to September 2019, the Jamaica Manufacturers and Exporters Association (JMEA) has expressed its concerns at the figures. Read more

    Guatemala asks OAS to facilitate meeting with Government of Belize

    Breaking Belize News: Guаtеmаlаn mеdіа, Аgеnсіа Guаtеmаltеса dе Nоtісіаѕ rероrtеd thаt Guаtеmаlаn Рrеѕіdеnt, Аlејаndrо Gіаmmеttі hаѕ аѕkеd thе Оrgаnіzаtіоn оf Аmеrісаn Ѕtаtеѕ (ОАЅ) tо fасіlіtаtе а mееtіng wіth thе Gоvеrnmеnt оf Веlіzе.Ассоrdіng tо thе rероrt, thе mееtіng wіll bе tо рrоmоtе іntеrасtіоn аnd gооd rеlаtіоnѕ wіth Веlіzе іn оrdеr tо tаkе аdvаntаgе оf орроrtunіtіеѕ іn trаdе аnd tоurіѕm, аmоng оthеrѕ. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    Senate OKs North American Trade Deal To Replace NAFTA, Giving Trump A Much-Needed Win

    NPR: The Senate overwhelmingly approved a revised North American trade pact in a rare bipartisan vote Thursday that hands President Trump a victory on a key campaign promise just as lawmakers are preparing his impeachment trial. Read more

    U.S., EU, Japan agree new subsidy rules with China trade in focus

    Reuters: The United States, the European Union and Japan proposed new global trade rules on Tuesday to curb subsidies they say are distorting the worldwide economy, with China their clear target. Read more

    Mercosur braces for change amid calls for new trade rules

    Buenos Aires Times: Regional trade bloc faces uncertain future, with Argentina now in the minority and Uruguay and Brazil seeking the right to secure trade deals outside the bloc’s remit. Read more

    Mercosur summit in Paraguay will address a review of the external tariff

    Mercopress: The upcoming Summit of Heads of State of the Southern Common Market Mercosur, to be held in late June or early July this year, will be held in Encarnacion, capital of Itapúa Department, Paraguay. Read more

    With Brexit imminent, what are the chances of a UK trade deal with China?

    The Guardian: Last week, Donald Trump and Liu He, the Chinese vice-premier, signed phase one of a new trade arrangement between the US and China. The talks surrounding the agreement have been tortuous, leading to fears that the world could be caught up in a trade conflict between these two economic giants. Read more

    Trade Peace May Hurt Countries Left Out of U.S.-China Deal

    Bloomberg: President Donald Trump is set to sign his phase one trade accord with China on Wednesday and the public will finally get its first chance to look beneath the hood. A key question for other nations: How will China’s commitment to buy $200 billion worth of additional American goods and services impact their access to the world’s biggest economies? Read more

    Trade centers in regional countries to spur non-oil exports

    Tehran Times: To expand non-oil exports during the sanctions time, Iranian economic and trade organizations have been defining some strategies and resolved to pursue them vigorously. Read more

    Europe to assess whether US-China deal is WTO compatible

    Euractiv: The EU will assess whether a US-China deal to roll back some bilateral tariffs in exchange for increased US imports to China is compatible with World Trade Organisation rules, said Trade commissioner Phil Hogan on Thursday (16 January). Read more

    US-China trade rapprochement round one

    East Asia Forum: The conclusion of phase one of the trade negotiations between the United States and China has been welcomed by global markets because it has brushed off many uncertainties caused by the tense relationship between the world’s two largest economies over the past two years. Read more

    Brexit trade deals on the table at UK-Africa summit

    African Business Magazine: Organised by the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID), in partnership with Department of Trade (DIT), the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, (FCO) and the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), the one-day summit and side events are designed to seal UK-African business deals as the UK prepares to formally leave the European Union (EU) on 31 January. Read more

    UK channels aid budget as it seeks closer ties with Africa post-Brexit

    The Guardian: Britain has unveiled plans to channel part of the £14bn aid budget through the City as it seeks to exploit the global reach of the finance sector to boost investment in Africa. Read more

    BRICS: What’s in it for Africa?

    Africa.com: The BRICS group of emerging economies (made up of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) gather at the 5th annual BRICS summit in Durban, South Africa. It is the first time the summit is being held in Africa – and rightly so – as the theme for this year is BRICS and AFRICA: Partnership for Development, Integration and Industrialisation. State leaders of the five countries will be among at least 5,000 delegates at the two-day summit. Read more

    China’s trade with Africa grows 2.2 per cent in 2019 to US$208 billion

    South China Morning Post: Two-way trade grew by just 2.2 per cent in 2019 to US$208.7 billion, compared with a 20 per cent rise a year earlier, according to official figures from China’s General Administration of Customs. Read more

    Investment will overshadow trade in Japan-U.S. talks

    Japan Times: The Japan-U.S. Trade Agreement (JUSTA), the pinnacle for modern trade policy between the two allies, is now in force. Read more

    US tariffs on autos not mentioned in talks, EU trade chief says

    Deutsche Welle: In Washington to smooth out trade differences with the Trump administration, an EU commissioner said the subject of car tariffs did not come up. German carmakers will be happy to see the issue off the negotiating table. Read more

    UK treasury chief: Some businesses may hurt after Brexit

    The Associated Press: The British government has announced plans for special events on the night of Jan. 31 when the country officially leaves the European Union but the country’s treasury chief has admitted that some U.K. business sectors will suffer as a result. Read more

    U.K. Economy Won’t Stay Close to EU After Brexit, Javid Says

    Bloomberg: U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Sajid Javid signaled Britain is planning to shift its economy further away from the European Union’s, firing an early salvo in what’s set to be a fractious year in hammering out their future relationship. Read more

    Asean, RCEP trade partners unlikely beneficiaries from US-China trade war, Deloitte economist says

    South China Morning Post: An unexpected effect of the US-China trade war has been an apparent acceleration of the process to forge an Asian trading bloc that does not include United States, according to Deloitte China’s chief economist Xu Sitao. Read more

    India’s ‘door still open’ to RCEP free-trade deal: Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar

    South China Morning Post: More than two months after India pulled out of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar has suggested New Delhi could rethink its decision. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below:

  • Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – January 1-11, 2020

    Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – January 1-11, 2020

    Happy New Year! Welcome to our first Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the year 2020! We trust you all had an enjoyable holiday season! We are happy to bring you the major trade and development headlines and analysis from across the Caribbean Region and the world for the first two weeks of 2020!

    There will be much to watch in trade this year so we look forward to you following the developments with us from week to week.

    HIGHLIGHTS

    The beginning of the year saw US-Iran tensions hit a boiling point. These tensions have simmered somewhat, and oil prices, which rose but not as high as expected, have since lowered in light of the ease in tensions.

    Global growth is set to rise by 2.5% this year, a small increase from 2.4% in 2019, as trade and investment gradually recover. This is according to the World Bank’s semi-annual Global Economic Prospects released January 2020.

    Regionally, on January 1, 2020, Barbados’ Prime Minister the Hon. Mia Amor Mottley took over the chairmanship of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) under that organisation’s rotating chairmanship system. Read more here.

    A three-day CARICOM workshop was held this to discuss World Trade Organization (WTO) issues. It was hosted by the SRC and WTI in Barbados and attended by ambassadors, technocrats and other high-level trade professionals.

    A significant oil discovery has been made offshore another CARICOM Member State. This time, it is Suriname. Read here. Also recall that Guyana is now an oil producing nation.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    Caricom raises external tariffs on pasta, cement

    Newsday TT: CARICOM’s Council for the Trade and Economic Development (COTED) has increased the common external tariff (CET) on pasta and cement for one year. It came into effect on January 1. Read more

    Food, drink labelling to change

    Barbados Today: Makers of packaged food and drink products may be required to have front-of-package nutrition labels by year end, Barbados TODAY has learned. But manufacturers are said to be concerned that having to revamp their labels could come at a major cost with business still slow in a tight economy. Read more

    Two faces of WTO emerge at meeting

    Barbados Today: Even as the world’s major economic powers abandon the global rules-based system in ongoing trade feuds, an international think tank’s advisor has urged officials here and in the region not to give up on the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Read more

    Walcott insists multilateral trade must benefit all

    Barbados Today: Multilateral trade must redound to the benefit of all, regardless of size. Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Senator Dr Jerome Walcott, made this declaration at a three-day CARICOM workshop held to discuss World Trade Organization (WTO) issues at the Savannah Beach Hotel, recently. Read more

    Poultry investor halts $7-$8 million investment over WTO uncertainty

    Eyewitness News (Bahamas): A poultry investor said yesterday it has put ‘on hold’ its $7-$8 million investment until the government makes clear its position going forward on the World Trade Organization (WTO). Read more

    Guyana rice exports valued at more than US$200 million

    Jamaica Observer: The Guyana Rice Development Board (GRDB) said it recorded a 20 per cent increase in revenue after exporting more than half a million tonnes of paddy, rice and rice by-products last year. Read more

    CARICOM needs united voice on global issues

    Barbados Advocate: If it has not been done already, the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) states have to devise a strategy for the global political and economic tensions and developments which continue to characterize the world in which we live. Read more

    CARICOM countries need to prepare for fallout of US and Iran situation

    St Lucia News Online: A sug­ges­tion that CARI­COM heads meet as soon as pos­si­ble, and come up with a strat­e­gy to deal with any pos­si­ble fall­out or dan­ger­ous sce­nar­ios, re­sult­ing from the re­cent dé­tente be­tween the Unit­ed States and Iran. Read more

    CARICOM heads chided for lack of sports investment

    Caribbean Life News: Caribbean heads of governments have been accused of not keeping pace with their sportsmen and women because the politicians are failing to provide facilities to support athletes consistent with their worldwide successes. Read more

    Will the EU care about the Caribbean after Brexit?

    The Voice: It’s not just Britain’s attitude towards its former colonies that may change with its geopolitical divorce. Lyndon Mukasa says the European Union’s position is also of growing interest. Read more

    UK expands its presence in Commonwealth countries

    Barbados Advocate: THE United Kingdom’s representation in the Commonwealth countries of the Eastern Caribbean has expanded over the last year. Read more

    Venezuela remains one of Guyana’s biggest rice buyers, despite no PetroCaribe deal

    Demerara Waves: Venezuela is Guyana’s biggest rice market, accounting for 34 percent or 177,682 tonnes of all that grain exported to several Latin American countries the Guyana Rice Development Board (GRDB) said in a statement. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    Oil rises as US-Iran conflict eases, focus turns to trade deal

    CNBC: Oil prices rose slightly on Monday as investors shift their focus away from easing Mideast tensions to this week’s scheduled signing of an initial U.S.-China trade deal which could boost economic growth and demand. Read more

    Brexit: MPs give final backing to Withdrawal Agreement Bill

    BBC: MPs have given their final backing to the bill that will implement the UK government’s Brexit deal. The Commons voted 330 to 231 in favour of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill and it will now pass to the House of Lords for further scrutiny next week. Read more

    Grassley pins blame for USMCA holdup on impeachment

    Politico: Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley on Friday blamed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for holding up passage of the new North American trade pact after she held off sending the articles of impeachment to the Senate. Read more

    IMO 2020: New Shipping Fuel Requirements Enter Into Force

    Hellenic shipping news: January 1, 2020 marked the implementation of the new sulphur oxide limit for shipping fuel imposed by the International Maritime Organisation under the MARPOL Convention, often referred to as IMO 2020. Read more

    US-China Trade War Seen as Boosting Vietnam Growth

    VoA: Vietnam has been a beneficiary of the China-U.S. trade war, enjoying a boost in services and exports that should drive economic growth to 7% this year, HSBC economist Yun Liu said last week. But she said the country remains vulnerable to economic risks including trade protection and inflation. Read more

    Brexit: EU ‘won’t be rushed’ on trade deal, says Simon Coveney

    BBC: The EU “will not be rushed” on a trade deal with the UK after Brexit, according to Ireland’s deputy PM. Boris Johnson says a deal can be agreed by the end of 2020 and has included a pledge in his Brexit bill not to extend any transition period to secure one. Read more

    Europe, Scotland and Brexit – what next?

    EU Observer: Last month’s UK general election will undoubtedly be remembered for the Conservative Party’s historic victory and the long-awaited clarity on Brexit. Yet the vote was not uniform across the UK. In Scotland, the Scottish National Party (SNP) secured an even more emphatic result, taking 47 of the nation’s 59 Westminster seats. Read more

    Here’s how the WTO can help address plastic pollution

    World Economic Forum: Trade plays a central role in plastic pollution and in the global plastics economy. Amid impressive and multiplying efforts across the globe to address plastic pollution, however, the relevance of trade to the production, consumption and disposal of plastics has been underestimated. Read more

    What to Expect in the January 2020 Session of UNCITRAL Working Group III on ISDS Reform

    IISD: In January 2020, Working Group III (WG III) of UNCITRAL will convene in Vienna to work on possible ISDS reform. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

    NEW ON THE CTLD BLOG

    The Caribbean Trade & Development Digest is a weekly trade news digest produced and published by the Caribbean Trade Law & Development Blog. Liked this issue? To read past issues, please visit here. To receive these mailings directly to your inbox, please subscribe to our Blog below: