Tag: trade

  • 10 Trade Policy Developments to watch in 2020

    10 Trade Policy Developments to watch in 2020

    Alicia Nicholls

    Happy New Year! It is both a new year and a new decade, but several stories we were following in 2019 have spilled over into 2020. 2019 started off as a year of uncertainty and volatility with increased trade restrictive measures and slowing global merchandise trade growth and foreign direct investment (FDI) flows.

    Towards the end of 2019 some positive developments occurred and so 2020 does present some potential bright spots, such as the likely ratification of the US-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) Agreement, a now definitive date for Brexit and what appears to be an initial US/China deal.

    There are many things which are likely to impact global trade in 2020, including geopolitical developments, technological advancements, data privacy rules, climate change and the growing demand for more environmentally-friendly goods and services. All of these have the potential to either positively or negatively impact, inter alia, freight rates, supply chains and firms’ import, export and investment decisions, and on a wider scale, the global economy.

    While this is not meant to be an exhaustive list, here are the top ten trade developments we will be watching in 2020:

    1. WTO Reform

    The WTO is celebrating its 25th year of existence, but is also facing several challenges which threaten to undermine some seventy years of a rules-based multilateral trading system. Key this year to watch will be whether there will be a solution to the now defunct Appellate Body, and whether there will finally be a conclusion to the fisheries subsidies negotiations which again failed to yield an agreement last year. The US also continues to argue for a revamping of the current system of eligibility for Special & Differential Treatment. The 12th WTO Ministerial Conference will be held in Nur-Sultan, Kazahstan in June 2020, and will therefore be one of the organisation’s most important ministerial meetings to watch.

    2. Brexit

    After several missed deadlines for leaving the European Union (EU), the decisive victory handed to the Conservatives in the December 12, 2019 snap United Kingdom (UK) election meant that Prime Minister Boris Johnson was able to get parliamentary approval of his deal with the EU. The UK is now on track to leave the current 28-member grouping on January 31, 2020. Some political and economic uncertainty remains, however, especially with the stronger electoral performance of the Scottish National Party (SNP). Will the Scottish opposition to leaving the EU undermine the unity of the UK and will there be yet another Scottish independence referendum? What kind of post-Brexit trade agreement will the UK and EU eventually negotiate?  

    3. Trade Wars: US/China and Japan/South Korea

    After a year of continued touch and go negotiations and escalating tensions between the US and China, a ‘Phase One’ trade deal, which was announced in December 2019, will be signed January 15, 2020. The text of the Agreement has not yet been released, but it reportedly contains chapters on intellectual property, technology transfer, agriculture, financial services, unfair currency practices, trade expansion and dispute resolution. Under the agreement, China has agreed to increase imports from the US, and the US has deferred implementing the List 4B Section 301 tariffs which were to have come into effect on December 15, 2019 and decreased some of the List 4A tariffs.

    Receiving much less attention is the Japan-South Korea trade tensions which escalated in summer 2019 with fears that it could have harmed the global economy. The two Asian economic behemoths have had a challenging political history, but tensions flared up in July 2019 when Japan restricted the export of three chemicals (fluorinated polyamides, photoresists, and hydrogen fluoride) to South Korea. Japan is the major exporter of these chemicals which are needed in the production of semi-conductors and display screens – top export products for South Korea. Senior-level negotiations between the two countries were held in December and there appears to be some de-escalation in tensions.

    4. US Presidential Election

    Without doubt, the inauguration of President Donald Trump in 2017 saw a radical shift in the US’ trade and foreign policy. At this stage, it is unclear who the democratic nominee will be. However, trade policy is likely to be a major issue in the US election campaign, and even among the current democratic contenders there are some differences in their approaches to trade policy.

    What is certain, however, is that a Trump re-election in November 2020 would entail four more years of economic nationalism, a continued retreat from multilateralism, undermining of the rules-based multilateral trading system, and climate change denial.

    4. Regional Trade Agreements: USMCA, RCEP and AfCFTA

    After much uncertainty about the fate of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) – the agreement which seeks to update and replace the NAFTA – a revised agreement was eventually signed in December 2019. It will need to be ratified by each of three parties in order to enter into force.

    Another agreement to watch will be the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) whose negotiations began in 2012. At the Bangkok Summit in November 2019, it was announced that the text has been agreed. Although India pulled out of the RCEP negotiations, it appears that the remaining fifteen parties are on track to sign the Agreement in 2020.

    Phase II negotiations on the operationalisation of the Africa Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) will begin in 2020 and will focus on investment, competition policy and intellectual property.

    5. IMO shipping fuel standards

    The United Nations International Maritime Organisation (IMO) Low Sulphur Regulation comes into effect January 1, 2020. From this date, the IMO requires all shipping companies to reduce their sulphur emissions by 85%. The sulphur in fuel oil must be reduced to 0,50 from 3,50% for all sea-going vessels. This is an important move for reducing shipping emissions, although concerns have been raised about the possible freight rate increases.

    6. ACP-EU Post-Cotonou Negotiations

    The Cotonou Agreement – the partnership agreement which sets the framework for cooperation between the European Union (EU) on the one hand, and the countries of the ACP (renamed to the Organisation of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (OACPS) – is due to expire in 2020. The Cotonou Agreement was signed in 2000 and revised in 2010. Negotiations on a successor agreement will continue into 2020.

    7. Second Review of the EU-CARIFORUM EPA

    2020 would make it twelve years since the EU-CARIFORUM EPA has been provisionally applied between the EU and CARIFORUM countries. The second review on the implementation and impact of the EPA is currently on-going and consultations were held in 2019. The first EPA review in 2014 found that the EPA had not led to a significant increase in CARIFORUM exports to the EU, and there was still implementation work to be still done on both ends. The results of the second review will be important to gauging what additional progress has been made.

    8. Pending CCJ Advisory Opinion on freedom of movement

    The Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) will this year deliver its first advisory opinion pursuant to Article 212 of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas (RTC) on the circumstances under which it is lawful for CARICOM Member States to “opt-out” of CARICOM Heads of Government decisions that involve fundamental objectives of the Community. Last year the Court held a two-day hearing where it heard oral submissions. The ruling will be critical to clarifying Community law on opt-outs.

    9. UNCTAD XV – October 2020

    All eyes will be on Barbados and the United Arab Emirates in October 2020 when the two nations will co-host the UNCTAD XV quadrennial. This will be a good opportunity for Barbados to help influence the trade and development agenda for the next four years, highlighting issues such as climate change and small States issues.

    10. COP26 Climate Talks

    2020 is a ‘make or break’ year for climate action. By most measures, the UNFCCC COP25 was a disappointment despite being the longest UN climate talks on record. Agreement on Paris Agreement Article 6 (carbon markets) and common timeframes, for instance, remains elusive and has been pushed back again to COP26. It should be noted that 2020 is the year when parties are expected to undertake their first global stocktake under the Paris Agreement and ratchet up their climate ambition by submitting more ambitious nationally determined contributions (NDCs). Climate change both impacts and is impacted by trade. As such, these talks will be key to follow.

    As usual, we at the CTLD Blog will be monitoring these developments. We welcome you to follow them with us by reading our weekly Caribbean Trade & Development News Digests. You can subscribe here to receive the mailings directly to your inbox:

    Alicia Nicholls, B.Sc., M.Sc., LL.B., is an international trade and development consultant with a keen interest in sustainable development, international law and trade. You can also read more of her commentaries and follow her on Twitter @LicyLaw.

    DISCLAIMER: All views expressed herein are her personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of any institution or entity with which she may be affiliated from time to time.

  • Top 6 Trade Policy Developments Affecting the Caribbean in 2019 – Infographic

    Top 6 Trade Policy Developments Affecting the Caribbean in 2019 – Infographic

    Happy New Year all! Are you curious about what were the major trade policy developments affecting the Caribbean in 2019? The Caribbean Trade Law & Development (CTLD) Blog and Barbadian-based logistics company RDL Eagle Trade have collaborated to bring you an infographic highlighting these major developments.

    Click the infographic below to access the full document:

    This infographic was brought to you as a collaboration between the Caribbean Trade Law & Development (CTLD) Blog and RDL Legal Eagle.

  • Africa-Caribbean relations to deepen with a joint CARICOM diplomatic mission

    Africa-Caribbean relations to deepen with a joint CARICOM diplomatic mission

    Alicia Nicholls

    CARICOM countries will establish a joint diplomatic mission in Kenya – which for many CARICOM governments, like Barbados, will be their first diplomatic mission on the African continent. According to a press release from the Barbados Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) dated December 7, Prime Minister of Barbados, the Hon. Mia Amor Mottley, unveiled a plaque and accepted the space for the joint mission on behalf of the regional grouping.

    The joint mission will be housed in an ultra-modern business complex in the diplomatic district of Nairobi, Kenya, across the road from the United Nations’ main office in Africa.

    During the unveiling, Prime Minister Mottley stated that “this is but only one of many steps we will take in the next few months that will communicate to our people, as well as to those who are watching from outside, that this is not a fly-by-night relationship.”

    She further stated that it is a relationship ” that will be anchored deeply and which is intended to unleash people-to-people communication and cooperation and the trade and investment opportunities such that our nations can prosper by relying on each other, and not simply on those from the North Atlantic.”

    Efforts at deepening Africa-Caribbean relations

    Only a handful of Caribbean countries have a diplomatic presence on the African continent. Additionally, trade between the countries of the Africa continent and the Caribbean is small, with the Caribbean enjoying a trade surplus. According to data from ITC Trade Map, CARICOM countries exported US$449 million worth in goods to Africa in 2017, representing 2.6% of CARICOM’s total exports to the world. Whereas, the region imported US$258 million worth of goods from the continent in that same year. Africa’s exports to CARICOM only represented a mere 0.06% of its total world exports in 2017.

    However, this volume of trade is likely to increase if the current interest in deepening Africa-Caribbean economic relations continues. Earlier this year, Prime Minister Mottley led delegations to Morocco, Ghana and now to Kenya where she is attending the ACP Summit.

    During the visit of President of Ghana Nana Akufo-Addo to Barbados in June this year, Prime Minister Mottley had also announced plans by her Government to soon establish a High Commission to Ghana. In a move to facilitate travel from Africa, the Barbados government has also waived visa requirements for nationals from eight African countries.

    This year as well, President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo visited Barbados and several other Caribbean countries as part of Ghana’s year of remembrance of 400 years since the start of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. President of Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta, also paid a visit to the region a few weeks later. During their visits, both Presidents took the opportunity to sign cooperative agreements and outline plans to further develop business and other relations between the Caribbean and their respective countries.

    In August 2019, it was announced that CARICOM and the African Union “will shortly sign a Memorandum of Understanding establishing a framework for engagement and cooperation”.

    On that note, there is currently no trade agreement between CARICOM or any African countries. Some individual Caribbean countries have bilateral investment treaties (most of which are not in force) and double taxation agreements with individual African countries.

    Joint mission to be applauded

    The promised CARICOM joint diplomatic mission should be applauded and is a good sign of CARICOM leaders’ intention to meaningfully deepen our ties with the African continent – a continent with which we share strong historical bonds, but still limited commercial ties. A joint mission allows CARICOM countries to pool their scarce financial, human and other resources – similar to what the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) has demonstrated with its joint missions in Geneva and Brussels.

    Need for a trade/business attache

    It is hoped that the staff of the future CARICOM joint mission to Kenya would also include some kind of trade attache or business liaison which would be instrumental in helping to promote Africa-Caribbean trade, investment and tourism.

    According to the press release, Prime Minister Mottley will, when she assumes Chairmanship of CARICOM in January 2020, work with the Kenyan Government and business community to hold the first CARICOM-Africa summit. These are indeed exciting times for Africa-Caribbean relations!

    Alicia Nicholls, B.Sc., M.Sc., LL.B., is an international trade and development consultant with a keen interest in sustainable development, international law and trade. You can also read more of her commentaries and follow her on Twitter @LicyLaw.

    DISCLAIMER: All views expressed herein are her personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of any institution or entity with which she may be affiliated from time to time.

  • Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – November 17-23, 2019

    Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest – November 17-23, 2019

    Welcome to the Caribbean Trade & Development News Digest for the week of November 17-23, 2019! 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

    World merchandise trade is expected to remain below trend into the fourth quarter of 2019, according to the WTO’s latest Goods Trade Barometer. Read more here. The WTO’s new Trade Monitoring Report issued on 21 November shows that G20 economies from mid-May to mid-October 2019 introduced import-restrictive measures covering an estimated USD 460.4 billion worth of traded merchandise, a 37% increase: Read more.

    At the 38th Session of the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly held November 17-21 in Kigali, Rwanda, parliamentarians from the European and ACP parliaments agreed on several resolutions. Read more here.

    CARICOM trade ministers met in Georgetown, Guyana, 18-19 November, for the 49th Regular Meeting of the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED). Read more here. A delegation from CARICOM also held a roundtable discussion with the US Congress on the issue of de-risking on November 19.

    REGIONAL NEWS

    US Congress Roundtable on de-risking in the Caribbean hailed a success

    CARICOM: Representatives of the governments of the 15-nation Caribbean Community (CARICOM) had a fully-attended Roundtable meeting on Tuesday November 19 with members of the U.S. Congress and senior representatives of major U.S. banks, concerning the effects of de-risking and the withdrawal of correspondent banking relations (CBRs). Read more

    UWI hosts Caribbean-China trade, investment symposium

    Guyana Chronicle: The University of the West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill Campus held a symposium titled “Exploring New Horizons in Caribbean-China Trade and Investment Relations” on Tuesday at the Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Imagination (EBCCI). Read more

    T&T manufacturers say seeking to tap all opportunities here

    Stabroek News: The Trinidad and Tobago Manufacturers’ Association (TTMA) led a Trade Mission to Guyana, from Wednesday to today, to engage in mutual trade with Guyanese companies. Read more

    Decisiveness, alacrity needed to confront challenges – COTED Chair

    CARICOM: Ministers with responsibility for Trade and Foreign Relations, in the Region began a two-day Meeting in Georgetown, Guyana, on Monday, against the background of difficult circumstances – trade, economic and environmental – facing the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). Read more

    Cops to receive training on trade-based money laundering

    LoopTT: Police Commissioner Gary Griffith met with Programme Officer of the Cybercrime and Anti-Money Laundering Section of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Yevheniy Umanets. Read more

    JAMPRO pledges $1m in support of Kingston Creative

    Jamaica Observer: The Jamaica Promotions Corporation (JAMPRO) on Wednesday pledged $1million in support of Kingston Creative, a movement aimed at promoting culture and the regeneration of downtown Kingston. Read more

    Jamaica Customs updates items not requiring trade licenses

    Jamaica Observer: The Jamaica Customs Agency (JCA) has published a list of items which no longer require import or export licences from the Trade Board. Read more

    Minerals Sector Contributes 2.7 Per Cent To GDP

    JIS: Minister of Transport and Mining, Hon. Robert Montague, says in 2018, the minerals sector contributed some 2.7 per cent to Gross Domestic Product (GDP), while earning some US$1.3 billion. Read more

    Jamaica And China To Focus On Increasing Trade

    JIS: Prime Minister, the Most Hon. Andrew Holness, says Jamaica and China will focus on increasing trade, particularly in getting more Jamaican goods into the Chinese market. Read more

    Process to support CARICOM use of Jamaica’s new skills certificate completed — Johnson Smith

    Jamaica Observer: Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Kamina Johnson-Smith says Jamaica, during the 49th meeting of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) in Georgetown, Guyana, completed the process to support the use of the country’s new higher-security skill certificate. Read more

    The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) joins GGGI as its 34th Member and 1st Regional Integration Member

    OECS: The Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) became the 34th Member of the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) after formally submitting its Instrument of Accession. The OECS is also the first regional integration organisation to become a member of GGGI. Read more

    Securing Economic Integration: The importance of intraregional trade

    OECS: Intraregional trade is a critical component of the OECS integration process. Significant strides have been made over the years to secure the foundation for a thriving common market – resulting in the successful establishment of the Eastern Caribbean Economic Union in January, 2011. Read more

    Barbados commercial expo in Belize

    LoveFM: Barbados Investment and Development Corporation and Belize’s Ministry of Investment, Trade and Commerce brought the Barbados Commercial Mission to Belize Expo. Today ten companies from Barbados were represented at the expo. Read more

    Some CARICOM countries want amendment to Common External Tariff for certain products

    Kaiteur News: The Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) has been receiving a concerning number of requests for the suspension of the region’s common external tariff (CET) for certain products. This is according to the Chair of the 49th meeting of the Council, Francine Baron. Read more

    CARICOM delegation discussing corresponding banking in the US

    Jamaica Observer: Antigua and Barbuda Prime Minister Gaston Browne is leading a Caribbean Community (CARICOM) delegation to the United States to participate in a roundtable discussion on de-risking and correspondent banking. Read more

    After trade deal, unhealthy foods flowed into Central America, Dominican Republic, study finds

    Buffalo University: The research highlights the importance of studying ties between trade and diet. Read more

    Icecream making to return to Bim

    Barbados Today: Iconic ice cream brand BICO will once again be made in Barbados come February after a decade of overseas production in several countries, BICO Ltd’s executive director Edwin Thirlwell, announced Tuesday. Read more

    INTERNATIONAL NEWS

    The WTO Faces a New Threat From Trump, This Time Over Its Budget

    Bloomberg: The Trump administration on Friday criticized the World Trade Organization’s compensation structure for appellate body members, laying out a case for potentially blocking the institution’s budget and effectively halting its work starting next year. Read more

    Twenty-second UNCTAD-OECD Report on G20 Investment Measures

    UNCTAD: The joint UNCTAD-OECD Report reveals that investment policy making in G20 members has slowed down further during the reporting period (mid-May to mid-October 2019). Only a few G20 Members took investment policy action, and the number of measures was low. Read more

    Beijing signs 197 Cooperation documents on Belt & Road Construction

    Belt and Road News: China has Signed 197 Cooperation documents on Belt & Road Construction with 137 Countries and 30 International organisations by the end of October 2019, Meng Wei, the Spokeswoman for the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said at a Press Conference in Beijing. Read more

    ACP-EU : Agreement on climate change, migration and post-Cotonou

    European Parliament: MEPs and African, Caribbean and Pacific MPs agreed on climate change, migration, sustainable growth and the post-Cotonou agreement. Read more

    ACP-EU : Agreement on climate change, migration and post-Cotonou

    European Sting: During the 38th session of the Joint Parliamentary Assembly (JPA), which took place from 17 to 21 November in Kigali (Rwanda), Members of the European Parliament and their counterparts from 78 African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries debated and adopted several resolutions. Read more

    Need for a progressive EU-ACP partnership to address common global challenges

    Euractiv: The international scenario is rapidly changing, but not necessarily in a positive way. That’s why there is a need for a progressive partnership between the European Union and the Africa-Caribbean-Pacific countries, writes MEP Carlos Zorrinho. Read more

    Rwanda: Senate President Urges Lawmakers to Reflect Deeply on Global Issues

    AllAfrica: Senate President Dr Augustin Iyamuremye on Tuesday told delegates at the ongoing 38th session of the ACP-EU joint parliamentary assembly in Kigali that they must seize the opportunity, to reflect deeply on regional and global issues. Read more

    EU-Singapore trade agreement enters into force

    EU: On 21 November 2019, the EU-Singapore trade agreement entered into force. This means, among other benefits, that Singapore will now remove all remaining tariffs on EU products, provide new opportunities for EU services’ providers, ensure legal protection for 138 iconic European food and drink products (known as Geographical Indications), as well as remove regulatory obstacles to trade in key sectors. Read more

    WTO dispute settlement and the Appellate Body crisis: Insider perceptions and Members’ revealed preferences

    Vox: The WTO dispute settlement system is in crisis, endangering the future of the organisation. The proximate reason for alarm is the dwindling number of Appellate Body (AB) members, the result of the US blocking new appointments as the terms of sitting members expire. Read more

    Expert analysis: Africa’s free trade area – where are we now?

    GTR: The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), launched in 2018 and now in its operational phase, is a landmark deal that aims to bring together 54 African countries with a combined population of more than 1 billion people and a combined GDP of over US$3tn. Read more

    Global Goods Trade Hit by Tensions and Rising Tariffs, WTO Says

    Bloomberg: Global trade in goods will likely remain below trend through the current quarter due to heightened tensions and rising tariffs in key sectors, according to a World Trade Organization report. Read more

    Japan’s Lower House approves trade deal with U.S.

    Japan Times: The Lower House signed off Tuesday on a trade deal with the United States that cuts tariffs on farm and industrial products, taking a step toward its entry into force next year. Read more

    The US–Japan trade deal: small agreement, broad implications

    East Asia Forum: The recent announcement of the US–Japan Trade Agreement (USJTA) must have come as a surprise to many in Japan given its unusual expeditiousness. The agreement was concluded just six months after negotiations began — a dramatic contrast to the EU–Japan Economic Partnership Agreement which took more than five years to achieve. Read more

    Japan’s exports post worst fall in 3 years as shipments to U.S., China drop

    Reuters: Japan’s exports tumbled at their quickest pace in three years in October, threatening to tip the trade-reliant economy into recession as weakening demand from United States and China darkened the outlook. Read more

    Donald Trump’s block on WTO judges creates ‘doomsday scenario’ for world trade disputes

    South China Morning Post: The world will not end on December 10, yet for many who have spent their careers within the global trading oversight system, the date has apocalyptic consequences. Read more

    Germany’s Merkel urges more investment in Africa

    RFI: Speaking at the third G20 Compact with Africa Summit in Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged more businesses to invest in Africa. But two years after its launch, experts say the compact has failed to reassure investors. Read more

    Global trade umpire: the next casualty of Trump’s tariff war?

    Reuters: U.S. President Donald Trump has upended the global trade order with a slew of tariffs on economic rivals: now, Washington has redoubled its efforts to paralyze the very body designed to settle such disputes. Read more

    Developing Global Free Trade: Linking China’s BRI with Mercosur, South America

    China Daily Briefing: Chinese President Xi Jinping has just returned from Brazil where he attended the annual meeting of the BRICS nations in Brasilia. With the Presidents and Prime Ministers from India, Russia, and South Africa also all attending, the scene has been set for Russia’s stint as the BRICS Chair in 2020, which is just six weeks away. Read more

    Beijing tariff demands may expand U.S.-China ‘phase one’ trade deal significantly

    Reuters: A “phase one” trade deal between the United States and China was supposed to be a limited agreement that would allow leaders from both countries to claim an easy victory while soothing financial markets. Read more

    EU defies Boris Johnson and declares UK will only get a ‘bare-bones’ trade deal or a no-deal Brexit next year

    Business Insider: The European Union’s trade chief has declared that Boris Johnson will only get a “bare-bones” trade deal next year — or none at all. Read more

    Eurobarometer survey: Majority of EU citizens positive about international trade

    EU: The results of a special Eurobarometer survey published today by the European Commission show that 60% of Europeans feel that they personally benefit from international trade, 16 percentage points more than 10 years ago at the time of the previous poll. Read more

    European Union launches WTO trade dispute against Colombia’s unfair duties on frozen fries

    EU: The EU has today brought a dispute to the World Trade Organization (WTO) against unlawful anti-dumping measures imposed by Colombia on frozen fries from Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands. Read more

    EU-Singapore free trade agreement comes into force

    Strait Times: The landmark trade agreement between the European Union and Singapore, which removes nearly all Customs duties between the two jurisdictions, comes into force today. Read more

    STRAIGHT FROM THE WTO

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