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CARICOM and Cuba Expand Duty-Free Market Access

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and Cuba have signed the Second Protocol to an Agreement that will expand access to each other’s markets for goods.

CARICOM Secretary-General, Ambassador Irwin LaRocque, and Cuban Ambassador to CARICOM, Julio Cesar Gonzalez Marchante, signed the Second Protocol to the Trade and Economic Cooperation Agreement between CARICOM and Cuba during the recent 45th Meeting of the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) in Georgetown, Guyana.

Under the Second Protocol, Cuba will expand duty free access to more than 320 items including meat, fish, dairy products, fruits, vegetables, beer, rum, cement, soap and apparel.

CARICOM will grant duty free access to some 50 items, including fish, pharmaceutical products, fertilizers and articles of iron and steel. CARICOM will also offer differentiated treatment on 22 items. The differentiated treatment includes phased reduction of duty by Most Developed Countries in CARICOM.

Ambassador LaRocque said that signing the Second Protocol marked a further deepening of the trade and economic relations between CARICOM and Cuba and provided further opportunities for the region’s private sector.

CARICOM and Cuba signed the first Trade and Economic Cooperation Agreement on July 5, 2000. The agreement provides for, among other things, the promotion and expansion of trade in goods and services, by means of: free access to the markets of the parties; elimination of non-tariff barriers to trade; the establishment of a system of Rules of Origin; and harmonization of technical and sanitary and phytosanitary measures.

The Trade and Economic Cooperation Agreement has provided tremendous opportunities for the development and expansion of business.

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