Common External Tariff - significado y definición. Qué es Common External Tariff
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Qué (quién) es Common External Tariff - definición


Common external tariff         
A common external tariff (CET) must be introduced when a group of countries forms a customs union. The same customs duties, import quotas, preferences or other non-tariff barriers to trade apply to all goods entering the area, regardless of which country within the area they are entering.
Tariff (regulation)         
BUSINESS PRICES AND TERMS SET BY A GOVERNMENT REGULATOR
Tariff schedule
A tariff or tariff schedule is a special type of contract between a regulatory agency, such as a public utilities commission or a government such as a municipality, and a business, to provide a product or service to the public, often in exchange for being granted an exclusive franchise to provide the tariffed product or service within an exclusive area.
Tariff Schedule         
BUSINESS PRICES AND TERMS SET BY A GOVERNMENT REGULATOR
Tariff schedule
A comprehensive list of the goods which a country may import and the import duties applicable to each product.
Ejemplos de uso de Common External Tariff
1. As a full member, Venezuela will adopt Mercosur‘s common external tariff.
2. What is more, the Kingdom and the GCC Customs Union have established a common external tariff with very low, stable, predictable and declining import duties complemented by the absence of quantitative restrictions.
3. "Economically stronger countries have to understand the realities ... of smaller countries" Tabare Vazquez, president of UruguayUnder the entry agreement, Venezuela will have to adopt a common external tariff system within four years.
4. Background On May 1, 2004, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, Cyprus and Malta acceded to the European Union.'4; The 10 new members were required to change their tariff schedules to conform to the EU‘s common external tariff schedule, resulting in increased tariffs on certain imported products.
5. Background On May 1, 2004, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, Cyprus and Malta acceded to the European Union.'4; The 10 new members were required to change their tariff schedules to conform to the EU‘s common external tariff schedule, resulting in increased tariffs on certain imported products.'4; Under General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1''4 (GATT 1''4) Articles XXIV: 6 and XXVIII, the United States is entitled to compensation from the EU to offset some of these changes.'4; The expansion of EU quotas to account for the addition of 10 new countries and more than 75 million new EU consumers was another key element of the negotiations.