EMBARGO - significado y definición. Qué es EMBARGO
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Qué (quién) es EMBARGO - definición

FINANCIAL PENALTIES APPLIED BY NATIONS TO PERSONS, NATIONS OR COMPANIES TO AFFECT POLITICAL CHANGE
Embargo; Trade sanctions; Embargos; Trade embargo; Trade sanction; Secondary embargo; Trade Sanctions; Economic sanction; Financial sanction; Embargoes; Financial sanctions; Weaponization of finance; Sanctioned economy; United Nations sanctions
  • An undersupplied US gasoline station, closed during the oil embargo in 1973

embargo         
n.
1) to impose an embargo
2) to place, put an embargo on
3) to lift, remove an embargo from
4) a trade embargo
5) an embargo against, on
6) under embargo
Embargo         
·vt To lay an embargo on and thus detain; to prohibit from leaving port;
- said of ships, also of commerce and goods.
II. Embargo ·noun An edict or order of the government prohibiting the departure of ships of commerce from some or all of the ports within its dominions; a prohibition to sail.
embargo         
[?m'b?:g??, ?m-]
¦ noun (plural embargoes)
1. an official ban, especially on trade or other commercial activity with a particular country.
2. historical an order of a state forbidding foreign ships to enter, or any ships to leave, its ports.
¦ verb (embargoes, embargoing, embargoed)
1. ban (something) officially.
2. archaic seize (a ship or goods) for state service.
Origin
C17: from Sp., from embargar 'arrest'.

Wikipedia

Economic sanctions

Economic sanctions are commercial and financial penalties applied by one or more countries against a targeted self-governing state, group, or individual. Economic sanctions are not necessarily imposed because of economic circumstances—they may also be imposed for a variety of political, military, and social issues. Economic sanctions can be used for achieving domestic and international purposes.

The efficacy of sanctions is debatable—there are many failures—and sanctions can have unintended consequences. Economic sanctions may include various forms of trade barriers, tariffs, and restrictions on financial transactions. Since the mid-1990s, United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions have tended to target individuals and entities, in contrast to the comprehensive embargoes of earlier decades.

An embargo is similar, but usually implies a more severe sanction. An embargo (from the Spanish embargo, meaning hindrance, obstruction, etc. in a general sense, a trading ban in trade terminology and literally "distraint" in juridic parlance) is the partial or complete prohibition of commerce and trade with a particular country/state or a group of countries. Embargoes are considered strong diplomatic measures imposed in an effort, by the imposing country, to elicit a given national-interest result from the country on which it is imposed. Embargoes are generally considered legal barriers to trade, not to be confused with blockades, which are often considered to be acts of war. Embargoes can mean limiting or banning export or import, creating quotas for quantity, imposing special tolls, taxes, banning freight or transport vehicles, freezing or seizing freights, assets, bank accounts, limiting the transport of particular technologies or products (high-tech) for example CoCom during the Cold War.

In response to embargoes, a closed economy often develops in an area subjected to heavy embargoes. The effectiveness of embargoes is thus in proportion to the extent and degree of international participation. Embargoes can be an opportunity for some countries to develop self-sufficiency.

Ejemplos de uso de EMBARGO
1. Financial embargo The government is under a Western financial embargo aimed at forcing Hamas to recognise Israel and renounce violence.
2. Lifting of Arms Embargo: A recent call by some forces for a selective lifting of the UN embargo on arms is unbalanced, misguided and fraught with dangerous consequences.
3. EU arms embargo Mr Hu will probably press his case on the most outstanding contentious issue – the lifting of the EU arms embargo on China.
4. Unlike the US, which maintains an arms embargo and continues to include Libya on its list of states that sponsor terrorism, Europe dropped its embargo in October 2004.
5. Considering embargo and blockade unacceptable in the modern world, we call for an early lifting of the unilateral embargo against Cuba.