P
- Package
P - Principal Officer
P. & I. - Protection and
indemnity
P. & L. - Profit and Loss
P. O. D. - Paid on delivery
P.A. - Particular average
P.A.N. - Premium advice note
P.B. - Permanent Bunkers
P.D. - Port dues
P.D.O. - Property damage only
P.I. - Personal injury
P.I.A. - Peril insured
against
P.I.L. - Premium income limit
P.L. - Public liability
P.L.A. - Port of London
Authority
P.M.L. - Probable maximum
loss
p.o.c. - Port of call
P.O.D. - Pay on delivery,
Port of distress
POP -
Proof of Product
p.p. - Picked ports, Per
procuration (on behalf of)
p.p.i. - Policy proof of
interest
P.R. - Polski Rejestr. Port
Risks, pro-rata
P.S.T. - Pacific Standard
Time
P.T. - Premium transfer
p.t. - Private terms
P/A - Particular average.
Power of attorney. Private account
P/C - Price Current, Petty
Cash, Percent, Particular charges, profit commission
P/L - Partial loss
P/N - Promissory note
P/S - Public sale
Pac. - Pacific coast ports
Pacific Basin Economic Council
- The PBEC is a private sector group organised in 1967 to promote
regional trade and investment. PBEC currently includes about 1,000
corporations and 14 national membership committees.
Pacific Economic Cooperation
Council - The PECC is a nongovernmental organisation founded in 1980
and aimed at promoting cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region. Members
are drawn from 20 countries and territories: Australia, Brunei, Canada,
Chile, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New
Zealand, the Pacific Islands, Peru, the Philippines, Russia, Singapore,
Taiwan, Thailand, and the United States.
Pacific Rim - The Pacific
Rim, referring to countries and economies bordering the Pacific ocean,
is an informal, flexible term which generally has been regarded as a
reference to East Asia, Canada, and the United States. At a minimum, the
Pacific Rim includes Canada, Japan, the People's Republic of China,
Taiwan, and the United States. It may also include Australia, Brunei,
Cambodia, Hong Kong/Macau, Indonesia, Laos, North Korea, South Korea,
Malaysia, New Zealand, the Pacific Islands, the Philippines, Russia (or
the Commonwealth of Independent States), Singapore, Thailand, and
Vietnam. As an evolutionary term, usage sometimes includes Mexico, the
countries of Central America, and the Pacific coast countries of South
America.
Pan American Standards Commission
- See: Comision Panaamericana de Normas Tecnicas.
Pan American Union - See:
Organisation of American States.
Paris Club - The Paris Club
has become a popular designation for meetings between representatives of
a developing country that wishes to renegotiate its "official"
debt (normally excluding debts owed by and to the private sector without
official guarantees) and representatives of the relevant creditor
governments and international institutions. These meetings usually occur
at the request of a debtor country that wishes to consolidate all or
part of its debt service payments falling due over a specified period.
Meetings are traditionally chaired by a senior official of the French
Treasury Department. Comparable meetings occasionally take place in
London and in New York for countries that wish to renegotiate repayment
terms for their debts to private banks. These meetings are sometimes
called "creditor clubs." See: London Club.
Paris Convention - The Paris
Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, first adopted in
1883, is the major international agreement providing basic rights for
protecting industrial property. It covers patents, industrial designs,
service marks, trade names, indications of source, and unfair
competition. The U.S. ratified this treaty in May of 1887. The treaty
provides two fundamental rights:- The principle of national treatment
provides that nationals of any signatory nation shall enjoy in all other
countries of the union the advantages that each nation's laws grant to
its own nationals. - The right of priority enables any resident or
national of a member country to, first, file a patent application in any
member country and, thereafter, to file a patent application for the
same invention in any of the other member countries within 12 months of
the original filing and receive benefit of the original filing date. The
resident or national of a member country also can claim the filing date
of a trademark application or industrial design filed in another member
country within six months of the filing date in his or her own country
or country of residence.
Pass-Through - Pass-through
operations (also called transhipments) involve a foreign country's use
of one country in a trade bloc as a means of gaining preferential
treatment from other countries in the bloc. See: Transhipment.
Patent Cooperation Treaty -
The Patent Cooperation Treaty, PCT, is a world-wide convention, open to
any Paris Convention country. The PCT entered into force in 1978. Unlike
the Paris Convention, which addresses substantive intellectual property
rights, the PCT addresses procedural requirements, aiming to simplify
the filing, searching, and publication of international patent
applications.
PB - Performance Bond
PBEC - Pacific Basin Economic
Council
PCT - Patent Cooperation
Treaty
pd. - Passed. Paid
PE - Centrally Planned
Economy
PEC - President's Export
Council
PECC - Pacific Economic
Cooperation Council
PECSEA - President's Export
Council, Subcommittee on Export, Administration
PEFC - Private Export Funding
Corporation
Performance Requirements -
"Performance requirements" refers to government-mandated or
-approved activities that investors must undertake, usually as a
condition of establishment or operation in a particular country.
Period of Investigation - The
period, usually 6 months, beginning at least 150 days before and
continuing 30 days after the first day of the month when an antidumping
petition is filed, during which an exporter's home market (or third
country) and United States prices and other appropriate facts are
investigated to determine whether sales to the United States have been
at less than fair value. See: Tariff Act of 1930.
Pers. Acc. - Personal
Accident
Person - See: Foreign Person.
Persona Grata - A diplomatic
representative who is acceptable to the government of the country where
he or she is assigned.
Persona Non Grata - A
diplomatic representative who is no longer acceptable to the government
of the country where he or she is assigned.
PERT - Progress evaluation
and review technique
Petrodollars - This term
refers to oil earnings of petroleum-exporting countries in excess of
their domestic needs and deposited in dollars in Western banks. However,
a large part of the revenues that OPEC countries were unable to spend
has been recycled to oil-importing countries in an attempt to balance
international accounts.
Pfo. - Portfolio
PFP - Policy Framework Paper
pgke. - Package
Phytosanitary Inspection
Certificate - A certificate, issued by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to satisfy import regulations of foreign countries,
indicating that a U.S. shipment has been inspected and is free from
harmful pests and plant diseases.
PIANC - Permanent
International Association of Navigation Congresses
pier - Structure where ships
can berth.
Pilf. - Piferage
pilotage - Assisting the
master of a ship in navigation when entering or leaving a port.
PIP - Post-Initiated
Promotion
Plata Basin Financial Development
Fund - See: Fondo Financiero Para el Desarrollo de la Cuenca del
Plata.
Plaza Accord - In a September
1985 meeting at the Plaza Hotel in New York, G-5 officials ratified an
initiative to use exchange rates and other macropolicy adjustments as
the preferred and necessary means to bring about an orderly decline in
the value of the dollar. The agreement, intended to curb increasing U.S.
trade imbalances and protectionist action, supported orderly
appreciation of the main non-dollar currencies against the dollar. See:
Louvre Accord.
PLC - Pre-License Check,
Public Limited Company
pm - Premium
Policy Framework Paper - The
PFP lays out the steps a country will take while receiving structural
adjustment assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). It
describes the origins of the country's difficulties, corresponding
improvement efforts, and requisite financing as well as probable impacts
on environment and society. The paper, updated annually, is developed by
the recipient government in collaboration with IMF and the World Bank.
By design, it also serves as a vehicle for attracting orderly assistance
from other donors. See: Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility.
Political Risk - With regard
to Eximbank and Overseas Private Investment Corporation programs,
political risk coverage normally includes defaults or losses due to
action of inaction by governments, including war and civil unrest,
expropriations, and inconvertibility of local currency to dollars.
Losses due to currency devaluation are not considered a political risk.
See: Commercial Risk.
pontoon - Flat-bottomed
vessel with a shallow draft.
Port - Harbour having
facilities for ships to moor, load, or unload.
Port Shopping - Port shopping
is the practice of exporters and importers choosing a particular port on
the basis of their assessment of Customs' treatment, rather than on the
quality of physical facilities and efficiency.
Portfolio Investment - In
general, any foreign investment that is not direct investment is
considered portfolio investment. Foreign portfolio investment includes
the purchase of voting securities (stocks) at less than a 10 percent
level, bonds, trade finance, and government lending or borrowing,
excluding transactions in official reserves.
Post-Initiated Promotion -
This is a scheduled low budget trade promotion totally within resources
at post, such as BIO, BFC, or BSP.
Post-Shipment Verifications -
PSVs are conducted to determine that a commodity is being used for the
purposes for which its export was licensed. Firms or individuals
representing the end user, intermediate consignees, or the purchaser may
be subject to inquiries pertaining to the post-shipment verification. As
part of the PSV process, BXA forwards a cable to the U.S. embassy or
consulate in the respective geographical location to conduct an on-site
inspection to ensure that the commodity is physically present and used
as stated in the application. Post-shipment verifications are usually
conducted six-to-eight months subsequent to export of the commodity.
PSVs are also conducted by BXA agents.
POW WOW - The POW WOW is a
trade show (held annually in the United States and annually in Europe)
which brings together U.S. sellers and foreign buyers of travel-related
services pertaining to travel to the United States.
Pow Wow Selection Committee -
A committee of private industry representatives in foreign countries
which is responsible for selecting invitees to the International POW
WOW.
PP - Purchase Price
PPA - Protocol of Provisional
Application
ppd. - Prepaid
ppt. - Prompt loading
pratique - Permission granted
by the authorities at a port, after assessing the health of those on
board the arriving ship, to allow them to make physical contact with the
shore.
Pre-License Checks - PLCs are
conducted to determine that dual-use items on an export license
application are destined for a legitimate end-use by a reliable
end-user. Firms or individuals representing the licensee (the
applicant), the consignee, the purchaser, the intermediate consignee, or
the end user may be subject to inquiries pertaining to the pre-license
check. As part of the process, BXA forwards a cable to the U.S. embassy
or consulate in the respective geographical location to conduct an
inspection or meet with company representatives to conduct inquiries on
BXA's behalf.
Preferences - These special
trade advantages (e.g. tariff preferences) are given by governments to
trading partners in order to promote export growth and development.
These are often granted by developed countries to LDCs. Licensing
practices, quotas or preferential application of other measures,
including taxes, can also be granted in the non-tariff area.
Preferential Trade Area for
Eastern and Southern African States - PTA, established in 1981,
supports economic development and cooperation (agriculture,
communications, customs, industry, monetary affairs, natural resources,
and trade). Membership includes: Burundia, Comoros, Djibouti, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Rwanda, Somalia, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. PTA's headquarters are in Lusaka, Zambia.
Preliminary Determination -
The dumping determination by the International Trade Administration
announcing the results of the investigation conducted within 160 days
(or, in extraordinarily complicated cases, 210 days) after a petition is
filed or an investigation is self-initiated by the International Trade
Administration. If the International Trade Administration determines
that there is a reasonable basis to believe or suspect that the
merchandise under consideration is being sold or is likely to be sold at
less than fair value, liquidation of all affected entries is suspended,
and the matter is referred to the International Trade Commission.
"Preliminary determination" also refers to the decision by the
ITC where there is a reasonable indication that an industry in the
United States is materially injured, or threatened with material injury,
or the establishment of an industry in the United States is materially
retarded by reason of the imports of the merchandise which is the
subject of the petition. The ITC must make its decision within 45 days
after the date on which the petition is filed or an investigation is
self-initiated by the International Trade Administration. If this
determination is negative, the investigation is terminated. See: Tariff
Act of 1930.
Prem. Red. - Premiums
reducing
Prem. Res. - Premium reserve
(reinsurance)
President's Export Council -
The President's Export Council (PEC) advises the President on government
policies and programs that affect U.S. trade performance; promote export
expansion; and provide a forum for discussing and resolving
trade-related problems among the business, industrial, agricultural,
labour, and government sectors. The Council was established by Executive
Order of the President in 1973 and was originally composed only of
business executives. The Council was reconstituted in 1979 to include
leaders of the labour and agricultural communities, Congress, and the
Executive branch. Twenty-eight private sector members serve "at the
pleasure of the President" with no set term of office. Other
members include five U.S. Senators and five Members of the House, the
Secretaries of Agriculture, Commerce, Labour, State, and Treasury, the
Chairman of the Export-Import Bank, and the U.S. Trade Representative.
The Council reports to the President through the Secretary of Commerce.
The President's Export Council, Subcommittee on Export Administration (PECSEA),
formed in June 1976, advises the PEC, the White House, and Commerce on
all export control matters, including those which affect Commerce,
State, Defence and Energy. The PECSEA membership comprises 25 industry
representatives, selected by the Secretary of Commerce.
President's Export Council,
Subcommittee on Export Administration - See: President's Export
Council.
Primary Product - A product
in an unprocessed or natural state (e.g. an agricultural, mineral or
fishery product).
Principal Officer - See:
Title and Rank.
Principal Supplier - The
country that has the largest portion of total GATT trade in a product
imported into a given country. The principal supplier has first rights
to negotiate compensation should a country assess a duty in excess of
its bound rate. Any tariff concessions granted to the principal supplier
are granted automatically to all other countries accorded MFN status.
Prior Deposits - A government
requirement that an importer deposit in a commercial bank or central
bank a specified sum of money (usually a percentage of the value of the
imports my for a specified length of time as a condition of importing).
These deposits are often held without interest and thus represent a real
cost. They are recognised as barriers to trade.
Private Export Funding
Corporation - PEFCO is a private company, accessed through its
member banks and a few exporters, that works with Eximbank in using
private capital to finance U.S. exports. The corporation acts as a
supplemental lender to traditional commercial banking sources by making
loans to public and private borrowers located outside of the United
States who require medium and/or longer-term financing of their
purchases of U.S. goods and services.
Private Voluntary Organisations
- PVOs are non-profit, tax-exempt and nongovernmental organisations
governed by a group of private /citizens whose purpose is to engage in
voluntary, charitable and development operations overseas. The U.S.
Agency for International Development has registered over 150 PVOs which
are eligible to receive USAID funding.
Pro Forma Invoice - An
invoice provided by a supplier prior to the shipment of merchandise,
informing the buyer of the kinds and quantities of goods to be sent,
their value, and important specifications (weight, size, and similar
characteristics).
Product Groups - Commodity
groupings used for export control purposes. See: Export Control
Classification Number.
Prof. Com. - Profit
commission (reinsurance)
Profit - For the purposes of
constructed value in an antidumping duty investigation or review, the
profit used is the profit normally earned by a producer, from the
country of export, of the same or similar product as that under
investigation. By statute, the amount of profit shall not be less than 8
percent of the sum of general expenses and cost.
Project License - The Bureau
of Export Administration uses the project license to authorise
large-scale exports of a wide variety of commodities and technical data
for specified activities. Those activities are restricted to capital
expansion, maintenance, repair or operating supplies, or the supply of
materials to be used in the production of other commodities for sale.
Items intended for resale in the form received are not permitted and
must be effected under a Distribution License.
Proof of Product - Legal proof certification that a product
exists. This will normally be issued by the end seller and certified
through a lawyer or bank.
Protectionism - The use of
restrictions to discourage imports and artificially help domestic
producers compete with foreign suppliers.
Protective Order - With
regard to antidumping cases, a term for the order under which most
business proprietary information is made available to an attorney or
other representative of a party to the proceeding. See: Tariff Act of
1930.
Protest System - The Protest
System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, tracks protests
from the date they are received through final action. A protest is the
legal means by which an importer, consignee, or other designated part
may challenge decisions made by a District Director of Customs.
Protocol - See: International
Agreements Title and Rank.
Protocol of Provisional
Application - A legal device that enabled the original contracting
parties to accept general GATT obligations and benefits, despite the
fact that some of their existing domestic legislation at that time
discriminated against imports in a manner that was inconsistent with
certain GATT provisions. Although meant to be "temporary," the
Protocol has remained in effect; and countries that signed the PPA in
1947 continue to invoke it to defend certain practices that are
otherwise inconsistent with their GATT obligations. Countries that
acceded to the GATT after 1947 have also done so under the terms of the
Protocol.
PSV - Post-Shipment
Verification
PTA - Preferential Trade Area
for Eastern and Southern African, States
Ptg. Std. - Petrograd
Standard (timber trade)
Public Limited Company - See:
Limited (Liability).
Purchase Price - A statutory
term used in dumping investigations to refer to the United States sales
price of merchandise which is sold or likely to be sold prior to the
date of importation, by the producer or reseller of the merchandise for
exportation to the United States. Certain statutory adjustments (e.g.,
import duties, commissions, freight) are made, if appropriate, to permit
a meaningful comparison with the foreign market value of such or similar
merchandise. See: Tariff Act of 1930.
Purchaser - Within the
context of export controls, the purchaser is that person abroad who has
entered into the export transaction with the applicant to purchase the
commodities or technical data for delivery to the ultimate consignee.
Purchasing Agent - An agent
who purchases goods in his/her own country on behalf of large foreign
buyers such as government agencies and large private corporations.
Purchasing Power Parity -
Purchasing power parity is a theory which states that exchange rates
between currencies are in equilibrium when their purchasing power is the
same in each of the two countries.
PVOs - Private Voluntary
Organisations
PWB - Prime World Bank
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