S&D
- Special and Differential Treatment
S. & A. - Signing and
accounting (procedure)
S. & F.A. - Shipping and
Forwarding Agent
S. & H/exct. - Sundays
and holidays excepted in lay days
S. & L. - Sue &
Labour (charges)
S. B. - Short Bill
S. to S. - Station to station
S.A. - Salvage Association
s.a.n.r. - Subject to
approval no risk
S.B.M. - Single buoy mooring
s.b.s. - survey before
shipment
s.c. - Salvage charges
S.C.A. - Settlement of claims
abroad
S.C.O.R. - Scientific
Commission on Oceanic Research
S.D. - Sea damage
S.d. - Short delivery
S.D.A. - Single
administrative document
S.D.H.F. - Standard Dutch
Hull Form
S.E.P. - Subject to
endorsement on the policy
S.H.P. - Shaft horse-power
S.I. - Short Interest, Sum
Insured International System of Units (System International)
S.I.T.P.R.O - Simplification
of Industrial Trade Procedures Board
S.K.D. - Semi knocked down
s.l. - Salvage loss
S.O. - Seller's option
S.O.L. - Ship owner's
liability
S.O.S. - Service of suit
S.P. - Supra Protest
s.p.d. - Steamer pays dues
S.R. & C.C. - Strikes,
riots and civil commotions
S.R.L. - Ship repairers'
liability
S.S. & C. - Same sea and
country or coast
S.S.C. - Simultaneous
settlements clause
S.S.N. - Standard shipping
notice
s.v. - Sailing vessel
S.W. - Shipper's weights
S.W.D. - Seawater damage
S.W.G. - Standard wire gauge
S/A - Subject to Acceptance
(insurance)
s/a - Subject to approval
S/Fee - Survey Fee
S/I - Sum insured
S/IOGA - State/Industry-Organised,
Government-Approved
S/L - Sue and labour
S/L.C. - Sue and labour
clause
S/L.Ch. - Sue and labour
charges
S/N - Shipping note
SA - Sociedad Anonima,
Societe Anonyme
SA de CV - Sociedad Anonima
SAARC - South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation
SABIT - Special American
Business Internship Training Program
SACU - Southern African
Customs Union
SADC - Southern African
Development Community
SAF - Structural Adjustment
Facility
Safeguards - The General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) permits two forms of multilateral
safeguards: (a) a country's right to impose temporary import controls or
other trade restrictions to prevent commercial injury to domestic
industry, and (b) the corresponding right of exporters not to be
deprived arbitrarily of access to markets. Article XIX of the GATT
permits a country whose domestic industries or workers are adversely
affected by increased imports to withdraw or modify concessions the
country had earlier granted, to impose, for a limited period, new import
restrictions if the country can establish that a product is "being
imported in such increased quantities as to cause or threaten serious
injury to domestic producers," and to keep such restrictions in
effect for a such time as may be necessary to prevent or remedy such
injury.
Sales Representative - An
agent who distributes, represents, services, or sells goods on behalf of
foreign sellers.
SALM - Single anchor leg
mooring
SARL - Societe e
Responsabilite Limitee
SAS - Saudi Arabian Standards
Organisation
SAS - Societe par Actions
Simplifiee
Saudi Arabian Standards
Organisation - SASO was established in April 1972 as the sole Saudi
Arabian government organisation to promulgate standards and measurements
in the kingdom. Primarily, SASO promulgates standards for electrical
equipment and some food products. Some of these standards have been
adopted by the Gulf Cooperation Council.
SBM/SPM - Single buoy/point
mooring
SC - Senior Commercial
Officer
Sch. - Schooner
Schedule B - Schedule B is a
U.S. Bureau of the Census publication and is based on the Harmonized
Commodity Description and Coding System (Harmonized System). Export
statistics are initially collected and compiled in terms of
approximately 8,000 commodity classifications in Schedule B, Statistical
Classification of Domestic and Foreign Commodities Exported from the
United States. See: Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated.
Scope Determinations - Scope
determinations deal with the product coverage of antidumping and
countervailing duty orders. The Department of Commerce will determine --
in response to an application from an interested party or on its own
initiative -- whether a certain product is included within the scope of
an antidumping and countervailing duty order.
sd. - Sailed
SDNs - Specially Designated
Nationals
SDR - Special drawing right
(limitation of liability)
SDRs - Special Drawing Rights
SEA - Single European Act
SECOFI - Secretaria de
Comercio y Fomento Industrial
Secretar¡a de Comercio y Fomento
Industrial - SECOFI is Mexico's Ministry of Commerce and Industrial
Promotion.
Section 201 - Section 201,
the "escape clause" provision of the Trade Act of 1974,
permits temporary import relief, not to exceed a maximum of eight years,
to a domestic industry which is seriously injured, or threatened with
serious injury, due to increased imports. Import relief, granted at the
President's discretion, generally takes the form of increased tariffs or
quantitative restrictions. To be eligible for section 201 relief, the
International Trade Commission (ITC) must determine that: (a) the
industry has been seriously injured or threatened to be injured and (b)
imports have been a substantial cause (not less than any other cause) of
that injury. Industries need not prove that an unfair trade practice
exists, as is necessary under the antidumping and countervailing duty
laws. However, under section 201, a greater degree of injury --
"serious" injury -- must be found to exist, and imports must
be a "substantial" cause (defined as not less than any other
cause) of that injury. If the ITC finding is affirmative, the
President's remedy may be a tariff increase, quantitative restrictions,
or orderly marketing agreements. At the conclusion of any relief action,
the Commission must report on the effectiveness of the relief action in
facilitating the positive adjustment of the domestic industry to import
competition. If the decision is made not to grant relief, the President
must provide an explanation to the Congress. See: Escape clause Trade
Act of 1974.
Section 232 - Under section
232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, as amended, Commerce determines
whether articles are being imported into the U.S. in quantities or
circumstances that threaten national security. Based on the
investigation report, the President can adjust imports of the article(s)
in question. Commerce must report on the effects these imports have on
national security and make recommendations for action or inaction within
270 days after starting an investigation. Within 90 days of the report,
the President decides whether to take action to adjust imports on the
basis of national security. The President must notify Congress of his
decision within 30 days. See: Trade Expansion Act of 1962.
Section 301 - Under section
301, firms can complain about a foreign country's trade policies or
practices that are harmful to U.S. commerce. The section empowers the
USTR to investigate the allegations and to negotiate the removal of any
trade barriers. USTR may also self-initiate investigations. Specific
timeframes for conducting the investigations are specified by law.
Section 301 requires that GATT's dispute resolution process be invoked
where applicable and, if negotiations fail, to retaliate within 180 days
from the date that discovery of a trade agreement violation took place.
See: Special 301 Super 301.
Section 337 - Section 337 of
the Tariff Act of 1930 requires investigations of unfair practices in
import trade. Under this authority, the International Trade Commission
applies U.S. statutory and common law of unfair competition to the
importation of products into the United States and their sale. Section
337 prohibits unfair competition and unfair importing practices and
sales of products in the U.S., when these threaten to: (a) destroy or
substantially injure a domestic industry, (b) prevent the establishment
of such an industry, or (c) restrain or monopolise U.S. trade and
commerce. Section 337 also prohibits infringement of U.S. patents,
copyrights, registered trademarks, or mask works. See: Tariff Act of
1930.
Section 416 - Section 416 of
the Agricultural Act of 1949 provides for the donation of food and feed
commodities owned by Agriculture's Commodity Credit Corporation and is
focused on people in developing countries. See: Food For Peace. Food For
Progress.
SED - Shipper's Export
Declaration
SEED - Support for East
European Democracy
SELA - Sistema Economico
Latinoamericao
Selling, General and
Administrative (Expenses) - SGA is the sum of:- General and
administrative expenses (such as: salaries of non-sales personnel, rent,
heat, and light); - Direct selling expenses (that is, expenses that can
be directly tied to the sale of a specific unit, such as: credit,
warranty, and advertising expenses); and - Indirect selling expenses
(that is, expenses which cannot be directly tied to the sale of a
specific unit but which are proportionally allocated to all units sold
during a certain period, such as: telephone, interest, and postal
charges).
SEM - Seminar Mission
Senior Commercial Officer -
The SCO is the senior U.S. and Foreign Commercial Officer at an embassy
and reports in-country to the Ambassador. At major posts, this position
carries the title of Commercial Counselor; in key posts, Minister Counselor.
Usually reporting to the SCO are a Commercial Attaché and Commercial
officers. The latter are sometimes assigned to subordinate posts
throughout the country.
Sep. - Separation procedure
(signing and accounting)
SEPD - State Export Program
Database
SF - Solo Fair (overseas
procured)
SFSC - Shared Foreign Sales
Corporation
SFW - Solo Fair (Washington
procured)
SGA - Selling, General and
Administrative (Expenses)
Shared Foreign Sales Corporation
- A shared FSC is a foreign sales corporation consisting of more than
one and less than 25 unrelated exporters. See: Foreign Sales
Corporation.
SHex. - Sundays and Holidays
excepted
SHinc. - Sundays and Holidays
included
Ship's Manifest - A list,
signed by the captain of a ship, of the individual shipments
constituting the ship's cargo.
Shipment - A shipment is all
of the cargo carried under the terms of a single bill of lading.
Shipper's Export Declaration
- A form required by the Treasury Department and completed by a shipper
showing the value, weight, consignee, destination, etc., of export
shipments as well as Harmonized Schedule B (see above) identification
number.
Shipper's Export Declaration
- The SED includes complete particulars on individual shipments and is
used to control exports and act as a source document for the official
U.S. export statistics. SEDs must be prepared for shipments through the
U.S. Postal Service when the shipment is valued over $500. SEDs are
required for shipments, other than by the U.S. Postal Service, where the
value of commodities classified under each individual Schedule B number
is over $2,500. SEDs must be prepared, regardless of value, for all
shipments requiring a validated export license or destined for countries
prohibited by the Export Administration Regulations. SEDs are prepared
by the exporter and the exporter's agent and delivered to the exporting
carrier (such as: post office, airline, or vessel line). The exporting
carrier presents the required number of copies to the U.S. Customs
Service at the port of export. The Foreign Trade Statistical Regulations
(15 CFR, Part 30) provide the statistical requirements for use by
exporters, freight forwarders, and ocean carriers concerning preparation
and filing of SEDs.
Shipping Weight - Shipping
weight represents the gross weight in kilograms of shipments, including
the weight of moisture content, wrappings, crates, boxes, and containers
(other than cargo vans and similar substantial outer containers).
Short Supply - Commodities in
short supply may be subject to export controls to protect the domestic
economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the
serious inflationary impact of satisfying foreign demand. Items that the
U.S. controls for short supply purposes include petroleum and petroleum
products, unprocessed western red cedar, and shipment of horses by sea.
The controls are included in the Export Administration Regulations.
SIC - Standard Industrial
Classification
SICE - Sistema de Informacion
al Comercio Exterior
SIDA - Swedish International
Development Authority
SIECA - Permanent Secretariat
of the General Treaty on Central American Economic Integration
SIFIDA - Societe
Internationale Financiere pour les Investissements, et le Developpement
en Afrique
SII - Structural Impediments
Initiative
SIJORI - Singapor-Johor-Riau
Growth Triangle
SIMIS - Single Internal
Market Information Service
Singapore-Jahor-Riau Growth
Triangle - SIJORI is a subregional economic grouping composed of the
nation of Singapore, the Malaysian State of Johor, and Indonesia's Riau
Province.
Single Currency Peg - See:
Exchange Rate Classifications.
Single European Act - The
SEA, which entered into force in July 1987, was the first significant
revision of the Treaty of Rome. The SEA provides the legal and
procedural support for achievement of the single European Market by
1992. The SEA revised the EEC Treaty and, where not already provided for
in the Treaty, majority decisions were introduced for numerous votes
facing the Council of Ministers, particularly those affecting
establishment of the single European Market and the European financial
common market. The role of the European Parliament was strengthened;
decisions on fiscal matters remained subject to unanimity.
Single Internal Market
Information Service - SIMIS, operated by the Commerce Department's
International Trade Administration, provides information, assistance,
and advice on how to do business in the European Community's internal
market. Telephone: 202-482-5276.
Sistema de Informacion al
Comercio Exterior - SICE (English: Foreign Trade Information System)
is a databank which provides foreign trade information to the public and
private sectors of member countries of the Organisation of American
States (OAS). The System includes information on the U.S. import and
export markets, markets of other OAS member countries, and trade
information on the European Community and Japan.
Sistema Economico Latinoamericano
- See: Latin American Economic System.
SITC - Standard International
Tariff Classification
SITC - Standard International
Trade Classification
Sk. - Sack
SL - Sociedad de
Responsabilidad Limitada
SLC -
Standby Letter of Credit..see Stand-By Arrangements
Sld. - Sailed
SMSA - Standard Metropolitan
Statistical Area
SNC - Societe in Nome
Collettivo, Societe en Nom Collectif
SNEC - Sub-Group on Nuclear
Export Coordination
SOAP - Sunflower Oil
Assistance Program
Sociedad Anonima - S.A.
(Spanish: "incorporated company") is a form of corporation
which must have at least five shareholders, who may be either Mexican or
foreign. Each shareholder is liable only up to the amount of their
contribution. No shares may be held by the company name. "S.A."
must follow the firm name, indicating that it is a corporation.
Sociedad Anonima de Capital
Variable - SA de CV (Spanish: "variable capital company"),
similarly to SA, must have at least five shareholders, who may be either
Mexican or foreign. Each shareholder is liable only up to the amount of
their contribution. SA de CV differs from SA in that an SA de CV may own
its shares. "S.A. de C.V." must follow the firm name
indicating that it a corporation with variable capital.
Societe a Responsabilite Limitata
- "Srl" (Italian) is a private company.
Societe Anonyme - S.A.
(French: "incorporated") is a form of corporation which must
have at least seven shareholders, who may be either French or foreign.
Each member is liable only up to the amount of stock owned.
Societe e Responsabilite Limitee
- SARL (French: limited liability company") has features of both a
corporation and a partnership. The number of partners cannot exceed 50.
Partners may be either French or foreign. Partner liabilities are
limited to the amount of their contribution, which may be in cash or in
kind but not in skills. While shares may be freely traded among
partners, they may not be transferred to third parties without majority
agreement of partners representing at least 75 percent of the capital.
Societe en Commandite Simple
- Societe en commandite simple (French: "limited partnership")
is composed of general partners, of which the managing partner at least
must have unlimited liability, and silent partners whose liability is
limited to the amount of their capital contributions. Silent partners
are not permitted to perform any management functions vis-a-vis other
partners. In a limited partnership without shares, transfer of shares of
the limited partners is only allowable with the consent of all the
partners. In a limited partnership with shares (Societe en commandite
par actions), these are transferred in a manner similar to corporations.
Societe en Nom Collectif -
Societe en nom collectif, SNC, (French: "general partnership")
is organised with all partners being allocated shares for their
contributions, which may be cash, in-kind, or services. There is no
required minimum or maximum capital, nor any share par value. Shares in
the firm are not negotiable and cannot be transferred without agreement
of all the partners. Each partner is liable for the totality of the
firm's debts and obligations.
Societe in Nome Collettivo -
"Snc" (Italian) is a general partnership in which there is no
limit on the liability of the partners.
Societe Internationale Financiere
pour les Investissements et le Developpement en Afrique - SIFIDA
fosters the formation of profitable business in Africa by identifying
and nurturing productive projects, by arranging for syndicated loans,
and by providing export finance. The Society is a holding company
affiliated with the African Development Bank (AfDB); headquarters are in
Chene-Bourg, Switzerland. Major shareholders include the AfDB, the
International Finance Corporation and more than 100 financial,
industrial, and commercial institutions around the world.
Societe par Actions Simplifiee
- SAS (French: "private limited company") is designed for
joint ventures and permits the rights and liability of each shareholder
to be defined by mutual agreement between the parties. Only two
shareholders are required.
Societe Per Azioni - "SpA"
(Italian: public corporation) must have at least two shareholders at
formation; after formation, the requirement is reduced to one
shareholder.
Society for Worldwide Interbank
Financial Telecommunications - SWIFT is a cooperative organised
under Belgian law, with headquarters in La Hulpe, near Brussels. SWIFT
provides communications services to the international banking industry,
including payments and administrative messages and, more recently,
securities settlements. Traffic in 1991 was about 362 million messages.
SWIFT is owned by the member banks -- approximately 1,600 -- including
the central banks of most countries. The U.S. Federal Reserve is not a
member, but participates in certain types of payments. Securities
brokers and dealers, clearing and depository institutions, exchanges for
securities, and travellers checks issuers also participate in SWIFT.
SWIFT was organised in 1973 and started operations in 1977.
SOEC - Statistical Office of
the European Communities
Soft Currency - The currency
of a nation in which exchange may be made only with difficulty. Soft
currency countries typically have minimal exchange reserves and deficits
in their balance of payments. See: Hard Currency.
Soft Loan - Commonly, a loan
from a government or multilateral development bank with a long repayment
period and below-market interest.
SOGA - State-Organised,
Government-Approved Mission
South Asia Preferential Trading
Arrangement - See: South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation.
South Asian Association for
Regional Cooperation - SAARC promotes economic, technical,
scientific, and social cooperation among members. The Association was
founded in 1985 by seven countries: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives,
Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The Association plans to establish a
South Asian Preferential Trading Arrangement (SAPTA) by 1997 as a step
toward creating an economic community in south Asia.
South Group - See: Danish
International Development Assistance.
South Pacific Bureau for Economic
Cooperation - See: South Pacific Forum.
South Pacific Forum - The SPF
is a regional arrangement for convening 15 governments and territories
for deliberations on issues of mutual interest. The Forum was
established in 1971; headquarters are in Suva, Fiji; members include:
Australia, the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kirbati, Marshall Islands,
Micronesia, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon
Island, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanatu. The South Pacific Bureau for Economic
Cooperation (SPEC) is a subsidiary organisation which promotes regional
cooperation in the development of the island members in partnership with
the more industrially developed countries of the region: Australia and
New Zealand.
Southern Africa Development
Community - SADC, established in April 1980 (as the Southern Africa
Development Co-ordination Conference), is a regional economic pact
comprising Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia,
Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Since a change in name and
focus in mid-1992, the Community focuses solely on development, leaving
trade matters to the Preferential Trade Agreement for Eastern and
Southern Africa (PTA). Community headquarters are in Gaborone, Botswana.
Southern African Customs Union
- SACU, established in 1910, includes Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South
Africa, and Swaziland. SACU provides for the free exchange of goods
within the area, a common external tariff, and a sharing of custom
revenues. External tariffs, excise duties, and several rebate and refund
provisions are the same for all SACU members. SACU's revenues are
apportioned among its members according to a set formula. These funds
constitute a significant contribution to each member's government
revenues.
Southern Common Market - See:
Mercosur.
Southern Cone - The southern
cone consists of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay. With
the exception of Chile, these countries also comprise the Southern
Common Market.
SPA - Societe Per Azioni
SPEC - South Pacific Bureau
for Economic Cooperation
Special 301 - The Special 301
statute requires the United States Trade Representative (USTR) to review
annually the condition of intellectual property protection among U.S.
trading partners. Submissions are accepted from industry after which the
USTR, weighing all relevant information, makes a determination as to
whether a country presents excessive barriers to trade with the United
States by virtue of its inadequate protection of intellectual property.
If the USTR makes a positive determination, a country may be named to
the list of: (a) Priority Foreign Countries (the most egregious), (b)
the Priority Watch List, or (c) the Watch List. Special 301 (a variation
of Section 301) was created by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act
of 1988. See: Section 301 Super 301.
Special American Business
Internship Training Program - SABIT, originally the Soviet-American
Business Internship Training Program, is a cooperative program that
brings business executives and scientists from the former Soviet Union
for three-to six-month internships with American companies. The program
teaches these managers and scientists how to operate in a market economy
at the same time that American businesses development market contacts
once their interns return home. Soviet business managers are referred by
the Commerce Department's International Trade Administration to
sponsoring U.S. companies, which make the final selection of their
interns. The program matches U.S. corporate sponsors with Soviet
business executives from the same industries. The Independent States
provide transportation; the companies provide living expenses and
training in management techniques (production, distribution, marketing,
accounting, wholesaling, and publishing).
Special and Differential
Treatment - The principle, enunciated in the Tokyo Declaration, that
the Tokyo Round negotiations should seek to accord particular benefits
to the exports of developing countries, consistent with their trade,
financial, and development needs. Among proposals for special or
differential treatment are reduction or elimination of tariffs applied
to exports of developing countries under the Generalised System of
Preferences (GSP), expansion of product and country coverage of the GSP,
accelerated implementation of tariff cuts agreed to in the Tokyo Round
for developing country exports, substantial reduction or elimination of
tariff escalation, special provisions for developing country exports in
any new codes of conduct covering nontariff measures, assurance that any
new multilateral safeguard system will contain special provisions for
developing country exports, and the principle that developed countries
will expect less than full reciprocity for trade concessions they grant
developing countries.
Special Drawing Rights - SDRs
are international reserve assets, created by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in 1970 and allocated to individual member nations. Within
conditions set by the IMF, SDRs can be used by a nation with a deficit
in its balance of international payments to settle debts with another
nation or with the IMF. The value of SDRs is computed as a weighted
average of five currencies: deutsche mark, French franc, Japanese yen,
pound sterling, and U.S. dollar.
Specially Designated Nationals
- The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), Department of the
Treasury, implements and enforces financial and trade sanctions. FAC has
the authority to include within the definition of the sanctioned
government those individuals and entities that FAC has determined are
owned by, controlled by, or acting directly or indirectly on behalf of
the target government. Parties so identified are known as Specially
Designated Nationals or SDNs. In practice, an SDN is a target government
body, representative, intermediary, or front (whether overt or covert)
that usually is located in a third country and functions as an extension
of the sanctioned government. An SDN may also be a third-party company
that otherwise becomes owned or controlled by the target government or
that operates on its behalf. No criminal linkage is necessary. Ownership
by, control by, acting on behalf of, or profiting from trade with the
target government or country would suffice to qualify a person for
designation.
SPF - South Pacific Forum
Spot Transaction - See:
Forward Exchange Rate.
SRL - Societe a
Responsabilite Limitata
SSA - Sub-Saharan Africa
Stand-By Arrangements - A
stand-by arrangement, like an extended arrangement, assures a member
country of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that it will be able to
make purchases up to a specified amount from the IMF during a given
period, as long as the member has observed the performance criteria and
other terms specified in the arrangement. Stand-by arrangements extend
up to three years. See: International Monetary Fund.
Standard Industrial
Classification - The SIC is the classification standard underlying
all establishment-based U.S. economic statistics classified by industry.
Standard International Trade
Classification - The SITC was developed by the United Nations in
1950 and is used solely by international organisations for reporting
international trade. The SITC has been revised several times; the
current version is Revision 3.
Standards - As defined by the
Multilateral Trade Negotiations "Agreement on Technical Barriers to
Trade" (Standards Code), a standard is a technical specification
contained in a document that lays down characteristics of a product such
as levels of quality, performance, safety, or dimensions. Standards may
include, or deal exclusively with, terminology, symbols, testing and
test methods, packaging, marking, or labelling requirements as they
apply to a product. The GATT Standards Code, negotiated and accepted
during the Tokyo Round in the 1970s, is designed to eliminate the use of
standards, technical regulations, and conformity assessment
(certification) procedures as unnecessary barriers to trade. The
Standards Code is administered by the GATT Secretariat in Geneva,
Switzerland. The Commerce Department's National Institute of Standards
and Technology is responsible for several provisions of the Standards
Code which relate to the establishment of a U.S. inquiry point, a
standards information centre, and a technical office for
non-agricultural products.
Standstill - Standstill
refers to a commitment of GATT contracting parties not to impose new
trade-restrictive measures during the Uruguay Round negotiations. See:
Rollback.
State Export Program Database
- The SEPD is a trade lead system maintained by the National Association
of State Development Agencies (NASDA). The SEPD includes information on
state operated trade lead systems.
State Trading Enterprises -
STEs are entities established by governments to import, export and/or
produce certain products. Examples include: government-operated
import/export monopolies and marketing boards or private companies that
receive special or exclusive privileges from their governments to engage
in trading activities.
State/Industry-Organised,
Government Approved - See: Certified Trade Missions.
Statistical Office of the
European Community - EUROSTAT provides European Economic
Community-wide statistics on economics, finance, foreign trade,
services, transportation, industry, population, social conditions,
energy, agricultural, forestry, and other topics. Eurostat offices are
located in Luxembourg.
Std. - Standard (timber
trade)
STELA - System for Tracking
Export License Applications
STEs - State Trading
Enterprises
Stev. Liab. - Stevedores'
liability
stevedore - Person whose
functions are to load, stow and unload ships.
stg - Sterling
stk - Stock
STM - State Trade Mission
stow - Position in a ship
where goods are placed for their
Str. - Steamer
Strategic Level of Controls -
Commodity groupings used for export control purposes. See: Export
Control Classification Number.
Strd. - Standard
Structural Adjustment Facility
- See: Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility.
Subsidies - GATT does not
directly define subsidies. The U.S. regards a subsidy as a bounty or
grant paid for the manufacture, production, or export of an article.
Export subsidies are contingent on exports; domestic subsidies are
conferred on production without reference to exports. While governments
sometimes make outright payments to firms; subsidies usually take a less
direct form (R&D support, tax breaks, loans on preferential terms,
and provision of raw materials at below-market prices).
Subsidy - There are two
general types of subsidies: export and domestic. An export subsidy is a
benefit conferred on a firm by the government that is contingent or
exports. A domestic subsidy is a benefit not linked to exports,
conferred by the government upon a specific industry or enterprise or
group of industries or enterprises.
Substantial Suppliers - If a
country supplies approximately 10 percent of the trade in a given item
imported to a second country, the first country is said to have a
substantial supplier status.
Summary Investigation - A
20-day investigation conducted by the International Trade Administration
immediately following filing of an antidumping petition to ascertain if
the petition contains sufficient information with respect to sales at
"less than fair value" and the injury or threat of material
injury to a domestic industry caused by the alleged sales at "less
than fair value" to warrant the initiation of an antidumping
investigation. See: Tariff Act of 1930.
Summit Conference - A summit
conference is an international meeting at which heads of government are
the chief negotiators, major world powers are represented, and the
meeting serves substantive rather than ceremonial purposes. The term
first came into use in reference to the Geneva Big Four Conference of
1955.
Sunflowerseed Oil Assistance
Program - SOAP, one of four export subsidy programs operated by the
Department of Agriculture, helps U.S. exporters meet prevailing world
prices for sunflowerseed oil in targeted markets. USDA pays cash to U.S.
exporters as bonuses, making up the difference between the higher U.S.
cost of acquiring sunflowerseed oil and the lower world price at which
it is sold.
Super 301 - This provision
was enacted due to Congressional concern that the regular Section 301
procedures narrowly limit U.S. attention to the market access problems
of individual sectors or companies. Super 301 sets procedures to
identify and address within three years certain "priority",
systemic trade restriction policies of other nations. Super 301 was
created by the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988. Super 301
authority expired May 30, 1990.
Supply Access - Assurances
that importing countries will, in the future, have fair and equitable
access at reasonable prices to supplies of raw materials and other
essential imports. Such assurances should include explicit constraints
against the use of the export embargo as an instrument of foreign
policy.
Support for East European
Democracy - The SEED Act, signed into law in November 1989,
contained 25 distinct actions to support structural adjustment, private
sector development, trade and investment, and educational, cultural, and
scientific activities in Poland and Hungary. Funding for most of the
actions was provided by the Agency for International Development. The
SEED Act expired at the end of fiscal year 1990. Since then support has
been provided under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1991. See: Foreign
Assistance Act of 1991.
Surveillance - This involves
the monitoring of trade practices to help ensure that governments
implement their obligations under trade agreements. One of the
objectives of the negotiating group on Functioning of the GATT System
(FOGS) is to improve GATT surveillance of trade policies and practices
of Contracting Parties.
Surveillance Body - A body
created by the Uruguay Round Trade Negotiating Committee (TNC) to
monitor implementation by contracting parties of their standstill and
rollback commitments. The Surveillance Body will transmit its records
and reports to the TNC, so that the latter may conduct periodic
evaluations of the implementation of the commitments.
Suspension of Investigation -
A decision to suspend an antidumping investigation if the exporters who
account for substantially all of the imported merchandise agree to stop
exports to the U.S. or agree to revise their prices promptly to
eliminate any dumping margin. An investigation may be suspended at any
time before a final determination is made. No agreement to suspend an
investigation may be made unless effective monitoring of the agreement
is practicable and is determined to be in the public interest. See:
Tariff Act of 1930.
Suspension of Liquidation -
If affirmative, the preliminary determination of dumping or
subsidization, or final determination after a negative preliminary
determination, provides for suspension of liquidation of all entries of
merchandise subject to the determination which are entered, or withdrawn
from warehouse, for consumption, on or after the date of the publication
of the notice in the Federal Register. Customs is directed to require a
cash deposit, or the posting of a bond or other security, for each entry
affected equal to the estimated amount of the subsidy or the amount by
which the fair value exceeds the U.S. price. When an administrative
review is completed, Customs is directed to collect the final subsidy
rate or amount by which the foreign market value exceeds the U.S. price,
and to require for each entry thereafter a cash deposit equal to the
newly determined subsidy rate or margin of dumping. See: Tariff Act of
1930.
Swap Network - The swap
network is a series of bilateral arrangements between the Federal
Reserve and fourteen foreign central banks and the Bank for
International Settlements providing standby reciprocal facilities for
obtaining foreign currencies. The facilities provide for the swap
(simultaneous spot purchase and forward sale) of each other's currency
by the Federal Reserve and the respective foreign central bank. Swap
drawings typically have a three-month maturity, with an understanding
that they may be more or less automatically rolled over for another
three months.
Swaps - Swaps take dozens of
forms but often entail the exchange of one type of asset or payment for
another. Some of the more common forms are: cross-border; currency;
debt-for-charity; debt-for-commodity; debt-for-debt;
debt-for-development; debt-for-equity; debt-for-export;
debt-for-local-currency; debt-for-nature; discount; dual currency;
interest rate; inward; premium; reverse; and vanilla. Minor variation in
names is common. Currency swaps convert principal from the lender's
currency into the debtor's currency and receiving interest payments in
the debtor's currency. The swap, made to protect the principal from
future changes in foreign exchange rates, involves a forward exchange
contract to recover the currency involved. Debt swaps entail replacing
the foreign liabilities of a debtor country with ownership or rights of
value. A debt-for-equity swap replaces foreign liabilities with a stake
in the debtor country's national enterprises; a debt-for-export swap
replaces foreign liabilities with an arrangement to receive proceeds
from the overseas sale of the debtor country's products or commodities;
a debt-for-debt swap replaces an existing foreign liability with a new
commitment from the debtor country. Interest rate swaps involve
agreements on the means for exchanging future cash flows. Single
currency interest rate swaps concern exchanging future cash flow in the
same currency and offer a means for modifying the impact of future
changes in interest rates on a company's profitability. Cross currency
interest rate swaps concern exchanging future cash flows between one
currency and another, traded either on a fixed or floating rate, and
offer a means for limited the risk of converting financial interests
between currencies. Swaps also involve arrangements whereby different
sellers of similar commodities swap and deliver them to each other's
customer if such action saves transportation costs. See: Derivatives.
SWEDECORP - Swedish
International Enterprise Development Corporation
Swedish International Development
Authority - SIDA, an agency responsible to the Ministry for Foreign
Affairs, administers the greater portion of Swedish development
cooperation. Swedish development assistance is directed toward five
goals: economic growth, economic and social equality, economic and
political independence, democratic development, and environmental
quality. About 50 percent of Sweden's development assistance is directed
toward a limited number of designated "program countries" in
Africa, Asia, and Latin America and involves negotiated efforts to
integrate external assistance and long-term development strategies. The
remaining assistance is allocated to UN agencies, international
development banks, and about 90 countries. The Authority was established
in 1965; headquarters are in Stockholm, Sweden. See: Swedish
International Enterprise Development Corporation.
Swedish International Enterprise
Development Corporation - SwedeCorp, a government funded under
Sweden's aid program, supports enterprise development through joint
venture investments in developing countries and in Central and Eastern
Europe. The Corporation also encourages the transfer of industrial and
commercial knowledge from Sweden to third world countries and promotes
exports from developing countries to Sweden. The Corporation was formed
in July 1991 based on a reorganisation of international industry
assistance programs; headquarters are in Stockholm, Sweden. See: Swedish
International Development Authority.
SWIFT - Society for Worldwide
Interbank Financial Transactions
Switch Arrangements - A form
of countertrade in which unused purchase rights under
government-to-government trade (clearing agreements) on unwanted goods
received by a firm in a countertrade transaction are sold at a discount
to buyers for cash.
Syn. - Syndicate (e.g
Lloyd's)
System for Tracking Export
License Applications - STELA is a BXA computer-generated voice unit
that interfaces with the BXA database: ECASS (Export Control Automated
Support System). STELA enables a caller to check on an export license by
making a telephone call.
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