T.
& C.C. - Technical and
Clauses Committee
t. & s. - Touch and stay
T.B. - Trial Balance
T.B.A. - To be advised, To be
agreed
T.C.I. - Time charterer's
interest
T.D.W. - Tonnage deadweight
T.E. - Trade expenses
T.E.E. - Trans-Europe Express
T.F. - Tropical freshwater
T.I.B. - Trimmed in bunkers
T.I.V. - Total insured value
T.L. - Total loss
T.L.O. - Total loss only
T.L.V.O. - Total loss of
vessel only
T.O.R. - Time on Risk
T.O.T. - Terms of trade
T.O.V.A.L.O.P. - Tanker
Owners' Voluntary Agreement Concerning Liability for Oil Pollution
T.P.I. - Tons per inch
T.P.Liab. - Third party
liability
T.P.N.D. - Theft, pilferage
and non-delivery
T.Q. - Tale quale (as found)
T.S.I. - Total sum insured
T.T. - Telegraphic transfer
T.T.F. - Timber Trade
Federation
T.W.M.C. - Transport, wages,
maintenance and care
T/C - Till countermanded
t/h - Tonnes per hour
T/L - Total loss
T/O - Transfer order
T/S - Transhipment
TA - Trade Assistant
TAA - Trade Adjustment
Assistance
Table of Denial Orders - The
TDO is a list of individuals and firms that have been disbarred from
shipping or receiving U.S. goods or technology. Firms and individuals on
the list may be disbarred with respect to either controlled commodities
or general destination (across-the-board) exports. The list is published
in the Export Administration Regulations.
TAC - Technical Advisory
Committee
TAP - Trade Assistance and
Planning Office
Tare Weight - The weight of a
container and/or packing materials without the weight of the goods it
contains.
Targeted Export Assistance
Program - See: Market Promotion Program.
TARIC - Integrated Tariff of
the European Community
Tariff - A tax assessed by a
government in accordance with its tariff schedule on goods as they enter
(or leave) a country. May be imposed to protect domestic industries from
imported goods and/or to generate revenue. Types include ad valorem,
specific, variable, or some combination.
Tariff Act of 1930 - Title
VII of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, provides for the imposition
of antidumping duties on imported merchandise found to have been sold in
the United States at "less than fair value," if these sales
have caused or are likely to cause material injury to, or materially
retard the establishment of, an industry in the United States. The
following terms and phrases are commonly used in connection with proceedings
under The Tariff Act of 1930, as amended. See: Administrative Review
Antidumping Duty Antidumping Investigation Notice Antidumping Duty Order
Antidumping Petition Assessment "Class or Kind" of Merchandise
Constructed Value Cost of Production Critical Circumstances Deposit of
Estimated Duties Disclosure Meeting Dismissal of Petition Dumping Margin
Exporter's Sales Price Fair Value Final Determination Foreign Market
Value Hearing Period of Investigation Preliminary Determination
Protective Order Purchase Price Revocation of Antidumping Duty Order
& Termination of Suspended Investigation Section 337 Summary
Investigation Suspension of Investigation Suspension of Liquidation.
Tariff Anomaly - A tariff
anomaly exists when the tariff on raw materials or semi-manufactured
goods is higher than the tariff on the finished product.
Tariff Bindings - The
agreement by contracting parties to maintain the duty rates on specified
goods at negotiated levels or below. Bindings are provided for in GATT
Article II.
Tariff Escalation - A
situation in which tariffs on manufactured goods are relatively high,
tariffs on semi-processed goods are moderate, and tariffs on raw
materials are nonexistent or very low.
Tariff Escalation - This term
refers to the common situation whereby raw materials and less processed
goods are generally duties at lower rates than more processed versions
of the same or derivative goods. For instance, the import duty in most
countries is generally higher for petrochemicals than for the petroleum
and other raw materials necessary for their production. It is argued by
primary commodity exporting nations that this situation confers a higher
degree of protection for the processing industries of importing
countries than nominal tariff rates would suggest.
Tariff Quota - A tariff that
remains at the same level until a certain quantitative limit (quota) is
reached. The duty on imports ports in excess of that level will be
higher.
Tariff Quotas - Application
of a higher tariff rate to imported goods after a specified quantity of
the item has entered the country at a lower prevailing rate.
Tariff Schedule - A
comprehensive list of the goods which a country may import and the
import duties applicable to each product.
Tariff Schedules of the United
States - See: Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated.
Tariff Schedules of the United
States Annotated - Effective 1979 to January 1989, the U.S. import
statistics were initially collected and compiled in terms of the
commodity classifications in the Tariff Schedules of the United States
Annotated (TSUSA), an official publication of the U.S. International
Trade Commission embracing the legal text of the Tariff Schedules of the
United States (TSUS) together with statistical annotations. This
publication was superseded by the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States Annotated for Statistical Reporting Purposes (HTSUSA) in
January 1989. Effective 1979 to January 1989, the U.S. export statistics
were initially collected and compiled in terms of the commodity
classifications in Schedule B, Statistical Classification of Domestic
and Foreign Commodities Exported from the United States. Schedule B is a
U.S. Bureau of the Census publication and, during this period, was based
on the framework of the TSUS. In January 1989, this publication was
replaced by Schedule B based on the Harmonized System. See: Schedule B.
Tariff Surcharges - An import
tax that is usually assessed at a flat rate over and above whatever
duties are assessed. -
Tax Information Exchange
Agreement - A TIEA imposes on the agreeing countries a mutual and
reciprocal obligation to exchange information relating to the
enforcement of their respective tax laws. A TIEA provides a means by
which a signatory government can pursue certain tax evaders,
particularly in cases involving large tax claims or drug enforcement.
Countries that sign a TIEA agree to: (a) exchange tax information at the
government level in a form admissible to U.S. or host country courts;
(b) collect information without regard to the taxpayer's nationality;
(c) establish a means for compelling the production of tax information;
and (d) ensure that local laws do not prohibit the sharing of tax
information. A TIEA can support tourism in a signatory country because
the Agreement facilitates Internal Revenue Service approval of the
destination as a necessary business expense (deductible for Federal
income tax purposes) for U.S. citizens and companies which seek to
justify attendance at business conventions and seminars in a signatory
country.
TCI - Third Country
Initiative
TCMD - Third Country Meat
Directive
Tcpa. - Target closest point
of approach
TD - Table of Denial Orders
TDA - Trade and Development
Agency
TEA - Targeted Export
Assistance Program
Technical Advisory Committees
- The TACs are voluntary groups of industry and government
representatives who provide guidance and expertise to Commerce on export
control matters, including evaluation of technical issues; worldwide
availability, use and production of technology; and licensing procedures
related to specific industries. TACs have been set up for: (a) materials
(Materials Technical Advisory Committee, MATAC), (b) biotechnology
(Biotechnology Technical Advisory Committee, BIOTAC), (c) computer
systems (CSTAC), (d) electronics (ETAC) (formerly
"semiconductors"), (e) sensors (STAC) (formerly
"electronic instrumentation"), (f) materials processing
equipment (MPETAC) (formerly "automated manufacturing
equipment"), (g) regulations and procedures (RPTAC), (h)
telecommunications equipment (TETAC), and (i) transportation and related
equipment (TRANSTAC).
Technical Barrier to Trade -
A specification which sets forth characteristics a product must meet
(such as levels of quality, performance, safety or dimensions) in order
to be imported. According to the Standards Code, a specification which
sets forth characteristics or standards a product must meet (such as
levels of quality, performance, safety, or dimensions) in order to be
imported.
Technology - BXA regulations
define technical data as "information of any kind that can be used,
or adapted for use, in the design, production, manufacture, utilization,
or reconstruction of articles or materials. Technology can be either
"tangible" or "intangible." Models, prototypes,
blueprints or operating manuals (even if stored on recording media) are
examples of tangible technology. Intangible technology consists of
technical services, such as training, oral advice, information guidance
and consulting.
Technology Transfer - This
term is used to characterize "the transfer of knowledge generated
and developed in one place to another, where is it is used to achieve
some practical end." Technology may be transferred in many ways: by
giving it away (technical journals, conferences, emigration of technical
experts, technical assistance programs); by industrial espionage; or by
sale (patents, blueprints, industrial processes, and the activities of
multinational corporations).
Temporary Importation under Bond
- When an importer makes entry of articles brought into the United
States temporarily and claimed to be exempt from duty under Chaper 98,
Subchapter XIII, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States, a bond
is posted with Customs which guarantees that these items will be
exported within a specified time frame (usually within one year from the
date of importation). Failure to export these items makes the importer
liable for the payment of liquidated damages for breach of the bond
conditions. (See 19 CFR 10.31.). The Temporary Importation under Bond (TIB)
is usually twice the amount of duties and other payments the importer
would otherwise be required to pay. Merchandise imported under TIB is
usually for sales demonstration, testing, or repair.
Terms of Reference - TOR is
World Bank parlance referring to the preparation of a description of the
assignment for consultants to be selected by borrowers following World
Bank procedures.
Terms of Trade - Terms of
trade refers to the economic factors affecting a country's foreign trade
in goods and services, such as dependency on foreign sourcing and
relative competitiveness in production.
TEU - Twenty-foot equivalent
unit
Textile Surveillance Body -
The TSB is an international body which meets in Geneva at the GATT to
monitor the Multi-Fiber Arrangement. The TSB receives reports of all
textile restrictions and can make recommendations to participants. It
can mediate disputes between parties to the MFA but has no binding
powers. Membership is balanced between importing and exporting members.
TF - Trade Fair
(Overseas-Recruited)
TFC - Trade Fair
Certification
TFW - Trade Fair
(Washington-Recruited)
Third Country Initiative -
The TCI was created to help countries establish an export control system
on strategic commodities. Such countries, while not members of CoCom,
would establish export control systems that provide levels of protection
as close as possible to those provided by CoCom. Such systems include:
(a) import certifications and delivery verifications, (b) controls over
reexports of CoCom-origin, controlled goods and indigenous exports of
CoCom-controlled goods, (c) cooperation in pre-licensing and
post-shipment checks, and (d) cooperation on enforcement matters. The
United States supports the third country initiative through section 5(k)
of the Export Administration Act, which allows it to provide selected
non-CoCom countries with the same licensing benefits provided to CoCom
members.
Third Country Meat Directive
- The TCMD is a regulation by which the European Community controls meat
imports based on sanitary requirements. The TCMD requires individual
inspection and certification by EC veterinarians of U.S. meat plants
wishing to export to the EC.
Threshold Value - The dollar
value of contracts above which government entities are covered by the
government procurement code.
Through Bill of Lading - A
single bill of lading covering receipt of the cargo at the point of
origin for delivery to the ultimate consignee, using two or more modes
of transportation.
TIAS - Treaties and Other
International Acts Series
TIB - Temporary Importation
under Bond
TIC - Trade Information
Centre
TIEA - Tax Information
Exchange Agreement
Tied Aid Credit - Tied aid
credit refers to the practice of providing grants and/or concessional
loans, either alone or combined with export credits, linked to
procurement from the donor country.
Tied Loan - A loan made by a
government agency that requires a foreign borrower to spend the proceeds
in the lender's country.
TIFTs - Trade and Investment
Facilitation Talks
TIMS - Textiles Information
Management System
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