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Trade agreements:. EU and:EFTA (European Free Trade Area)Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, most of former YugoslaviaThe Faroe IslandsSome African, Caribbean
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1. Transport & Incoterms Reading:
INCOTERMS 1990
Hill pp 520/525
Elements of import/export - Alan Branch
2. Trade agreements: EU and:
EFTA (European Free Trade Area)
Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, most of former Yugoslavia
The Faroe Islands
Some African, Caribbean & Pacific states (ACP)
Certain Overseas Countries & Territories (OCT)s and 150 developing countries Capital cities please:
Algeria - Algiers- Algerian Dinar
Cyprus - Nicosia - Cyprus pound
Egypt - Cairo- Egyptian pound
Israel - Jerusalem/Tel Aviv - New Shekel
Jordan - Amman - Jordanian Dinar
Lebanon - Beirut - Lebenese pound
Malta - Valetta - Maltese Lira
Morocco - Rabat - Moroccan Dirham
Spain - Madrid - Peseta
Syria - Damascus - Syrain pound
Tunisia - Tunis - Tunisian DinarCapital cities please:
Algeria - Algiers- Algerian Dinar
Cyprus - Nicosia - Cyprus pound
Egypt - Cairo- Egyptian pound
Israel - Jerusalem/Tel Aviv - New Shekel
Jordan - Amman - Jordanian Dinar
Lebanon - Beirut - Lebenese pound
Malta - Valetta - Maltese Lira
Morocco - Rabat - Moroccan Dirham
Spain - Madrid - Peseta
Syria - Damascus - Syrain pound
Tunisia - Tunis - Tunisian Dinar
3. Selection of Transport Mode Road
Rail
Sea
Air
Pipeline
4. How to select transport
distribution analysis
speed
frequency
reliability
quality
cost
5. Selection of Mode nature of commodity
degree of packing & cost
ease of handling in a transport mode
statutory obligations
transport in country
image
distribution factors
dangerous cargo
suitability
transit time
quantity
insurance
terms of export sale
documentation
6. strengths & weaknesses strengths of air:
speed of travel, good safety record, highly trained staff, good public image
strengths of sea:
capability of moving large loads, cheapest option. Shipowners can trade anywhere, subject to water depth Limits of road:
load size restricted by legislation, distance regulated by drivers hours, congestion, road shared with other users
Limits of rail:
inflexibility of operation, need for transhipment, political interference
7. The unknown revolution: Containers:
revolutionised shipping itineraries
constraints on ship size all but vanished
regular & frequent service required by shippers
service patterns changed to selective port calls, amalgamation of services, mergers between lines & consortium
8. Comparison: 10,000dwt takes up to 14 days to unload
Traditional shipment - spends 2/3 time in port
Break bulk can cause damage
Easy for theft & pilferage Containers vessel of 40,000 dwt takes 24 hours to unload
Containers - reduce number of ports of call - ideal is 4
Rapid turnaround & intensive use reduces numbers of vessels needed on a route
reduction of sea haul - eg trunk across USA by rail
9. “Reefers”= “refrigerated goods” 50% trade is fruit and vegetables - very seasonal
mainly about long term contracts
trade depends on demand - (chinese gooseberry)
other products: frozen fruit juice, flowers & bulbs, diary products, meat, X-Ray film, confectionary
10. Commercial imports Goods may be imported legally only through places approved by customs
Ships & aircraft must lodge a report, including cargo list with customs on arrival, usually before unloading
All goods must be properly “entered” and duties/levies/charges paid before released from customs control
Customs officers have the right to examine all goods to confirm they correspond with the “entry”
11. The trade transaction Three key documents:
1) The letter of credit
issued by a bank at the request of an importer, it states the bank will pay a specified amount of money to the beneficiary (exporter) on production of specified documents
2) Draft or Bill of Exchange used to settle trade transactions “sight” or “time”
3) The Bill of Lading Firms engaging I international trade have to trust someone they have never met, from a different culture, lives in a different country, abides by a different legal system, and could be very difficult to track down if there are problems!
UK shipment to Indonesia. If UK ships before payment, concern. Importer - if pays prior to shipment - take delivery & not pay. Or defective goods shipped?
Each party has different set of preferences re payment! ie one before & one after. Problem solved by using third party they can both trust - usually bank.
1/ Importer obtains banks promise to pay on importers behalf. (letter of credit)
2/ Bank promises exporter to pay on behalf of importer (exporter, sees L/C & ships)
3/ Exporter ships “to the bank” trusting banks promise to pay (Title given to bank in form of Bill of Lading)
4/ Bank pays exporter (L/C presented)
5/ Bank gives merchandise to importer (B/Lading signed to importer)
6/ Importer pays bank (reinburses bank)
Firms engaging I international trade have to trust someone they have never met, from a different culture, lives in a different country, abides by a different legal system, and could be very difficult to track down if there are problems!
UK shipment to Indonesia. If UK ships before payment, concern. Importer - if pays prior to shipment - take delivery & not pay. Or defective goods shipped?
Each party has different set of preferences re payment! ie one before & one after. Problem solved by using third party they can both trust - usually bank.
1/ Importer obtains banks promise to pay on importers behalf. (letter of credit)
2/ Bank promises exporter to pay on behalf of importer (exporter, sees L/C & ships)
3/ Exporter ships “to the bank” trusting banks promise to pay (Title given to bank in form of Bill of Lading)
4/ Bank pays exporter (L/C presented)
5/ Bank gives merchandise to importer (B/Lading signed to importer)
6/ Importer pays bank (reinburses bank)
12. These are the main documents required: Commercial invoice
Import licence
Certificate of origin
Community Transit Document
Single Administration Document
Evidence of freight charges
Out of Charge note (form C130) Commercial invoice:Original invoice & copy for retention by customs must be submitted. If in a foreign language, a translation may be required. If invoice does not give details, a separate packing list will be required
Import licence: required for goods not covered by an open general licence
Certificate of Origin: if required
Community Transport Document: For goods imported from another part of the EU
Single Administration Document: Customs Entry
Evidence of freight charges - for goods bought on FOB terms
Out of charge: details of goods imported, shipping marks etc.when entry has been processed and examination of goods completed, it will be returned to the importer as an authority that goods may be released from customs.
Commercial invoice:Original invoice & copy for retention by customs must be submitted. If in a foreign language, a translation may be required. If invoice does not give details, a separate packing list will be required
Import licence: required for goods not covered by an open general licence
Certificate of Origin: if required
Community Transport Document: For goods imported from another part of the EU
Single Administration Document: Customs Entry
Evidence of freight charges - for goods bought on FOB terms
Out of charge: details of goods imported, shipping marks etc.when entry has been processed and examination of goods completed, it will be returned to the importer as an authority that goods may be released from customs.
13. Import licences E.U.
Textiles & clothing (negotiated bi-lateral agreement, being phased out, WTO takes over)
Iron & Steel
(monitors volume & price for outside EU)
Other Products(eg toys, footwear from China) UK
Firearms & ammunition
Nuclear weapons
Sanctions (eg Iraq prohibits any imports without a DTI licence)
14. Single Administration Document Introduced in 1988 to replace over 100 different forms used before within the EU!
Developed as a 8 copy set:
1/3 for export
4/5 for community transit
6/8 for import
90% of imports now use direct trader input (dti) where importer sends info to HM customs computer
15. Checklist: Plan as much as possible for each import
Use correct INCOTERM for maximum profit & minimum risk
Select forwarding agents carefully
Know about commercial credits
Regularly review your transport arrangements
Research - to keep up to date!
16. You will need to write notes on: Bill of Lading
it is a receipt
it is a contract
it is a document of title
What are details contained in a B/L? Air way bills
receipt
not document of title - no legal application
non-negotiable
evidence of a contract of carriage
original not needed for collection: fax Bill of lading:Issued to the exporter by the common carrier transporting the merchandise,states the conditions in which the goods were delivered to (and received by) the ship. Forms evidence for the actual contract, document of title it can be used to obtain payment, or written promise of payment before the merchandise is released to the importer. Can also function as collateral against funds which may be advanced by the exporter by its local bank during shipment and before final payment.
1. name of shipper
2. name of carrying vessel
3. full description of cargo: shipping marks, individual package numbers, contents, cubic capacity, gross weight
4. Marks & Numbers identifying the goods
5. Port of Shipment
6. Port of discharge
7. Full details of freight, inc when & where it is to be paid
8 name of consignee/shippers order
9 terms of contract of carriage
10 Date goods rec. for shipment/loaded onto vessel
11. name & address of notified party
12 Number of B/lading
13 Signature of ships master/agent, dateBill of lading:Issued to the exporter by the common carrier transporting the merchandise,states the conditions in which the goods were delivered to (and received by) the ship. Forms evidence for the actual contract, document of title it can be used to obtain payment, or written promise of payment before the merchandise is released to the importer. Can also function as collateral against funds which may be advanced by the exporter by its local bank during shipment and before final payment.
1. name of shipper
2. name of carrying vessel
3. full description of cargo: shipping marks, individual package numbers, contents, cubic capacity, gross weight
4. Marks & Numbers identifying the goods
5. Port of Shipment
6. Port of discharge
7. Full details of freight, inc when & where it is to be paid
8 name of consignee/shippers order
9 terms of contract of carriage
10 Date goods rec. for shipment/loaded onto vessel
11. name & address of notified party
12 Number of B/lading
13 Signature of ships master/agent, date