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How to Get Duty-Free Treatment for Haitian Textiles and Apparel

How to Get Duty-Free Treatment for Haitian Textiles and Apparel. October 23, 2012. Imports of Haitian Apparel are Increasing!. Textile & Apparel Trade Preference Programs - Haiti.

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How to Get Duty-Free Treatment for Haitian Textiles and Apparel

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  1. How to Get Duty-Free Treatment for Haitian Textiles and Apparel October 23, 2012

  2. Imports of Haitian Apparel are Increasing!

  3. Textile & Apparel Trade Preference Programs - Haiti The United States has enacted several laws to encourage economic development in Haiti by offering trade preferences for certain textile and apparel articles produced in Haiti. These trade preferences are incorporated in four acts: • CBTPA: Enacted in 2000. Primary imports under this program are men’s/boys’ T-shirts and certain knit apparel, requiring U.S. yarns and U.S. or regional fabric. • HOPE: Enacted in 2007. Established U.S.’s most liberal rules of origin, allowing third-country fabrics for use in Haitian apparel. • HOPE II: Enacted in 2008. Expanded preferences to include knit and woven apparel. • HELP: Enacted in 2010. Expansion of TPLs, the basis for long-term substantial capital investment by foreign textile and apparel producers.

  4. General Requirements for Trade Preferences All of the trade preferences for imports of textile and apparel from Haiti have certain requirements in common: • Apparel must be either wholly assembled, knit, or knit-to-shape in Haiti, and/or, in some cases, certain trade agreement partners or other preference program beneficiary countries. • If yarns or fabrics are required to be sourced from a specific country(ies), those inputs must be wholly formed from that country. • Under all trade preference programs, qualifying goods may be exported from either Haiti or the Dominican Republic.

  5. CBTPA Preference Programs under Quota CBTPA provides duty-free treatment for certain apparel goods, but imports are limited by annual quotas: • Knit apparel articles (not socks or non-underwear T-shirts), of U.S. yarn, CBTPA knit fabric or knit-to-shape, cut and sewn in CBTPA. • Quota limit: 970 million SMEs (latest fill rate: 13%) • Non-underwear T-shirts, of U.S. yarn, CBTPA fabric, cut and sewn in CBTPA. • Quota limit: 12 million dozen (latest fill rate: 55%)

  6. Summary of HOPE, HOPE II and HELP Preferences • Value-Added TRQ: Exported value sourced from Haiti and/or qualifying countries must be at least 50-60%. • Woven Apparel TRQ: May use fabric from any source, up to 70 million (and potentially 200 million under certain conditions). • Knit Apparel TRQ: May use fabric from any source, up to 70 million (and potentially 200 million under certain conditions). • Earned Import Allowance Program: For every 2 SMEs of qualifying fabric purchased for manufacture of apparel in Haiti, 1 SME of Haitian apparel, using fabric from any source, may enter US duty-free.

  7. Earned Import Allowance Program (EIAP): “2 for 1” • For every 2 SMEs of qualifying knit or woven fabric shipped to Haiti for production of apparel, qualifying apparel producers may export 1 SME of apparel wholly formed or knit-to-shape in Haiti duty free, regardless of the source of the fabric. • Qualifying knit fabric: Wholly formed or knit-to-shape in the U.S., FTA partners, or beneficiary countries, from U.S. yarns. • Qualifying woven fabric: Wholly formed in the United States from yarns wholly formed in the United States.

  8. Increasing Production Capacity • Grand opening of new industrial park in Northern Haiti: “Caracol.” • Park’s infrastructure is supported by public investment of $224 million. Donors include USAID and IDB. • Korean producer, Sae-A, estimates 20,000 new jobs over next ten years. Currently training more than 1,000 new workers. • Phase 2 just received $50 million grant from IDB.

  9. For More Information For more information: OTEXA.ITA.DOC.GOV CAFTA (General questions): Richard.Stetson@trade.gov; (202) 482-2582 Short Supply/Haiti : Maria.Dybczak@trade.gov; (202) 482-3651

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