New Zealand dairy products can enter China duty-free, last tariffs removed under FTA
- Imports of milk powder were subjected to the longest phase-out under the New Zealand-China free trade agreement signed in 2008
- New Zealand’s Trade Minister Todd McClay says the removal is expected to deliver tariff savings of US$221 million per year
“This is good news for our dairy sector. The removal of these remaining tariffs is expected to deliver additional annual tariff savings of approximately NZ$350 million [US$221 million],” Trade Minister Todd McClay said in a statement.
“The [free trade agreement] continues to deliver benefit to the New Zealand economy and to underpin the New Zealand-China trade relationship.”
Safeguard duties are emergency tariffs that countries use to shield domestic industries against intense competition from a sudden surge in imports of a particular product.
The so-called special agricultural safeguards mechanism in the free trade deal was designed as a temporary measure. The tariff preferences are applied up to a designated volume and China’s standard tariff applied to imports above the safeguard trigger.