‘Offending countries know themselves’ – Jagdeo says more CARICOM talks not needed to remove trade barriers
Trade barriers have been an issue for decades; they include non-tariff barriers such as quotas, embargoes, sanctions and levies and affects some exports to CARICOM markets.
Jagdeo explained that tariffs are no longer huge impediments; phytosanitary measures, he said, impede trade now.
Essentially, these measures are quarantine and biosecurity measures implemented by countries to help safeguard against the spread of pests or diseases that may be in agricultural products.
But he believes phytosanitary measures are “capriciously” applied. So technical work is needed to promote trade while simultaneously guaranteeing health and safety.
On Sunday, Guyana’s President and incumbent CARICOM Chairman Dr. Irfaan Ali urged Caribbean citizens to pressure their leaders into removing trade barriers that have long constrained greater regional food security efforts.
Doing so, he reasoned, will help the region to produce more food, increase intra-regional trade and cut out expensive food imports from outside the Caribbean.
Neither Guyanese official named countries who maintain these barriers but honey import and transshipment restrictions in Trinidad and Tobago have been a consistent complaint of the Guyanese private sector.
Trinidad and Tobago’s honey, bees and bee products are guided by the island’s age-old Food and Drug Act of 1960 and Beekeeping and Bee products Act of 1935. And as per the country’s Beekeeping and Bee Products Act, only honey originating from the Windward and Leeward Islands can be transshipped there.