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Lebanon Imposes Tariffs on Certain Imports, Report Says

Lebanon recently imposed a 2 percent tariff on all imports until 2022 except for “pharmaceuticals, electric cars, and raw materials for industrial and agricultural products,” according to a May 30 report from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council. Lebanon also…

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announced a 10 percent tariff rate will apply to 20 products that include certain foods, clothing and “industrial components” that are “deemed as being ‘dumped’ onto the Lebanese market,” the report said. Other products included under the 10 percent tariff are “flour, dairy products, detergents, furniture, leather shoes, bulgur, electrical machinery, aluminium profiles, clothes, wafers and biscuits, vehicle bodywork, metal pipes, confectionary and gums, marble and granite tiles,” HKTDC said. The tax, placed on products the country believes are “being imported in large quantities at prices lower than those produced locally” will be subject to the tariff for five years, the report said. The move was made after a May 22 Lebanese Cabinet meeting, HKTDC said. The report said the tariff increase was intended to reduce trade imbalances and spur local production. Lebanon’s Industry Minister Wael Abu Faour said “this will protect the Lebanese manufacturing sector, contribute to lowering trade deficit and revive a large number of industries," according to the report.