Off the wire
China Fisheries Association issued statement on South China Sea arbitration initiated by the Philippines  • Brazilian, Colombian border towns cooperate in combating mosquito-transmitted diseases: report  • China plans 5 new space science satellites  • Search continues for boy abandoned in forest by parents as punishment  • Falling oil price boost New Zealand terms of trade  • Xinhua China news advisory -- June 1  • China renews blue alert for rainstorm  • Tourists continue to spend up big in Australia  • UN chief "deeply saddened" by new deaths of hundreds of migrants in Mediterranean Sea  • Chinese investments key to LatAm growth: expert  
You are here:   Home

Government aid for New Zealand exporters in navigating FTAs

Xinhua, June 1, 2016 Adjust font size:

The New Zealand government is investing in new tools to help businesses get the most of the country's network of free trade agreements (FTAs).

About 4.6 million NZ dollars (3.12 million U.S. dollars) over four years would be spent helping exporters "in extracting full value" from FTAs, Trade Minister Todd McClay said Wednesday.

New Zealand currently had FTAs with economies that accounted for more than half its trade and that would rise to 70 percent once the 12-nation Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) came into force, McClay said in a statement.

"This new investment will support the development of new tools to help business understand and use FTAs. Our tariff finder, for example, has made it a lot easier for SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) to identify the FTA that gives them the best competitive edge in their export markets," said McClay.

"This new money will also help us get improved commitments in FTAs when these come up for review, such as in services, investment, and addressing non-tariff barriers that exporters face," he said.

"There is a lot of information for businesses, as they plan for export growth. We want them well equipped to identify and seize new opportunities under all FTAs." Endit