tariff 的 2 个定义
- an official list or table showing the duties or customs imposed by a government on imports or exports.
- the schedule or system of duties so imposed.
- any duty or rate of duty in such a list or schedule.
- (5)
- to subject to a tariff.
- to put a valuation on according to a tariff.
tariff 近义词
tax or fee
更多tariff例句
- The two sides will trade under World Trade Organization rules, which sets the tariffs and quotas between countries that don’t have free trade agreements in place with each other.
- Both parties see tariffs as a way to put pressure on China, and that pressure is increasing as the US scrutinizes China’s repression of its Uighur minority.
- China isn’t the only country to offer EV subsidies, but it also spurred the domestic manufacturers by ensuring imported vehicles were for a long time not eligible for subsidies, and subject to import tariffs.
- Although China had been pledging some of those commitments for years, Mahoney argued that the deal wouldn’t have happened without applying tariffs.
- Consequently, LPL Financial’s Buchbinder calculates that the removal of trade tariffs with China would add billions to the earnings of S&P 500 companies.
- Some of them, like an across-the-board tariff on Chinese goods, might actually work.
- The U.K. has adopted a healthy feed-in tariff that guarantees solar system owners an attractive price for the energy they produce.
- Everybody knows how the Tariff and Labour questions were settled.
- They impose non-tariff barriers against exports and buy foreign companies while denying foreign ownership in their own economies.
- The tariff of 1828, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which led to the civil war in “Bloody Kansas” and ultimately to the Civil War itself.
- But they have tied their credit system in the bonds of narrow banking laws and their trade in those of a cramping tariff.
- Fortunately the results would not be immediately apparent, otherwise he would be compelled to raise his tariff for cheap suits.
- Let us look at their two main measures—the new tariff and the new corn-law.
- There is a perfect identity of principle, both working to the same good end, between the existing corn-law and the new tariff.
- One may now search hours for one, and, if found, have to pay four or five times the old tariff.