Betekenis van:
trade barrier
trade barrier
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- any regulation or policy that restricts international trade
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
Voorbeeldzinnen
- High tariffs have become a barrier to international trade.
- The barrier of territoriality of the rights conferred on proprietors of trade marks by the laws of the Member States cannot be removed by approximation of laws.
- More restrictive national measures governing the composition of EC-designated fertilisers that derogate from the provisions of a Community Directive normally constitute a barrier to trade.
- Member States should ensure that control procedures at external borders do not constitute a major barrier to trade and social and cultural interchange.
- It does not constitute a barrier to or discrimination in trade between Member States and does not distort competition between them.
- It is in the interest of the enlarged Community to ensure that the borders with its neighbours are not a barrier to trade, social and cultural interchange or regional cooperation.
- The way in which the contribution is collected therefore does not reinforce the effects of the aid on competition and trade between Member States, since it is not charged on imported products. Consequently, it does not create a barrier to entry into the French electricity and gas markets.
- National measures which restrict the use of products to a greater extent than a Community Directive would normally constitute a barrier to trade, insofar as products that are legally placed on the market and used in the rest of the Community are not expected, as a result of the prohibition on use, to be placed on the market in the Member State concerned.
- According to Italy, the measure at hand does not affect trade between Member States, as the certification system (sistema di accreditamento), which is based on objective criteria laid down in regional implementing rules, does not establish any barrier or limit to the establishment right of agencies coming from other regions or MS.
- However, experience has shown that, given the local character of those exemptions and the limited number of products concerned, maintaining the exemptions would not result in a non-tariff barrier to trade and, as a consequence, there is no longer a need to put an end to those exemptions.
- National measures which restrict the use of products to a greater extent than a Union Directive would normally constitute a barrier to trade, in so far as products that are legally placed on the market and used in the rest of the Union are not expected, as a result of the prohibition on use, to be placed on the market in the Member State concerned.
- These measures included an updated delimitation of the demarcated area, eradication of all declining trees in that area, continued monitoring and the creation of a barrier free from all host trees of the pinewood nematode vector, that is a ‘clear cut belt’, which should stop the spread of PWN to other Member States, safeguarding them from devastating losses for pine forests and possible trade restrictions from third countries.
- National measures which restrict the use of products to a greater extent than a Community Directive would normally constitute a barrier to trade, in so far as products that are legally placed on the market and used in the rest of the Community are not expected, as a result of the prohibition on use, to be placed on the market in the Member State concerned.
- Given the different approaches to data protection in third countries, the adequacy assessment should be carried out, and any decision based on Article 25(6) of Directive 95/46/EC should be made and enforced in a way that does not arbitrarily or unjustifiably discriminate against or between third countries where like conditions prevail, nor constitute a disguised barrier to trade, regard being had to the European Union’s present international commitments.
- Given the different approaches to data protection in third countries, the adequacy assessment should be carried out, and any decision based on Article 25(6) of Directive 95/46/EC should be made and enforced in a way that does not arbitrarily or unjustifiably discriminate against or between third countries where like conditions prevail, nor constitute a disguised barrier to trade, regard being had to the Community’s present international commitments.