Business correspondent

The Caribbean Nanda Nanda Nanda is breathtaking a relief that a 90-day break in the application of higher tariffs in a number of countries after Donald Trump.
The nest in the South American Materiff Venezuela and Suriname was called 38% of the proportion of 38% in many exports.
Following Trump’s change in politics, it is now facing only 10% of the tariffs of all countries separate from Canada, China and Mexico.
So why did Guyana face a higher apple in the first place?
Guyanese political commentator Francis Bailey, the country was caught in a geopolitical battle between the United States and China, he said. Or more specifically – Washington Cisime, Beijing’s “very strong support” in Guyan.
In recent years, there were billions of dollars in the Diventy or hospitals, hotels and civil servants. And an important new bridge connecting the capital Georgetown to the western region of Demerara-Mahaica is currently being built by a Beijing-based company.
In turn, the United States continues to be pleased to receive the main exports of Guyana, which is the ore from the Aluminum, which is removed ore. All of this, instead of releasing 38% of tariffs, instead of the fact that Guyana fishing and sugar industry.
The United States also supports Guyalana with Guydanauea in a territorial dispute in the West, which is two-thirds in the West. During his visit to Georgia in March, the Secretary of State Marco Rubio had to use force against Guyana, warned the “Results”.
However, the planned high tariff showed that Washington is in IRE, Mr. Bailey says. “I think that the reason we have given such high tariffs is to put pressure on Guyana.
If you want our protection of the United States, ‘you must follow the outside of your country,’ he says.

The Guyanese government did not respond to appeals for comment. Once the country and former English colony in one of the poorest peoples in the Western Hemisphere, it is pleased to grow wealth since the first time in the territorial waters in 2015.
Last year, US dollar exported $ 3.13 billion (£ 2.4 billion) to the United States To the numbers of the United Nations.
All countries along the Caribbean are now face 10% tariff for US exports. However, it is the price impact on the importance of Trump’s global tariffs from the United States.
The reason for this, according to the love and reliability of the Caribbean, the US products are immediately clear when you look at a high street or supermarket in the region. In fact, consumer goods of some islands are said to be imported 70% of the North American neighbor.
With American goods, which relying on foreign raw materials or components, this will inevitably be transferred to consumers in the Caribbean.
In addition, the Caribbean peoples from other countries in the world belong to the United States.
Thus, in the White House should see a similar amount of price increases in the caribbean, which is reconstructed in Chinese goods, which hit Chinese goods with 125% of the United States. About 10% for goods of other countries coming to the United States.
With high local import duties that cause excess prices in an area with more growing shipping costs and low salaries in the Caribbean, the influence of Trump’s tariffs can be deeply and much.

In Antigua and Barbuda, the interior designer Carissa Warner told the BBC that 70% of the materials are imported from the United States and 20% of China.
“Some of my projects are holding up while we are waiting for us to see what happened,” he said. “I am very worried like a job as well as a local consumer.
“I am very worried about the price of the food I look for online for the dishes to train.
Ms. Warner can facilitate the density of one side of the caribbean governments that one side of the Caribbean governments can facilitate the density of its people, by reducing its own import tasks in part of a percentage of the price of a substance.
Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne called the global tariffs “pretty concerned” and citizens call for “smarter and local”.

Trump tariffs, caribbean, often, often after natural disasters, after the next impact of the Covid Pandemic, comes compared to the combination of harsh economic conditions.
Antigua and Barbuda’s ambassador to the United States, Sir Ronald Sanders, said that the United States has enjoyed a trade surplus with the most caribbean countries.
“We have been supporting the American prosperity by importing more than the United States more than we exercise than the United States.”
“The problem we created for ourselves is that we do not want to diversify the US market and diversify other markets.”
As for the 10% tariff for the exports of the Caribbean to the United States, Sir Ronald says: “Any loss is not a good thing for our small economies, but we do not intend to break our trade without going to the US market.”
The caribear islands, high-market sizes, high-labor expenditures and principle markets, kept their production sectors relatively modest. In their exports, there are many niche products such as specialist Greeks and local dishes such as a fruit, akkee from Jamaica.
“Such products are all directed to a certain market and do not experience any competition because the United States does not produce them, and the countries facing their own tariffs, Sir Ronald continues.
Concerns in the Caribbean are potential additional taxes to Chinese ships entering the ports of the United States 1.5 million dollars for docking. This idea was cut by the White House in February.
In the Caribbean, it leads to the price of daily goods with the price of large amounts of items sold in the region produced in China and China.
Sir Ronald solves the problem of solving the problem of eliminating in the United States only solves the problem arising from the diversification, but this is not an achievement. “
Adds, “It is not easy to build new markets as people think. The trade controls are not governments; This is a private sector. And the things we receive will still come to the United States.”
Many Caribbean leaders feel the best strategy until the fall of the enemy from tariffs.

Mia Mottley, the chairman of the intergovernmental group, said that the region faced the most difficult periods in the region because the region has won independence several decades ago.
“We are working and continue to work to provide more self-sufficiency, but this trade war will take the price.”
Ms. Mottley added that it was very important to increase efforts to “invest in the production and light production”.
“We must build our relations with Africa, Central and Latin America and update their connections to the United Kingdom and the United Kingdom and Europe and Canada. We should not trust only in one or two markets.”
MS Mottley, the Prime Minister of Barbados, calls on the Caribbean to “work” to lower prices.
He added: “It’s just to the United States:” We are not your enemy. We are your friends’. “