Plain meaning
A preferential Canadian tariff treatment that can apply to eligible goods from designated developing countries.
Key points
- GPT treatment depends on the country of origin and whether the goods meet applicable origin and proof requirements.
- It is different from free-trade-agreement preferences such as CUSMA or CETA.
- Canada can change eligibility, rates, or country designations through legislation or regulation.
- Importers need records supporting origin and tariff treatment claimed.
Why it comes up
GPT changes can affect import costs, supply chains, development-policy debates, and tariff planning.