Following this step-by-step checklist will mean that you can write your contract with confidence: Know your parties. Agree on the terms. Set clear boundaries. Spell out the consequences. Specify how you will resolve disputes. Cover confidentiality. Check the legality of the contract. Open it up to negotiation.
Top ten tips in drafting and negotiating an international contract The language of the contract. Clear contract prose. Common law versus civil law. Jurisdictional issues. Terms of art. Personnel. In negotiations, expect the unexpected. Negotiation logistics.
Manufacturer in China – How to Establish a Reliable Connection Finding Chinese manufacturers. Your business contacts. The internet. Contacting the supplier. Meet and greet at trade fairs. Sourcing agents. The all-important factory audit. The golden sample before mass production.
An “NNN” agreement is short for Non-Disclosure/Non-Use/Non-Circumvention agreement, which means the information cannot be shared with anyone, it cannot be used in any way, and “behind-the-back” or design around tactics are forbidden.
An NNN agreement is a specialized legal contract used predominantly in China and Vietnam to protect businesses from various risks associated with outsourcing production and sharing sensitive information. The acronym NNN stands for Non-Disclosure, Non-Use, and Non-Circumvention.
A China NNN Agreement is a Non-Use, Non-Disclosure, and Non-Circumvention agreement that protects foreign companies that do business with Chinese companies. These agreements ensure that your intellectual property and business concepts are securely safeguarded.
The U.S. tax treaty with the People's Republic of China has provisions that are available to both nonresident and resident aliens. It states that a scholar is exempt from tax on earned income for three years.
Although the FIPA has various trade-related obligations, it is primarily an investment protection agreement aimed at ensuring Canadian investors in China and Chinese investors in Canada are treated the same as any domestic or other foreign investors by the two respective host governments.
China - Trade AgreementsChina - Trade Agreements China has bilateral investment agreements with over 100 countries and economies, including Austria, the Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Spain, Thailand, and the United Kingdom.
The United States and China signed an historic and enforceable agreement on a Phase One trade deal on January 15, 2020. The agreement requires structural reforms and other changes to China's economic and trade regime. Chapters with Key Achievements include: Intellectual Property.