. . "1298"^^ . "Import parity price or IPP is defined as, \u201CThe price that a purchaser pays or can expect to pay for imported goods; thus the c.i.f. import price plus tariff plus transport cost to the purchaser's location. This and the export parity price together define a range of the possible equilibrium prices for equivalent domestically produced goods\u201D. A simpler definition is used by the UN World Food Programme: \u201CThe import parity price (IPP) is the price at the border of a good that is imported, which includes international transport costs and tariffs\u201D."@en . . . . "35675174"^^ . . . "Import parity price or IPP is defined as, \u201CThe price that a purchaser pays or can expect to pay for imported goods; thus the c.i.f. import price plus tariff plus transport cost to the purchaser's location. This and the export parity price together define a range of the possible equilibrium prices for equivalent domestically produced goods\u201D. A simpler definition is used by the UN World Food Programme: \u201CThe import parity price (IPP) is the price at the border of a good that is imported, which includes international transport costs and tariffs\u201D. The USAID Market and Trade Glossary definition is: \"Import parity price (IPP) \u2013 is the monetary value of a unit of product bought from a foreign country, valued at a geographic location of interest in the importing country\"."@en . "Import parity price"@en . "992076959"^^ . . . .