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The Caribbean Economic Corridor

A structured trade and manufacturing corridor connecting the Dominican Republic to the US market via CAFTA-DR and Law 8-90 free zone incentives.

Origination

Middle East and Europe

Anchor

Dominican Republic Free Zones

Destination

United States Market

Reference Document

The Caribbean Economic Corridor: A Cross-Border Trade and Investment Pathway

The Caribbean Economic Corridor is a structured cross-border pathway that connects capital, companies, and manufacturing capacity from the Middle East and Europe through the Dominican Republic and into the United States market. It operates through a combination of free trade agreements, free zone infrastructure, geographic proximity, and institutional frameworks that make the Dominican Republic the most efficient nearshoring gateway in the Western Hemisphere.

Definition

What is the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

The Caribbean Economic Corridor refers to the trade and investment route connecting international markets – primarily the Middle East, Europe, and Israel – to the United States through the Dominican Republic and the broader Caribbean basin. It is not a single trade lane but a system of interconnected economic pathways enabled by geography, policy, and institutional infrastructure.

At its core, the Corridor functions as follows: companies and capital from international markets enter the Dominican Republic through its free zone system, establish or partner with manufacturing and logistics operations, and export finished or semi-finished goods into the United States under CAFTA-DR preferential trade terms.

The result is a near-zero tax production environment, 2-4 day shipping to the U.S. east coast, duty-free market access, and full alignment with U.S. regulatory and sourcing standards – making it a structurally superior alternative to Asia-based manufacturing for companies prioritizing supply chain resilience, speed to market, and cost predictability.

The Pathway

How the Corridor Works

Step 1 – Origin

Middle East, Europe, and International Markets

Companies and institutional capital from Israel, the Gulf Cooperation Council, and European markets seeking U.S.-aligned production and market access. These entities bring capital, technology, and manufacturing expertise seeking cost-efficient, compliant production environments close to the U.S. market.

Step 2 – Anchor

Dominican Republic Free Zones

The Dominican Republic hosts 820 companies operating across 87 industrial parks administered by CNZFE. Companies establish or contract manufacturing operations within these zones, benefiting from 100% tax exemption on profits, imports, and exports, full foreign ownership rights, and an established workforce across manufacturing, medtech, textiles, and industrial sectors.

Step 3 – Destination

United States Market Access

Under CAFTA-DR, qualifying goods produced in the Dominican Republic enter the United States duty-free. Combined with 2-4 day shipping to east coast ports including Miami, Baltimore, and New York, this creates a supply chain model that competes directly with Asia on cost while offering structural advantages in speed, compliance, and supply chain control.

Take the Next Step

Does Your Company Qualify for the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

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Infrastructure

Dominican Republic Free Zone System

The Dominican Republic’s free zone system is one of the most developed in Latin America and represents the institutional backbone of the Caribbean Economic Corridor. Established under Law 8-90, the system is administered by the National Free Zone Council (CNZFE) and has operated continuously for over three decades, providing a stable, government-backed framework for foreign investment and manufacturing operations.

Tax Incentives

100% exemption on corporate income tax, import duties, export taxes, and ITBI (sales tax) for the duration of operations within the free zone. No minimum capital requirement for foreign investors.

Ownership and Repatriation

100% foreign ownership permitted. Full profit, capital, and dividend repatriation guaranteed by law. No forced local partnership requirements.

Eligible Sectors

Manufacturing, medtech and medical devices, textiles and apparel, footwear, tobacco, electronics assembly, logistics and distribution, and industrial services.

Scale and Presence

820 companies operating in 87 industrial parks. 198,552 direct employment positions. Free zone exports reached $8.4 billion in 2024, representing 61% of total Dominican Republic goods exports (CNZFE 2024).

Government Framework

ProDominicana serves as the primary investment promotion agency, facilitating market entry, incentive qualification, and institutional coordination. CNZFE administers licensing, compliance, and free zone operations.

Logistics Network

Multiple commercial ports including Puerto Caucedo, Haina, and Puerto Plata. Direct shipping routes to Miami, New York, Baltimore, and New Orleans. Average transit time of 2-4 days to U.S. east coast ports.

Trade Framework

CAFTA-DR and U.S. Market Access

The Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) is the foundational trade agreement enabling the Caribbean Economic Corridor’s commercial viability. Entered into force between the Dominican Republic and the United States in March 2007, CAFTA-DR eliminates tariffs on qualifying manufactured goods exported from the Dominican Republic into the U.S. market.

For manufacturing companies, CAFTA-DR means that goods produced in Dominican Republic free zones – using imported inputs – can enter the United States duty-free provided they meet the agreement’s rules of origin requirements. This effectively makes Dominican Republic free zone production cost-competitive with, and in many cases superior to, production in Asia, Mexico, or other nearshoring destinations.

Key sectors benefiting from CAFTA-DR access include medical devices, textiles, apparel, footwear, electronics, and industrial components – all sectors with significant free zone presence in the Dominican Republic and strong U.S. import demand.

EGS Role

How Esco Global Strategies Operates Within the Corridor

Esco Global Strategies serves as the institutional entry point into the Caribbean Economic Corridor for companies, investors, and government stakeholders. EGS does not operate as a general consultant or intermediary. We structure and control the deal flow, government coordination, and capital alignment that makes corridor entry viable for serious mandates.

Our operating model covers the full corridor pathway: originating mandates from international markets, structuring market entry through Dominican Republic free zones, coordinating with ProDominicana and CNZFE, aligning capital through institutional and private sources, and overseeing execution through to operational deployment.

For Companies

Market entry architecture, free zone qualification, regulatory navigation, site selection, and execution oversight for manufacturing and industrial companies entering the DR market.

For Investors

Pre-screened deal flow, capital stack structuring, DFI coordination, and investment positioning for funds and family offices deploying capital into corridor-aligned manufacturing and infrastructure.

For Governments

Qualified inbound investment origination, public-private engagement structuring, and institutional coordination for trade organizations, chambers, and ministries seeking structured foreign direct investment.

Caribbean Corridor Access

Evaluate if your operation qualifies for structured U.S. market entry through the Caribbean Economic Corridor.

Check Eligibility

Next Step

Ready to Explore the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

Not sure if your company qualifies? Take the 5-minute assessment. Ready to speak with a strategist? Contact us directly.

Companies evaluating manufacturing or expansion into the United States through the Caribbean Economic Corridor can submit for review here.

Factor DR Free Zone Mexico Honduras Costa Rica
U.S. Tariff Rate 0% (CAFTA-DR) 5–25% (USMCA) 0% (CAFTA-DR) 0% (CAFTA-DR)
Corp. Tax in Free Zone 0% (20 yrs) 30% 0% (20 yrs) 0% (20 yrs)
Transit to U.S. East Coast 3–5 days 7–14 days (overland) 5–8 days 7–10 days
100% Foreign Ownership Yes Restricted sectors Yes Yes
Political Stability Index High Medium Medium High
Active EGS Mandate Program Yes No No No

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

The Caribbean Economic Corridor (CEC) is the EGS framework for helping foreign manufacturers establish U.S.-targeted production inside Dominican Republic free zones. It combines CAFTA-DR duty-free access, Law 8-90 tax exemptions (0% corporate tax for 20 years), and EGS’s operational infrastructure to create a structured path from factory setup to U.S. market entry.

Who qualifies for the Caribbean Economic Corridor program?

The program is designed for manufacturers with $3M–$50M+ in annual production targeting U.S. distribution. Priority sectors include textiles, footwear, electronics, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, and food processing. Companies must be seeking to reduce U.S. tariff exposure, shorten supply chain lead times, or establish compliant nearshore production. Not suitable for retail, early-stage startups, or non-manufacturing businesses.

How long does it take to establish operations through the CEC?

Typical timeline from qualification to operational setup is 90–180 days. This includes free zone approval, company formation, facility sourcing, and regulatory compliance. EGS manages the full mandate process, reducing the average setup time by 40–60% compared to unassisted market entry.

What tariff savings does the Caribbean Economic Corridor deliver?

Under CAFTA-DR, qualifying goods manufactured in Dominican Republic free zones enter the U.S. at 0% tariff. For manufacturers previously importing from Asia, Middle East, or non-treaty countries at 5–30%+ tariff rates, this creates immediate and compounding cost advantages. Combined with 0% corporate tax and import duty exemptions inside the free zone, the total fiscal benefit typically exceeds 20% of production cost.

Related Intelligence

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Caribbean Economic Corridor.

What is the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

The Caribbean Economic Corridor (CEC) is a framework developed by Esco Global Strategies to help manufacturers establish operations in the Dominican Republic, leveraging CAFTA-DR duty-free U.S. market access and Law 8-90 free zone tax incentives.

Who qualifies for the Caribbean Economic Corridor?

Companies in manufacturing, light industrial production, medical devices, textiles, and electronics assembly are primary candidates. Qualification depends on export intent, production scale, and DR free zone regulations. EGS conducts a preliminary assessment before any engagement.

How does CAFTA-DR benefit companies in the Corridor?

CAFTA-DR eliminates tariffs on qualifying goods exported from the Dominican Republic to the United States. This makes DR-based production cost-competitive for U.S.-bound goods that would otherwise face MFN tariff rates, particularly for manufacturers sourcing from Asia or the Middle East.

What is the typical timeline to establish operations?

From initial qualification to an operational free zone entity, the timeline typically ranges from 4 to 9 months depending on sector, facility requirements, and regulatory approvals. EGS manages the full process including entity formation, licensing, and infrastructure coordination.

Does EGS work with early-stage companies?

EGS primarily works with companies that have defined production requirements and a clear export strategy. Early-stage inquiries are evaluated case by case. Contact EGS to discuss your situation before the formal qualification process.