Company Profile
Central Law is a regional law firm in Central America and the Caribbean, with eleven offices in seven countries: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama and Dominican Republic.
The distinctive characteristic of Central Law is multinational coordination that allows our clients to handle their businesses and legal issues for the seven countries in the region from One-contact point, at the office of their choice. Diaz Duran & Asociados Central Law Company Profile Organization that operates in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.
Investors interested in building a quay at Monkey Point in NicaraguaFriday, July 25, 2008 A group of American investors is looking at investing in construction of a 350 million dollar deep-water port on the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua at Monkey Point. Bill Johnson, director of the Miami-Dade County Port, is visiting Nicaragua at the invitation of the state-owned National Port Company, Virgilio Silva, to explore the possibilities for such an investment. The Foreign Legal Counsel BusinessMonday, December 6, 2010 The largest Law firms in Costa Rica get 45% of their income from fees coming from abroad. The globalization has impacted the economies of Central America, embodied in free trade agreements, establishment of transnational corporations and the creation of service centers, generating a growing demand for legal services. This is essential as Central America is viewed as a single economic block. Grand Canal of Nicaragua: Financing On HoldFriday, June 26, 2015 HKND is seeking to dispel doubts about the financing of the Grand Canal, and has announced that it expects to start construction of the port of Brito and two free trade zones in 2016. Six months after the announcement of the start of ancillary works such as construction of access roads to the excavation sites and other facilities, it is still unknown where the estimated $50 billion needed to build the Grand Canal of Nicaragua will come from. IV International Congress of ArbitrationWednesday, January 30, 2013 Costa Rica will host the Congress which will focus on continental law and the so called Common Law in International Arbitration. The event will be held on 18 and 19 February this year and will include the participation of prominent lawyers and experts in these legal figures, which are crucial for trade and public-private and multilateral business relations. US extends tariff benefits for textile and tuna companiesFriday, September 19, 2008 The US extended the tariff benefits and market access to textile and tuna companies for two more years - until September 2010. These commercial advantages were established in 2000 in an expansion of the so called Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI). The Bearer Shares System in PanamaFriday, November 15, 2013 A correction to the Act 47 of 2013 enables corporations to continue to issue bearer shares. By Alvaro Aguilar, partner at Lombardi Aguilar Group Grand Canal of Nicaragua: Is There Funding?Wednesday, December 2, 2015 Its promoters claim that the resources to build it are there, with no more details, but the announcement of the postponement of the start of the mega work following the huge losses suffered by Wang Jing in the chinese stock market, has only increased the doubts. Doubts about the feasibility of this project have been present since it was first announced, but they now appear to be increasing given the contradictions arising from the information that the project spokespersons themselves have been giving out. There is No Longer a Standard Employment ModelWednesday, May 27, 2015 In advanced economies employment is becoming less stable while those in developing economies are focusing on public policies, which stimulates the growth of informality and, paradoxically, unemployment. EDITORIAL IDB Annual Meeting in PanamaMonday, February 4, 2013 The Inter-American Development Bank will hold its Annual Meeting in Panama City from 14 to 17 March, gathering together major economic authorities of the 48 member countries. A statement from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) reads: Central American Rice Farmers Fear BankruptcyTuesday, June 8, 2021 For the Central American Rice Federation, the bankruptcy of more than 62 thousand rice farmers in Central America and the Dominican Republic is imminent, due to the abolition of import tariffs, a measure that is part of the implementation of the DR-CAFTA Free Trade Agreement. Representatives of the sector consider that if the commercial liberalization of rice cultivation continues, there will be an increase in unemployment and poverty in their agricultural areas, since more than 265,000 people depend directly on this crop and approximately 990,000 people indirectly, and foresee serious social, economic and political implications due to the effects of the Treaty. |
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