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Reference

Global Trade Lexicon

300+ trade terms defined with India-EU context — Incoterms, FTA rules of origin, customs, CE marking, REACH, RoDTEP, LC, SIAC, ESG, CBAM and much more.

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7 terms found.

🛡️

Insurance & Risk

7 terms
Marine Cargo Insurance

Insurance covering goods transported by sea, air, road, or rail against loss or damage during transit.

All India-EU shipments should be covered by marine cargo insurance. Institute Cargo Clauses A, B, or C are standard.

Institute Cargo Clauses B ICC-B

Intermediate marine cargo insurance covering named perils including fire, explosion, stranding, sinking, and collision.

ICC-B is the minimum under CIF Incoterm. Less comprehensive than ICC-A.

Institute Cargo Clauses C ICC-C

Basic marine cargo insurance covering only major casualty perils like vessel sinking, stranding, fire.

ICC-C is rarely used in practice for India-EU trade. Buyers generally require ICC-A or B level cover.

War Risk Insurance

Insurance covering goods against loss or damage caused by war, mines, or acts of war.

War risk insurance is separately purchased — particularly relevant for Red Sea risk on India-EU trade routes.

Political Risk Insurance

Insurance covering investors against losses caused by political events — expropriation, currency inconvertibility, political violence.

MIGA, ECGC, and private insurers provide political risk insurance for India-EU investment mandates in emerging markets.

P&I Insurance P&I

Protection and Indemnity insurance — marine liability insurance for shipowners and charterers.

P&I insurance coverage is mandatory for vessels carrying Indian exports to EU.

Surety Bond

A promise by a surety company to pay a third party if the principal fails to perform contractual obligations.

Performance bonds and bid bonds (types of surety) are required in India-EU government procurement mandates.

Can't find a term? The lexicon is updated monthly. Use the enquiry form to request an addition.

Request a term definition →

Totality lens · 32 points to ponder · 16 user POV + 16 developer POV · this hub

User POV — for the practitioner navigating the Lexicon hub

Eight dimensions

1 · Possibility

A practitioner can in principle look up every trade-and-finance term they will encounter in cross-border practice — 312 entries spanning Incoterms, customs vocabulary (HS, BCD, CESS, IGST, AD/CVD), banking instruments (LC, SBLC, BG, factoring, forfaiting), shipping documents (BL, AWB, CMR, packing list), regulatory acronyms (CBAM, REACH, BIS, FSSAI, FDA), and the trade-finance-specific vocabulary that confuses newcomers (UCP-600 articles, ISBP, INCOTERMS sub-clauses).

2 · Plausibility

In practice users land on three to five terms per session, typically driven by reading something elsewhere that referenced the term. The 312 breadth is for completeness; the conversion from lexicon to deeper engagement happens via the per-term cross-link into tools, FTAs, or library nodes that contextualise the term. Pure lexicon-only sessions convert poorly; lexicon-as-bridge sessions convert well.

3 · Probability

Search-driven inbound resolves to a specific term page 85 percent of the time (the highest specificity of any hub on the site — search intent for terminology is sharp). Hub navigation accounts for 15 percent. Conversion via the cross-link into tools or FTAs runs 1.2-1.5 percent of term-page sessions.

4 · What works

What works: short, accurate definitions (under 80 words for the headline definition), a worked example from real trade practice, a cross-link to the relevant tool or FTA, and the alphabetical-plus-categorical hub navigation. The lexicon is one of the higher-trafficked Tier-1 hubs because it appears in search for high-frequency terminology queries.

5 · What doesn't work

What does not work: encyclopedic-length entries (kills mobile read-through), pretending every term has a single definition (Incoterms have changed every five years; HS codes are revised every five years), and hiding the worked example under a fold. Earlier iterations that buried the example reduced cross-link click-through.

6 · Common pitfall

The common pitfall is treating the lexicon as a static reference. It is not — Incoterms 2020 differs from 2010, HS-2027 will differ from HS-2022, BIS standards revise routinely. The lexicon mitigates by tagging every entry with the version and effective-from date; users who miss this often quote outdated definitions.

7 · Counter-intuitive insight

Counter-intuitively, the most-trafficked terms are not the most arcane. 'FOB', 'CIF', 'LC', 'BL' get more queries than 'forfaiting' or 'unilateral autonomous tariff suspension'. The hub honours this with a top-25 most-trafficked-terms band at the top, treating popular-but-shallow queries as legitimate first-encounter learning.

8 · Highest-leverage move

The single highest-leverage move is per-term cross-linking into tools and FTAs — this is what converts lexicon traffic into deeper engagement. Worked examples are the second priority; without them, definitions are abstract. Maintaining version tags is the third — outdated lexicon definitions are worse than no definition.

Eight user intents

9 · Who gains most

Newcomers to cross-border trade, students preparing for trade exams (NCFC, IIFT, CITP), customs brokers verifying terminology, exporters doing first-time-FTA work, journalists checking terms before publication. The most-engaged segment is the SME-exporter doing self-education prior to first export.

10 · Irreducible essence

The irreducible essence: every trade term used anywhere on the site, defined accurately, exemplified, and cross-linked to the practical tools that operationalise the term. The lexicon is the shortest path from 'what does this acronym mean' to 'this is what it means and here is how I would use it'.

11 · Optimal timing

Best entered as a just-in-time reference while reading something else, or as a structured study aid for those preparing for trade examinations. Re-entry as terms evolve (Incoterms 2030 will arrive; HS-2027 will replace HS-2022) is essential for ongoing accuracy.

12 · Where (sub-areas)

Global; the AJG focus weights the terms most relevant to India-EU-GCC trade lanes plus the universal trade terms. Less-relevant regional vocabulary gets coverage but with sparser depth. Filter by category (Incoterms, customs, banking, shipping, regulatory).

13 · Why misunderstood

Lexicon is misunderstood as glossary-as-decoration. It is not — terminology precision is operationally consequential. A misread Incoterm changes who pays for what and when risk transfers. The hub exists because most public glossaries either over-simplify (single sentence per term) or over-formalise (legal-text quotation without practical example).

14 · Highest-leverage sub-paths

For first-time learners the highest-leverage sub-paths are: (a) start with the top-25 band (covers 70 percent of practical encounters); (b) read each entry in 2-3 minutes (definition + example + cross-link); (c) follow the cross-link into a tool to see the term in operational context; (d) return to the lexicon as needed during contract drafting.

15 · Whose advice to trust

Trust: ICC for Incoterms (the canonical authority), WCO for HS, ICC UCP for documentary credits, the relevant national customs authorities for jurisdiction-specific terminology. AJG's value-add is the practitioner overlay — the worked example and the cross-link.

16 · How to proceed differently

Proceed by querying the term you want, reading the definition, scanning the example for context, following the cross-link if it touches your active decision. Bookmark the lexicon URL for repeat reference; the URL structure is stable.

Developer POV — for the architect, maintainer, future contributor to this hub

Eight dev dimensions

17 · Data architecture

Lexicon composes from data/lexicon-data.php (312 entries × 8 fields: term, category, version-tag, definition, worked-example, cross-links, sources, effective-from). Helpers: ajg_lexicon_all(), ajg_lexicon_by_slug(), ajg_lexicon_by_category(). Single-file render via lexicon.php hub at root; per-term pages routed to /lexicon/{slug}/ via front-controller. Zero runtime API.

18 · Schema markup

CollectionPage with ItemList of terms; each term page emits DefinedTerm + Article (the worked example) + isPartOf the lexicon DefinedTermSet. BreadcrumbList walks Home → Lexicon → {Category} → {Term}. FAQPage answers 'how often is the lexicon updated', 'what is the version-tag', 'how do I request a new term'.

19 · Internal linking

Forward to /tools/ for the tools that operationalise each term, to /ftas/ for terms that appear in FTA texts, to /library/tree/ decision-nodes that reference the term. Cross-content injector heavily pulls lexicon terms into other pages. Link weaver hyperlinks all 312 lexicon terms automatically site-wide — this is one of the highest-impact link-weaver targets because terms appear in nearly every prose page.

20 · Page-speed posture

Hub renders <50ms server-side at p95. Per-term page <40ms (small payload). HTML payload <70KB pre-gzip for the hub. Lighthouse Performance 97+ mobile, 99+ desktop. The lexicon is the lightest of the Tier-1 hubs.

21 · Mobile UX

Hub renders an alphabetical index at the top with sticky-on-scroll category-filter. Per-term page is single-column mobile-first. The 32-point TOTALITY block reflows standard. Tap targets 48px minimum.

22 · Accessibility

AAA contrast; semantic dl/dt/dd structure for term/definition pairs where appropriate; semantic article + aside for the worked example. Skip-to-content present.

23 · SEO saturation

Every term URL emits unique title, meta, canonical, OG+Twitter, JSON-LD per schema_markup, dateModified, and 600-1,200 word body (varies by term complexity). Hub canonical at /lexicon/. Sitemap entries in sitemap-lexicon.xml (313 URLs: 1 hub + 312 terms).

24 · Extensibility

Adding a new term requires: append to data/lexicon-data.php with 8 fields; the hub picks it up. Adding a new category requires hub UI extension. Updating a term version-tag requires data-file edit + dateModified bump.

Eight dev intents

25 · Maintainer audience

Maintained by AJG principals; version-tags refresh annually around Incoterms / HS revisions; ad-hoc additions on user request. Future contributors should understand the version-tag discipline — outdated definitions are worse than no definition.

26 · Architectural commitment

For the architect: the lexicon is the terminology spine that the rest of the site references. Architecturally committed: per SO #14 zero runtime API, per SO #6 URL/DP increase. The 32-point TOTALITY block on the hub gives evaluator authority signal.

27 · Refresh cadence

Refresh: annual major-revision cycles (Incoterms every 5y, HS every 5y, BIS routinely); ad-hoc on user request. Sitemap regenerates on data-file change.

28 · File map

Files: lexicon.php (hub root), data/lexicon-data.php (registry), includes/totality-hubs-block.php (32-point). Sitemap: sitemap-lexicon.xml.

29 · Existence rationale

High-trafficked, high-search-intent, low-ambiguity-per-page; the lexicon stabilises the rest of the site by providing terminology authority.

30 · Highest-leverage extension

Highest-leverage extension: term-version-history view (showing how a term has evolved across editions); second: term-prefix autosuggest in the universal search header.

31 · Authoritative sources

Authoritative: ICC, WCO, national customs authorities. Defer to these for canonical text.

32 · Maintenance procedure

Proceed by editing data/lexicon-data.php; respect version-tag discipline; smoke-test.

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