A 'trade restriction' is an artificial restriction on the trade of goods between two countries. It is the result of
protectionism. However, the term is not uncontroversial since what one part may see as a trade restriction another may see as a way to protect consumers from inferior, harmfull or dangerous products. For instance Germany required beer to follow the
reinheitsgebot and that made it impossible for some imported beers to be sold in Germany.
Rectangular
headlamps were prohibited in the United States where round lamps were required until 1975. By 1979, the majority of new cars now had the
rectangular headlamps. Again, the U.S. permitted only two standardized sizes of
rectangular sealed-beam lamp: A system of two 200 mm x 142 mm high/low beam units corresponding to the existing 7" round format, or a system of four 165 mm x 100 mm units (two high/low and two high-beam) corresponding to the existing 5¾ inch (146 mm) round format.
In 1968 the
U.S. DOT outlawed any decorative or protective element in front of the headlamps whenever the headlamps are switched on. Glass-covered headlamps, used on e.g. the
Jaguar E-Type, the pre-1968
VW Beetle, the
Porsche 356, the
Citroën DS and
Ferrari Daytona) therefore had to be equipped with uncovered headlamps for the US market, further altering the look of European models sold in the United States. This change meant that vehicles designed for solid
aerodynamic performance could not achieve it for the US market. In
1984, the DOT changed this rule, allowing replaceable-bulb headlamps of nonstandard shapes. However, this change did not mean that an automaker could equip a vehicle with the same type of headlamps in the US as in the rest of the world. United States headlamp standards are governed by
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 108, which is incompatible with the
UNECE standards used in most of the rest of the world.
Canada has its own headlamp standards similar to the US standard, but allows UNECE-compliant headlamps.