Contracts are so much a part of living in a society that you are probably unaware of how many contracts you make every day. In the broadest sense, a contract is simply an agreement that defines a relationship between one or more parties. Two people exchanging wedding vows enter into a contract of marriage; a person who has a child contracts to nurture and support that child; shoppers selecting food in a market contract to purchase the goods for a stated amount. A commercial contract, in simplest terms, is merely an agreement made by two or more parties for the purpose of transacting business.
Any contract may be oral or written. Written terms may be recorded in a simple memorandum, certificate, or receipt. Because a contractual relationship is made between two or more parties who have potentially adverse interests, the contract terms are usually supplemented and restricted by laws that serve to protect the parties and to define specific relationships between them in the event that provisions are indefinite, ambiguous, or even missing.
When one party enters into a commercial contract with an unfamiliar and distant party across a country border, a contract takes on added significance. The creation of an international contract is a more complex process than the formation of a contract between parties from the same country and culture. In a cross-border transaction, the parties usually do not meet face-to-face, they have different societal values and practices, and the laws to which they are subject are imposed by different governments with distinct legal systems. These factors can easily lead to misunderstandings, and therefore the contracting parties should define their mutual understanding in contractual, and preferably written, terms. The role of a contract in an international commercial transaction is of particular importance with respect to the following aspects.