Cut Duty Cost Minnesota

Import duties continue to be significant elements in the cost of international trade. Yet many companies and businesses still pay more duties than the law requires – which impacts adversely on landed cost and ultimately on business profitability.

Local Companies

Robert L. Lieser, CPA
(952) 885-9868
8609 Lyndale Ave. S., Ste. 112
Bloomington, MN
Quist, Madsen and Company, P.C
(952) 881-9111
10800 Lyndale Ave. S., Ste. 300
Bloomington, MN
Haller, Haller and Associates
(952) 884-0184
10510 France Ave
Bloomington, MN
Schechter Dokken Kanter Andrews & Selcer Ltd.
(612) 332-5500
100 Washington Ave. S., Ste. 1600
Minneapolis, MN
David M. Senness, CPA
(952) 893-0107
7900 Xerxes Ave. S., Ste. 500
Bloomington, MN
Wilkerson Associates
(651) 222-1801
55 East Fifth St., Ste. 1300
St. Paul, MN
Step by Step Bookkeeping
(612) 250-3544
2630 James Ave. N
Minneapolis, MN
Deloitte & Touche USA LLP
(612) 397-4000
50 South Sixth St., Ste. 2800
Minneapolis, MN
Grant Thornton LLP
(612) 332-0001
500 US Bank Plaza North
Minneapolis, MN
KPMG LLP
(612) 305-5000
4200 Wells Fargo Center
Minneapolis, MN

How to reduce customs duties in your business

There are many ways to reduce customs duties. The amount of duties paid depends on four “whats”. Managing the impact of any of these “whats”, will improve business profit.

1 What the goods are, (i.e. their nature and characteristics) determines tariff code and therefore the duty rate

2 What the origin of the goods is, (i.e. where dug up, grown, farmed, further manufactured or processed NOT just shipped from) determines whether preferential, standard or additional duties are payable

3 What the structure of the transaction is (i.e. whether sale, leased, loaned, free of charge, under warranty or repair arrangement), determines customs value

4 What happens to the goods once imported (i.e. sold, further manufactured, repaired and returned, stored and re-exported) determines whether various reliefs are available.

How to use a key opportunity in customs valuation planning

A major under utilised approach to reducing duties is to look at the customs valuation. A key provision in both US and EU customs law permits the customs value to be based on any earlier sale of the same goods in a chain of transactions prior to importation. For this reason it is variously described as the “prior sale”, “earlier sale” or “chain of sales” opportunity. They all mean the same thing, i.e. lower duty!

How does this work? For example, if goods are sold by a manufacturer in the US for $60 to a US export company which, in turn, sells them to an importer in the EU for $100, duty can be paid on a value of $60, providing certain conditions are met. The savings achieved are the difference between duty on the £100 and the duty on $60. Savings of up to 40% on the duty costs are possible.

What are the benefits? The chief benefit of the approach is to save customs duty by excluding the costs and profits attributable to the non-manufacturing activities undertaken in the country of export from the customs value declared at import in the destination country (US or EU).

The approach also uncouples the value of the imported goods for customs valuation purposes from their inventory value for corporate income tax purposes. That’s good because tax and customs values are often in tension. Tax authorities tend to favour a low import value (i.e. more profit to tax), whereas customs favour a higher import value (more import duty to collect.) Using an earlier sale approach, the price paid by the importer is no longer relevant for customs purposes, so that any increase in that price will not cause an increase in the amount of customs duty.

Who can benefit? Any company or business importing goods into the EU or US can benefit from the opportunity providing there has been an earlier sale and the exporter is willing to provide the relevant invoice relating to the earlier sale. Since this involves disclosure of margins by the exporter, the approach is more attractive to international groups of companies where such disclosure is not an issue and to industries where margins are already widely known. However, exporters can still realise the benefits by importing goods into the US and EU on their own account.

About the Author:

© Philip Brigstock-Bates 2004

Philip Brigstock-Bates manages Tariff AXe Services www.tariffaxe.com providing customs duty compliance and consulting advice to global companies, mid markets and start ups involved who import or use/sell imported goods in their businesses.

Professionally qualified in tax and import fields, he was previously he was with Ernst & Young and PricewaterhouseCoopers advising on duty planning reduction, compliance assurance and risk management for importers.

pbrigstock-bates@tariffaxe.com


Article Source:

thePhantomWriters Article Submission Service

Featured Local Company

Robert L. Lieser, CPA

9528859868
8609 Lyndale Ave. S., Ste. 112
Bloomington, MN

Related Articles
- Shop for Cheaper Car Insurance Minnesota
Cheap car insurance is all over the place these days. However, sometime it is just too good to be true. Finding cheap car insurance is just a matter of logging in on the internet and you can compare quotes in as little as five minutes. Nevertheless, is cheaper always means that it is better? Getting cheap car insurance no longer takes much effort on your side.
- Recording Assets Minnesota
- Car Loan Offers And Car Loan Quote Minnesota
- Low Cost Auto Insurance Minnesota
- Military Loans Minnesota
- Measuring Costs Minnesota
- The Decision To Refinance Minnesota
- Credit Card Debt Consolidation Minnesota
- Best Auto Loan Interest Rate Minnesota
- Cheap Personal Loans Are Not Easy Minnesota
Related Local Event
Midwest Plant Facilities Expo (MWPE)
Dates: 10/28/2009 - 10/29/2009
Location: Minneapolis Convention Center, Minneapolis
Minneapolis, MN
View Details

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History