National Post (National Edition)

STATES PRESS CANADA FOR FREER TRADE IN ONLINE GOODS.

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON • Canada is being pressed for freer trade in online goods by a number of American states, with eight state governors writing a letter seeking an expansion of Canada’s low limits for online duty-free purchases.

Their letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer says the NAFTA talks are an opportunit­y to review the $20 limit for what Canadians can buy online without paying duties on foreign goods.

Canada has one of the strictest duty-free limits in the world for online goods — a mere fraction of the $800 Americans can spend on sites like Amazon and eBay without paying an import fee.

“Canada’s ... threshold remains among the lowest in the industrial­ized world,” says the Nov. 21 letter, signed by the governors of Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, Maine, Maryland, Montana, Oregon, Utah and Virginia.

“Canada’s low threshold for the collection of duty and tax creates unnecessar­y price increases for Canadian consumers and hinders North American manufactur­ers’ supply chains on both sides of our shared border ...

“A modernizat­ion of the Canadian de minimis level would be beneficial to both countries.”

Changing Canada’s limit is a high priority for the U.S. side in NAFTA talks.

An American source familiar with the talks tells The Canadian Press that’s one reason the U.S. mentions the issue and sets a specific $800 target in its published list of negotiatin­g objectives.

The source says that while other U.S. demands are vaguely worded and devoid of hard numbers to leave negotiatin­g room, the demand to change the limit — known as “de minimis” — is firm and unequivoca­l.

In Canada, the debate pits importers versus bricks-andmortar shops.

The Retail Council of Canada says it’s unfair to compare the duty-free levels between the countries, since the domestic tax burden is different on U.S. retailers.

“There is no comparison between Canada and the U.S.,” the council says on its website. “First, the United States does not have a federal sales tax, so there is no tax advantage created for inbound shipments. The U.S. also does not collect state and local sales taxes at the border or for interstate shipments.”

The U.S. dominates the online retail space, the council notes: only 22 per cent of U.S. customers report having made a purchase from a foreign seller, compared with 67 per cent of Canadians.

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