Times Colonist

New NAFTA, new duty-free limit?

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OGDENSBURG, New York — Crow Smith greets the deliveryma­n there to unload a pile of packages from his truck.

The parcels and padded envelopes, many likely to contain holiday gifts, are loaded onto a trolley to the warehouse.

There, they will be sorted alphabetic­ally and placed on shelves until the Canadians who ordered them drive south down Hwy. 416 from the Ottawa area and cross the border into Ogdensburg, New York.

Canadians have been increasing­ly shopping online, but scoring deals from U.S. retailers and getting them shipped right to their homes has always been difficult, costly and sometimes impossible.

One reason is Canada has set its de minimis threshold — the maximum value of an item that Canadians can order from a foreign country without paying duties or taxes — at $20, which has not increased since 1985 and is one of the lowest in the world.

So Canadians order packages to the U.S. instead, hoping to save sales taxes, customs duties and the brokerage fees.

“It ends up being a big saving,” said Smith, the owner of NAC Logistics, located just around the corner from the internatio­nal bridge. But there could be changes coming.

This summer, Robert Lighthizer, the U.S. trade representa­tive, made it clear that he wants Canada and Mexico to raise their thresholds when he released his negotiatin­g objectives for the new North American Free Trade Agreement.

The current de minimis threshold for American customers ordering items from other countries is $800 US.

Smith, 79, has been in the cross-border shipping business one way or another for the past six decades, but since 2010, a small corner inside one of his three warehouses in Ogdensburg has been devoted to the smaller parcels that Canadians order online.

This is set up through a delivery network called Kinek, which has 134 locations in the U.S., in towns close to the border.

It is hard to determine the impact raising the de minimis threshold would have on services such as the one run by NAC Logistics.

On the one hand, it seems few people would bother with the 100-kilometre drive if it was easier to get it to the doorstep.

“There would really be no need to pick it up across the border if you didn’t have to pay duties, taxes or brokerage fees,” said Christine McDaniel, a senior research fellow with the Mercatus Institute at George Mason University in Arlington, Virginia.

As things stand, making a trip across the border does not necessaril­y mean saving on taxes and duties — you have to stay at least 24 hours to qualify for an exemption of $200. That exemption climbs to $800 if you stay 48 hours or more.

The Canada Border Services Agency said it does not track how many Canadians are asked to pay duties and taxes. But it collected about $54,000 in duties and nearly $2 million in sales taxes at the Prescott port of entry in 2016.

Also, if the product is manufactur­ed in the U.S. or Mexico, then NAFTA means it is exempt from duties anyway.

The real issue for consumers is that parcel delivery services charge brokerage fees for any item worth more than $20 to help figure it all out.

“Sometimes the brokerage fee, as a percentage of the share of the total value of the parcel, far exceeds the tax and the duty combined,” said McDaniel, who co-authored a report for the C.D. Howe Institute last year that argued raising the de minimis threshold would benefit consumers, businesses and the coffers of the federal government.

Dave Bucholtz, vice-president and chief compliance officer for Pacific Customs Brokers Ltd. in Surrey, said that unless health, safety and security concerns came into play — such as when consumers order medical devices or agricultur­al products — then brokerage fees would be unlikely to apply for anything valued under a new threshold.

Canadian retailers, many of them represente­d by the Retail Council of Canada, have been pushing back strongly against the idea.

“We don’t want the conferral of a tax and duty advantage on our parcel-shipping competitor­s operating from outside Canada,” said Karl Littler, vice-president of public affairs for the Retail Council of Canada.

 ??  ?? Crow Smith handles packages in a corner in one of his three warehouses in Ogdensburg, New York, that has been devoted to parcels that Canadians order online.
Crow Smith handles packages in a corner in one of his three warehouses in Ogdensburg, New York, that has been devoted to parcels that Canadians order online.

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