Calgary Herald

U.S. wants Canadian online purchases to be subjected to greater duty limits

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

Canada is being WASHINGTON 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 top priority for the U.S. 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-and-mortar shops.

Traditiona­l retailers warn that domestic stores would be hit hard by a change in policy, as Canadian purchases would flow to retailers based outside the country.

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.

The U.S. also 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.

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Canada is urged to review the $20 limit for what Canadians can buy online without paying duties.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Canada is urged to review the $20 limit for what Canadians can buy online without paying duties.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada