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ICC Policy Statement
ICC recommendations
for trade facilitation through effective customs duty relief programmes
Prepared
by the Commission on Customs and Trade Regulations
ICC is actively addressing
a wide range of international issues with the aim of improving processes
associated with cross border trade. ICC believes that effective and accessible
customs duty relief mechanisms are essential to the smooth operation of
international trade.
Customs duty relief programmes in the context of trade facilitation
ICC's preferred definition of "trade facilitation" involves
improving the efficiency of processes associated with trading in goods
across national borders. This requires a comprehensive and integrated
simplification effort, aimed at reducing the cost of international trade
transactions. It is important to ensure that only necessary activities
are required, and take place in an efficient, transparent, and predictable
manner, based on internationally accepted norms, standards and best practices.
Among the required
processes are customs duty relief programmes. A country will usually adopt
a core suite of customs duty reliefs to permit the import of goods for
duty-free storage, for processing and re-export, and for temporary admission.
This core suite might commonly be enhanced by a duty relief for returning
items, whether or not after processing abroad; and less commonly, one
for processing for subsequent import at reduced duty. The complexity of
the administrative procedures required to access these relief programmes
is a major factor in determining the take up, and efficient use, of the
programmes. ICC believes that even the largest organizations sometimes
decline to adopt available programmes, simply because the administrative
burden is too onerous. This may be because the administrative cost outweighs
the benefit, or because the degree of complexity takes the risk of non-compliance
to unacceptable levels.
Benefits
ICC is convinced
that widespread adoption of a simplified duty relief
structure such as is recommended in this statement will deliver the following
significant benefits to Government authorities interested in improving
customs efficiency:
reduced cost of policing a variety of complex programmes;
- more cost-effective revenue collection;
- better risk comparisons based on common procedures adopted by all users
of the relief;
- the ability to move controls securely inland, and base them on targeted
risk analysis;
- more efficient and correct application of simplified regulations, thereby
ensuring that any differential treatment of traders is based on objective
criteria;
- more predictable and faster movement of goods;
- increased trade, increased revenue, and improved economic performance,
and
- faster, more efficient and predictable border procedures encouraging
increased foreign direct investment.
At the same time,
traders might expect the following additional benefits:
- ability to take advantage of all eligible duty relief mechanisms in
a cost-effective manner;
- low-cost duty management software, used extensively and therefore relatively
cheap;
- faster clearance at the port;
- no need to maintain and administer multiple duty relief programmes;
- no need to transfer goods between duty relief programmes as they move
out of the scope of one relief and into the ambit of the other; and
- transparency as to the usage of all relief programmes from a single
management source.
The bottom line for
governments is increased trade, increased foreign direct investment, enhanced
competitiveness, overall reduction in costs, and enhanced government revenues.
(For more details on benefits see the ICC statement "Trade liberalization,
foreign direct investment and customs modernization: a virtuous circle"
8 October 1999).
Features of an inefficient suite of duty relief programmes
Duty relief programmes tend to grow over time, as solutions to specific
needs. Once in place, they tend to be maintained as stand-alone facilities,
and are very rarely reviewed as a part of a comprehensive suite of relief
facilities. In consequence, numerous inefficiencies come to be seen as
the inevitable norm. These include:
- the need to be authorized for multiple relief programmes;
- the need to transfer goods between one program and another;
- different customs offices controlling different reliefs - often determined
by the physical location of the goods without necessarily any thought
to whether the trader's personnel at that facility are in control of the
process or the goods;
- variable and
sometimes conflicting reporting requirements for each relief program;
- multiple guarantees to secure the potential duty within different suspensive
regimes;
- complexity at the port of arrival in the territory, to define the regime
to which the goods are to be assigned;
- complexity at the port of export to alert control staff to the termination
of the process; and
- over-reliance on drawback processes rather than duty suspension mechanisms.
Features of an efficient suite of duty relief programmes
Wherever possible, customs duty relief should be granted by
suspending
the duties otherwise payable, rather than by offering an opportunity subsequently
to recover duties previously paid. If security is required at the port,
any potential liabilities should be covered by guarantees or other financial
instruments, rather than by lodging cash.
All suspensive customs
duty reliefs can be discharged in one of the following ways:
- by export;
- by import on payment of appropriate duty;
- by transfer to another suspensive relief;
- by transfer to another economic trader operating a suspensive relief.
Nearly all the identifying
features of an inefficient suite of relief programmes relate to the transfer
of control of the goods subject to the programme. ICC believes that simplification
is best achieved by limiting the number of times that control of the relief
has to be transferred. In a well-designed suite of duty relief programmes,
such transfers will be rare. As long as there are numerous relief programmes
available to meet different needs, it is difficult, if not impossible,
to avoid transfers between them. ICC believes that the ultimate solution
is the adoption of a unitary relief programme.
What is a unitary relief programme?
Under a unitary relief programme, authorized traders are permitted to
enter goods into a single duty-suspensive environment. If the goods are
subsequently exported from that environment in the same state, the situation
is akin to customs bonded warehousing. If they are processed before being
exported, the situation is akin to processing for re-export. Alternatively,
the goods might be intended for the activities currently covered by temporary
admission relief, in which case the situation would be akin to their location
being treated as an extension of a customs warehouse. In this way, all
the core reliefs are incorporated in the concept of the single unitary
relief.
As customs procedures
become more flexible, additional relief mechanisms can also come under
the unitary relief. If the goods are processed within the unitary relief
and subsequently imported by duty payment, the customs value of the normalized
goods will be increased by the value added by the processing operation.
However, it is possible that the tariff code of the goods will have changed,
leading to a lower duty rate.
When the goods are
transferred to another trader, perhaps for completion of a stage in a
processing operation, if the responsibility for ultimate import or export
of the goods does not rest with that trader, control responsibilities
should not be transferred between offices within the customs administration.
The goods remain within the unitary relief, under the responsibility of
the authorized trader. If they have not been discharged from the relief,
the trader's systems should be able to locate them (perhaps by reference
to a 3rd party processor's factory) and show what processes they are subject
to. If the authorized entity is not able to do that, the customs administration
can raise a duty demand based upon the value and nature of the goods as
last identified in the system.
Conclusions
Effective duty relief mechanisms are fundamental to international trade
in goods on a global basis. All count
ries will benefit from them -- especially
those burdened with the least efficient trading processes, either through
infrastructure or managerial limitations. ICC is committed to assisting
governments to realize the full benefits of international trade through
effective trade facilitation measures that discourage both inefficient
and artificially complex or burdensome border procedures. To realize these
benefits for all parties, the concept of the unitary relief should be
recognized as a global best practice.
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Document 104-29 rev1FINAL
9 June 2004
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