Switzerland will stop shipping parcels to the United States starting August 26, after new 0 rules stripped a key exemption that had allowed small foreign packages to enter the country duty-free after President Donald Trump’s decision to end the de minimis 1 rule, which had allowed shipments worth less than $800 to avoid import taxes, will be scrapped on August 29, according to a 2 new 3 targets every country, not just China or Hong Kong, where the restrictions first 4 announced last month that packages from anywhere in the world will now be subject to import 5 Post responded by pausing all standard parcel services to the U. S., citing legal and logistical problems with the abrupt rollout.
“The new rules affect all postal companies worldwide and are being introduced at very short notice,” the agency said in a 6 added that many issues, especially around liability, haven’t been 7 imposes highest tariff rate on Switzerland Under the new 8 system, importers have two 9 can pay a percentage tax tied to a new “reciprocal” tariff table, or opt for a flat fee ranging from $80 to $200 per item for the first six 10 Switzerland , the reciprocal tariff rate was set at 39%, the highest rate assigned to any developed 11 figure was reached after recent trade negotiations between the two countries ended without 12 officials pushed 13 government made another offer to Washington in hopes of securing better trade terms, but nothing has 14 tariff shock landed 15 Post said its decision to halt packages is based on “US customs clearance regulations,” which, according to them, “differ greatly from the Universal Postal Union’s previous regulations.” That discrepancy made it impossible to continue parcel shipments under the current 16 shipments are suspended, but document and express consignments to the 17 still go 18 are usually handled with more paperwork and tighter tracking, making them easier to adapt to the new American 19 postal services across Europe, including Austria and Belgium, have also announced suspensions in response to the same 20 the change, the de minimis threshold helped move about 4 million small parcels into the 21 22 packages were rarely inspected and often landed straight at consumers’ doors without 23 system is now 24 shipments will go through customs and face taxation, slowing down deliveries and increasing 25 blocks tariff dodging through Liechtenstein With the 39% tariff in place, some companies tried to find a way around 26 idea floated was to route Swiss goods through Liechtenstein, a small country of about 40,000 people that shares a customs union with 27 the new U.
S. tariffs, Liechtenstein only has a 15% duty, which is far below the rate Switzerland faces. Geographically, it looked simple since Liechtenstein sits on Switzerland’s eastern edge, and trucks from there can drive directly into Austria, which is part of the European 28 made Liechtenstein a tempting channel for re-exporting goods at a cheaper tariff 29 the Swiss economy ministry quickly shut it down. “For a product to be considered ‘originating from Liechtenstein,’ it must either be wholly produced in Liechtenstein or have undergone sufficient processing there,” a ministry spokesperson reportedly told Bloomberg in an 30 also explained that “simply re-exporting Swiss products via Liechtenstein or reloading them there does not change their origin, meaning that the higher US duties on Swiss goods apply.” The 31 office has also signaled that it will be watching for such tactics and will not honor tariff reclassification 32 means any company hoping to sidestep the 39% rate by using Liechtenstein is still going to get hit with the full duty if the goods are clearly 33 $50 free to trade crypto when you sign up to Bybit now
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