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U.S. Customs and Border Protection Textiles

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Title: U.S. Customs and Border Protection Textiles


1
U.S. Customs and Border ProtectionTextiles
Department of Homeland Security ? Customs
and Border Protection
July 2006
2
The Textile Import Industry
Department of Homeland Security ? Customs
and Border Protection
Total Imports 1.9 Trillion Textile Products
43 of all Duties Collected Total Duties 25
Billion Average Duty Rate 16
K Thousand M Million B Billion
2
3
Columbus Trade

4
Columbus Trade


5
Columbus Trade


6
Textile Supplier Countries
Volume
  • Value
  • China
  • Mexico
  • India
  • Hong Kong
  • Indonesia
  • Pakistan
  • Canada
  • Vietnam
  • Honduras
  • Bangladesh
  • China
  • Mexico
  • Pakistan
  • Canada
  • India
  • Korea
  • Indonesia
  • Bangladesh
  • Honduras
  • Taiwan

7
January 1, 2005 and Beyond
  • Quota Eliminated for all WTO Member Nations
    EXCEPT China
  • Safeguard Mechanism Replaced by Comprehensive
    Quota Agreement
  • Textile Bilaterals Expired
  • Authority to Conduct TPVTs Expire
  • MOUs (HK and Macao)
  • Enforcement Focus Unchanging

8
January 1, 2005 and Beyond
  • Changes to the Regulations
  • Elimination of the Paper Textile Declaration
  • Allows Electronic Filing of Entries
  • Changes to the Construction of the Manufacturer
    Identification Code
  • The Entity that Performed the Origin Conferring
    Process
  • Not the Trading House, the Shipper, etc.
  • Remote Location Filing
  • Working on the Informal Value Limits/Not Revenue
    Neutral

9
Textile Enforcement Focus
  • Textiles and Wearing Apparel Designated As a
    Priority Trade Issue for FY 06
  • Enforcement Focus
  • Origin Fraud Illegal Transshipment Quota
    Circumvention Inadmissibility of Merchandise
  • Enforcement of Various Legislative Trade
    Initiatives and Free Trade Agreement Preference
    Claims
  • Protection of the Revenue
  • 5 Year Enforcement Strategy to Congress

10
Textile Enforcement Focus
  • Risks
  • FTA and other Trade Legislation
  • 22.4 Billion in Trade Preference Claims out of a
    Universe of 100.3 Billion in Imports
  • China Quota
  • Illegal Transshipment
  • Misdescription of Merchandise
  • Smuggling Unmanifested Goods
  • General Misdescription to Avoid Duties and Quota
  • 43 of Duties Collected Involve Textile Goods

11
Textile Enforcement Focus
  • FTA Activity
  • Morocco Implemented on January 1, 2006
  • CAFTA El Salvador Implemented on February 1
    Nicaragua and Honduras April 1, 2006 Guatemala,
    July 1, 2006
  • Thailand, ANDEAN Countries, Panama, UAE and SACU
    in Negotiation
  • Bahrain and Oman Completed
  • South Korea and Malaysia Negotiations Started

12
Enforcement Issues
  • Free Trade Agreement Enforcement
  • 2,164 Lines Valued at 66.4M Reviewed
  • 563 or 28 Found to Be Non-Compliant
  • 1.2 M in Additional Revenue Recovered
  • NAFTA Accounted for 79 of Revenues Recovered
    CBTPA Accounted for 13
  • Preference Claims Value 22.4 B in 2005

13
Training
  • Free Trade Agreement Training Initiative
  • New York, Miami, Los Angeles and Atlanta
  • 90 of Import Specialists Processing Textile FTA
    Goods Have Been Trained this Calendar Year
  • Extensive Training Materials Have Been Prepared

14
Textile Enforcement Focus
  • Chinese Quotas
  • U.S. Government Has Negotiated a Comprehensive
    Agreement which Became Effective on January 1,
    2006 Expires December 31, 2008
  • U.S. and China Resurrected ELVIS Links
  • China Issues a Paper Visa and a Certificate of
    Origin
  • Will Only Be Provided to CBP Upon Making the
    Request to the Importer

15
Textile Production Verification Teams
  • Since October 2005 TPVTS Were Conducted in
  • Hong Kong
  • Macao
  • Swaziland
  • Vietnam
  • Egypt
  • Mauritius
  • South Africa
  • Thailand
  • Kenya

16
Textile Production Verification Teams
  • November 2005 Visit to Hong Kong
  • 167 Factories Targeted
  • 65 Closed
  • 24 Refused Admission
  • 46 High-Risk Designation
  • 3 Evidence of Transshipment
  • December 2005 Visit to Macao
  • 28 Factories Targeted
  • 5 Closed
  • 3 High-Risk Designation

17
Textile Production Verification Teams
  • Seizure of Goods from Closed Factories
  • 2.6 Million to Date
  • Production Records Being Requested on Previous
    Shipments Involving 38.3 Million in Value
  • Penalties Being Pursued
  • Since October 2005 More than 42 Million Seized

18
Textile Enforcement
  • Audit of Textile Importers FY 2005
  • 42 Audits Completed
  • 34 Had Positive Enforcement Findings
  • 4.97 Million in Additional Revenues Collected
  • Classification Errors 928,831
  • Singapore FTA Findings 43,265
  • Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act 510,944

19
Common Broker Errors
  • Incorrect ISO Codes
  • Incorrect Construction of the Manufacturer
    Identification Code (MID)
  • Incorrect Country of Origin
  • Bras
  • Incorrect Entry Types
  • 01s Instead of 02s

20
Common Broker Errors
  • Just Because a Product Was Exported from an FTA
    or Trade Preference Country Doesnt Make It
    Eligible for Duty-Free Treatment
  • Dont Rely Solely on the Bill of Lading/Review
    All Documents Presented For Entry
  • Learn to Read

21
Enforcement Issues
  • A Search of Chapters 50-63, for Jan 2004 - July
    2005 Revealed 84 Million in Imports.
  • 18.5 Million, or 22 of that Value Reveals a
    Mismatch between Country of Origin and Country of
    Export or MID Origin.
  • Over 1 Million Shows Obvious Admissibility
    Issues.

22
Enforcement Issues
  • Filing of Incorrect Entries
  • 02 Quota/Paper Entries Continue to Be Required
    for the Following
  • AGOA Preference
  • Tariff Preference Level Claims in NAFTA, CAFTA,
    Chile, Singapore and Morocco FTAs
  • China Comprehensive Quota Agreement
  • CBTPA ATPDEA Claims under the Cap
  • Non-WTO Country Imports e.g. Vietnam
  • Worsted Wool (Chapter 99)




23
Textile Enforcement
  • Operation X
  • 5 Days over a 5 Week Period (Nov-Dec. 2005)
  • 2,121 Additional Examinations of Goods Claiming
    Country of Origin China Focus on Misdescription
  • 131 Violations Found
  • 63 Incorrect Country of Origin Declared
  • 23 Incorrect Information on Manifest
  • 22 Incorrect Classification of Goods
  • 4 Intellectual Property Rights Violations
  • 4 Health and Safety Violations
  • 3 Incorrect Quantities Declared
  • 1 Smuggling, etc.
  • Violations Totaled 2.5 Million in Value
  • 5 Seizures Totaling 88,441
  • 7 Penalties Being Pursued

24
Enforcement Issues
  • Misdescription/Misclassification of Imported
    Products
  • Ramie vs. Cotton and Manmade Fiber Products
  • Circumvents Chinese Quota Restraints
  • Ramie 0-2 Duty Rate
  • Cotton 16 Duty Rate
  • Manmade 32 Duty Rate
  • Loss in Duties Exceeds 12 Million
  • 68 Bogus Companies in the Mix to Defraud the
    Government and Evade Quotas

25
Detentions
  • Policy Is Not Set In Stone
  • Each Transaction Stands on Its Own
  • Generally
  • 4 Compliant Reviews and the Manufacturer is
    Removed from Scrutiny
  • Manufacturer May Have Problems with One Importer
    and Not Another Compliant Importer May Be
    Removed From Further Scrutiny
  • Information from other Sources e.g. Foreign
    Government May Cause Removal of Manufacturer
    Immediately from Further Scrutiny

26
CAFTA Implementation Issues
  • USTR Announced El Salvador Receiving CAFTA
    Retroactive Benefits on March 6, 2006 Ref. 71 FR
    11235 Honduras and Nicaragua Added in April
  • CBP Publishes Interim Regulation on March 7, 2006
    Ref 71 FR 11304
  • Required Documents
  • Pursuant to the Legislation
  • CBP Can Locate the Entry or the Entry Can Be
    Reconstructed
  • Satisfies the Conditions of Preferential
    Treatment Under CAFTA

27
CAFTA Implementation Issues
  • Time Limits
  • By December 31, 2006 , or 90 Days after the Date
    of Entry into Force for that Country
  • Being Changed to 90 Days after Last Country
    Enters into Force.


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