The Biden Administration is being urged to use its
executive authority to impose guardrails around the Section 321 de minimis
provision to stop the "abuse of duty-free shipments that put US
manufacturers at a disadvantage".
The National
Council of Textile Organisations (NCTO) has welcomed
a call from Congressman Jeff Duncan for the US government to clamp down on
the Section 321 de minimis loophole, noting that nearly three million de
minimis shipments enter the US each day.
“Tariff-free imports
skyrocketed in FY23 with more than one billion packages claiming de minimis
preferences in the US,” said Congressman Duncan.
He continued: “Mass
distributors are using e-commerce to abuse the de minimis provision to avoid
billions of dollars of tariffs designed to put American manufacturers on a fair
playing ground.
“The Biden Administration has
the authority to close the Section 321 de minimis loophole to stop the economic
harm being caused. US manufacturers who are seeing a substantial erosion of
market share, US workers who are losing their jobs, and small retailers who
cannot compete all realise that forced labour supply chains in China, as well
as drug traffickers, are benefitting from these loopholes while American jobs
are put in jeopardy.”
NCTO president and CEO Kim
Glas added: “On behalf of the US textile industry, I would like to sincerely
thank Rep. Duncan for his letter to President Biden, voicing his concerns over
the alarming rise in e-commerce shipments flooding our market through the
Section 321 de minimis provision in US trade law, which facilitates the
importation of goods made with forced labour, illicit narcotics such as
fentanyl, and counterfeit products, all of which are threatening the health and
safety of American consumers and undermining the domestic textile manufacturing
industry.
“An explosion in e-commerce
shipments has created a superhighway of orders through this gaping loophole,
allowing nearly three million packages a day to come into the US duty-free and
largely uninspected, effectively handing a free trade agreement to China and
the rest of the world.
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“The problem has been
compounded by China’s predatory trade practices, anaemic customs enforcement in
the US, and lack of rulemaking and penalties. The Executive Branch must
decisively act now and use its existing executive authorities to close this
extremely dangerous loophole to e-commerce shipments to stop the flow of
billions of dollars worth of Chinese apparel tainted by forced labour and
illicit narcotics from reaching our homes. The stakes are too high to continue
ignoring this glaring problem. We risk losing a vital domestic manufacturing
base and putting consumers’ lives at risk if the administration does not act
now.”