Customs Valuation Notes
Customs Valuation Notes
Customs Valuation Notes
Definition
Customs valuation is a customs procedure applied to determine the customs value of
imported goods. If the rate of duty is ad valorem, the customs value is essential to
determine the duty to be paid on an imported good.
Other provisions
The sequence of methods 4 and 5 can be switched at the request of the importer (not,
however, at the discretion of the customs officer). Moreover, the Agreement contains
provisions for special and differential treatment of developing countries and for technical
assistance. Since this Agreement is an integral part of the single WTO undertaking, all
WTO Members are Members of the Customs Valuation Agreement.
Conditions to be fulfilled
The customs value is the transaction value if all of the following conditions have been
fulfilled:
Evidence of sale
There must be evidence of a sale for export to the country of importation (i.e.
commercial invoices, contracts, purchase orders, etc.).
— are limited to the geographic area in which the goods may be resold;
— the price of the imported goods is dependent upon the price or prices at which the
buyer sells other goods to the seller;
— the price is established on the basis of a form of payment extraneous to the imported
goods.
— assists
— subsequent proceeds
— the cost of transport, insurance and related charges up to the place of importation if
the Member bases evaluation on a C.I.F. basis
— but not: costs incurred after importation (duties, transport, construction or assembly),
[Buyer and seller not related, otherwise ...
The buyer and seller are not related, but even if so, the use of the transaction value is
acceptable if the importer demonstrates that:
— any person directly or indirectly owns, controls or holds 5 per cent or more of the
outstanding voting stock or shares of both of them;
— one of them directly or indirectly controls the other (the Interpretative Note to
Article 15 provides that for the purposes of the Agreement, one person shall be deemed
to control another when the former is legally or operationally in a position to exercise
restraint or direction over the latter. The note also states that “persons” includes a legal
person, where appropriate).
Cases where Customs Administrations have reasons to doubt the truth or accuracy of
the declared value
Customs valuation based on the transaction value method is largely based on
documentary input from the importer. Article 17 of the Agreement confirms that customs
administrations have the right to “satisfy themselves as to the truth or accuracy of any
statement, document or declaration.” A “Decision Regarding Cases Where Customs
Administrations have Reasons to doubt The Truth or Accuracy of the Declared Value”
taken by the Committee on Customs Valuation pursuant to a Ministerial Decision at
Marrakesh spells out the procedures to be observed in such cases. As a first step,
customs may ask the importer to provide further explanation that the declared
value represents the total amount actually paid or payable for the imported
goods.
If the reasonable doubt still exists after reception of further information (or in absence of
a response), customs may decide that the value cannot be determined according to the
transaction value method. Before a final decision is taken, customs must communicate
its reasoning to the importer, who, in turn, must be given reasonable time to respond. In
addition, the reasoning of the final decision must be communicated to the importer in
writing.
— the same in all respects including physical characteristics, quality, and reputation;
For this method to be used, the goods must be sold for export to the same country of
importation as the goods being valued. The goods must also be exported at or about
the same time as the goods being valued.
Exceptions
Some exceptions are accepted, in particular:
— where there are no identical goods produced by the same person in the country of
production of the goods being valued, identical goods produced by a different person in
the same country may be taken into account.
— Minor differences in appearance would not preclude goods which otherwise conform
to the definitions from being regarded as identical.
The definition excludes imported goods, which incorporate engineering, artwork etc.,
provided by the buyer to the producer of goods free of charge or at a reduced cost,
undertaken in the country of importation for which no adjustment has been made under
Article 8.
— goods closely resembling the goods being valued in terms of component materials
and characteristics
— goods which are capable of performing the same functions and are commercially
interchangeable with the goods being valued
— goods which are produced in the same country as and by the producer of the goods
being valued. For this method to be used, the goods must be sold to the same country
of importation as the goods being valued. The goods must be exported at or about the
same time as the goods being valued.
— commissions usually paid or agreed to be paid, the sum of profits and general
expenses added in connection with sales must also be deducted;
— the usual transport costs and corresponding insurance are to be deducted from the
price of the goods when these costs are usually incurred within the country of
importation;
— the customs duties and other national taxes payable in the country of importation by
reason of the importation or sale of the goods are also to be deducted;
— the selling price of goods in the country of importation (i.e. the sale price of goods
manufactured in the importing country);
— a system which provides for the acceptance for customs purposes of the higher of
two alternative values (the lowest should be used);
— the price of goods on the domestic market of the country of exportation (valuation on
this basis would go against the principle in the Preamble that “valuation procedures
should not be used to combat dumping”);
— the cost of production other than computed values which have been determined for
identical or similar goods (valuation must be arrived at on the basis of data available in
the country of importation);
— the price of goods for export to a third country (two export markets are always to be
treated as separate and the price to one should not control the customs value in the
other);
— minimum customs value (unless a developing country has taken the exception which
allows for use of minimum values);
— arbitrary or fictitious values (these prohibitions are aimed at systems which do not
base their values on what happens in fact in the marketplace, as reflected in actual
prices, in actual sales, and in actual costs, reason of the importation or sale of the
goods are also to be deducted;
.