IMPORTING NEWS & ARTICLES
Two of the highest taxed goods that enter Australia are tobacco and alcohol. Today the Sydney Morning Herald reported that 2 million packets of cigarettes disappeared from a Customs warehouse [also known in the industry as a Section 79] in 2018.
Over the years more and more shipments are sold on an informal Delivered At Place [DAP] basis. The importer makes contact with overseas suppliers who in-turn offer a one-stop packaged price; a door-to-door price which in real terms is referred to by Incoterms 2020 as DAP.
Further to my piece from 19 October, nothing has changed in regards to entry processing with the Department of Agriculture [Quarantine]. The dire situation has gone from worse to worse; without sounding like an alarmist, the situation is absolutely horrendous.
Yes, I will show my age in this opinion piece [or maybe I will show my 23 years of experience], in the “olden days” we could take our Quarantine files to a Quarantine office, take a ticket, wait to be called and then sit in front of a Quarantine officer and have all of our entries processed.
In Australia the Customs Act 1901 does not require a Licensed Customs Broker [LCB] to submit an Export Declaration Number [EDN] to the Australian Border Force [ABF]. An EDN is required for (1) goods that are exported from Australia which are over $2000 AUD, (2) goods that are covered by an export permit or (3) for goods that will require a drawback of import duty. An EDN can be submitted to the ABF in less than a few minutes but can be audited by the ABF from the moment of submission and for the next five [5] years.
Australia’s major container ports in most cases have been leased for a lifetime; Melbourne, Port Botany, Brisbane, Darwin, Adelaide have all been leased for 99 years, Newcastle has been leased for 98 years and Fremantle has recently renewed leases only for a further 10 years. State governments generally tend to sell their ports to reduce their state’s debt. There was a time where ports were thought of as being part of a nation’s national security. The last major Australian mainland container port which has not been sold for a lifetime is Fremantle. The Tasmanian Government still owns all of their ports.