▲ | Scoundreller 2 days ago | |||||||
This is the issue for postal systems. In every country in the world, you could send a package by post and the receiving country’s customs will assess duty/taxes/admin fees and charge the recipient as the default procedure. As of later this week, the US will not do that procedure (or allegedly charge some absurd flat rate, like $50-$200 on even a $1 package). Sending postal systems don’t want to deal with the aftermath of rejected/refused packages. And it’s unknown if US Customs and US Postal Service is even capable of charging that flat rate anyway. | ||||||||
▲ | ViewTrick1002 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
In the EU a flat fee was introduced to deal with the workload and a system to send predeclared items. The difference is that it was communicated well in advance without any uncertainty. | ||||||||
|