From January to November of last year the United States imported over $400 billion in goods from China alone. The largest chunk of those imports are in the form of computer and digital equipment ...
Trump's executive order took aim at a little-known trade rule called "de minimis." Merchandise with ... it as a loophole that allows cheap Chinese products to flood into the U.S. and undercut ...
A collective of US entities, known as the Coalition to Close the De Minimis Loophole, has reached out to US President Donald ...
In early February, Trump announced that he would simultaneously impose tariffs on Mexican, Canadian, and Chinese products and end the de minimis exemption, which allowed retailers to import goods ...
The de minimis exemption will temporarily remain in place for products from Canada and Mexico even when U.S. tariffs on those countries take effect Tuesday. The exemption, which allows U.S ...
The de minimis exemption is back in play for products from China — for now. The exemption will end for such products once the Secretary of Commerce notifies Trump "that adequate systems are in ...
The Trump administration on Friday delayed the suspension of the so-called de minimis provision ... restrictions and tax exemptions on cheap products have allowed more than a billion packages ...
Rep. Linda Sánchez on Tuesday introduced legislation to close the de minimus loophole that allows the duty-free importation of packages valued at under $800.
The exemption will remain even with new tariffs set to take effect Tuesday as the White House pursues better methods to collect duties from low-cost goods.