Export Compliance Daily is a Warren News publication.

Tough to Say in ‘Uncharted Territory’ What Tariff Exemptions USTR Will Grant, Customs Lawyer Says

It’s impossible to forecast how many product-specific exemptions to the Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative will grant “because we’re in uncharted territory,” David Cohen, a trade expert with Sandler Travis, told a Sports & Fitness Industry Association webinar Oct. 11. With Tuesday’s deadline having lapsed for requesting exemptions to the first round of tariffs that took effect July 6, USTR denied 108 requests of the more than 10,000 filed and has yet to grant a single exemption, Cohen said.

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.

Requests for exemptions are due Dec. 18 on the second tranche of tariffs that took effect Aug. 23, he said. USTR has announced no process for requesting exemptions on the third tranche that took effect Sept. 24, and there’s talk the administration may wait to do so until after Jan. 1 when the duties are scheduled to rise to 25 percent from 10 percent, he said. “It is unclear yet whether and how many” exemptions USTR “will permit,” Cohen said. “I am optimistic that there will be some, at a minimum.”

His “cynical view” is there will need to be “some that they approve, because if they approve zero, they will be sharply criticized as having this entire system be nothing more than a sham,” he said. Cohen’s firm has “advocated” for exemptions “on many fronts,” including for companies that source products from China through “a wholly foreign-owned enterprise,” he said. “In many cases, companies have invested brick and mortar on the ground in China, and for them to lift up and pick up stakes and invest in new brick and mortar in a third country is enormously cost-prohibitive.”