Benefits under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) mostly won't apply to goods subject to recently implemented tariffs on solar panels, washing machines, aluminum and steel, said CBP in on its website. President Donald Trump imposed new Section 201 safeguard tariffs on imports of large residential washers and solar cells and modules in January and Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum in March.
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CBP issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
Filers of entries eligible for the Generalized System of Preferences may resume filing without payment of estimated duties beginning on the April 22 effective date of recent GSP renewal legislation (see 1803230028), CBP said in a notice in the Federal Register mirroring its earlier guidance on the topic (see 1804040031). CBP will on that date begin automatically processing refunds for GSP entries filed during the lapse period of Jan. 1, 2018, through April 21, 2018, that included Special Program Indicator (SPI) “A,” it said. “CBP will not automatically process GSP duty refunds for formal covered entries that were not filed electronically via ABI, nor for formal and informal covered entries that were filed electronically via ABI with payment of estimated duties, but without inclusion of the SPI Code ‘A’ as a prefix to the listed tariff number. In both situations, requests for liquidation or reliquidation of covered entries must be made no later than September 19, 2018,” the agency said. “To avoid confusion, importers should not submit post-importation GSP claims on tariff items filed with the SPI ‘A’ at entry summary,” it said.
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India's eligibility for the Generalized System of Preferences is being evaluated after petitions from American dairy interests and medical device manufacturers who complained about Indian trade policies on those products. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which announced the review of three countries on April 12, had mentioned India's pricing controls on knee replacements and stents as a trade irritant in its annual trade report (see 1803300022). The two interest groups have been asking for India's removal from GSP since October 2017 (see 1710190022). India is the top beneficiary of GSP, accounting for $5.6 billion of the program's $21.1 billion in imports last year, according to USTR.
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CBP plans to begin issuing refunds on duties paid on Generalized System of Preferences qualifying goods while the program was lapsed "shortly after" April 22, the agency said on its website. President Donald Trump signed GSP renewal into law on March 23 (see 1803230028) and it will take effect on April 22, the U.S. Trade Representative said. Importers must file refund requests by Sept. 19, USTR said.
Parties that wish to add to or remove products from the Generalized System of Preferences, change the GSP status of beneficiary countries, waive competitive need limitations, or oppose de minimis waivers must file their petitions with the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative by midnight on April 16, the agency said in a notice. If an importer is interested in retaining GSP status for a product on the de minimis list -- a product for which total imports from all countries did not exceed $23.5 million in 2017 -- the importer does not need to make a request for a waiver. However, parties that wish to contest a de minimis waiver should do so at regulations.gov.
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