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Foreign-Trade Zone No. 120 is located
within Cowlitz County. A Foreign-Trade Zone is a specially designated
area, in or adjacent to a U.S. Customs Port of Entry, which is considered
to be outside the Customs Territory or Commerce of the U.S.
Cowlitz EDC is Grantee for Foreign-Trade Zone No. 120, which is
available to all sites within Cowlitz County. Currently sites located
at the Port of Longview are activated and approved for zone activity.
"Why Companies use Foreign-Trade Zones"
- Foreign-Trade Zone Resource Center
All of the benefits the Foreign-Trade Zones program can offer manufacturers
and processors located in the United States are too numerous to
list here. But, there are few main benefits that account for most
of the companies that use the Zones program. Those benefits are
listed below:
- Relief from inverted tariffs-In certain instances, there are
tariff (import duty) relationships that actually penalize companies
for making their product in the United States. This occurs when
a component item or raw material carries a higher duty rate than
the finished product. Hence, the importer of the finished product
pays a lower duty rate than a manufacturer of the same product
in the United States. This gives the importer an unfair and unintended
advantage over the domestic manufacturer. The Foreign-Trade Zones
program levels the playing field in these circumstances.
FOR EXAMPLE: A Foreign-Trade Zone
user imports a motor (which carries a 4% duty rate) and uses it
in the manufacture of a vacuum cleaner (which is free of duty).
When the vacuum cleaner leaves the FTZ and enters the commerce of
the U.S., the duty rate on the motor drops from the 4% motor rate
to the free vacuum cleaner rate. By participating in the Zones program,
the vacuum cleaner manufacturer has virtually eliminated duty on
this component, and therefore reduced the component cost by 4%.
- Duty exemption on re-exports-Without a zone, if a manufacturer
or processor imports a component or raw material into the United
States, it is required to pay the import tax (duty) at the time
the component or raw material enters the country. However, a Foreign-Trade
Zone is considered to be outside the commerce of the United States
and the U.S. Customs territory. So, when foreign merchandise is
brought into a Foreign-Trade Zone, no Customs duty is owed until
the merchandise leaves the zone and enters the commerce of the
United States. Only then is the merchandise considered imported
and the duty paid. If the imported merchandise is exported back
out of the country, no Customs duty is ever due.
- Duty elimination on waste, scrap, and yield loss-Again, without
a zone, an importer pays the Customs duty owed as material is
brought into the United States. This is because the material is
considered imported at this point. If the processor or manufacturer
is conducting its operations within a zone environment, the merchandise
is not considered imported, and therefore no duty is owed until
it leaves the zone for shipment into the United States. To demonstrate
how this would benefit a company that has scrap, waste, or yield
loss from an imported component, lets look at a chemical processing
plant.
FOR EXAMPLE: A chemical plant manufacturing
hydroxywidgitpropolyne, which carries a 15% duty rate, uses the
raw material oxyovertaxophene, which also carries a 15% duty rate,
for one of its raw materials. Part of the production process consists
of bringing the imported oxyovertaxophene to extreme temperatures.
During this process 30% of the oxyovertaxophene is lost as heat.
If a processing company not in the Zones program imports $10,000,000
per year of oxyovertaxophene, it will pay $1,500,000 in duty as
the raw material enters the United States.
If the same company utilizes the zones program, it does not pay
duty on the oxyovertaxophene until it leaves the zone and is imported
into the United States. The zone user brings the oxyovertaxophene
into the zone with no duty owed. It then processes the oxyovertaxophene
into hydroxywidgitpropolyne. Remember, during this process 30% of
the raw material is lost due to waste factors, so the $10,000,000
in oxyovertaxophene is now worth only $7,000,000. Assuming all of
the end product is sold into the United States, the 15% Customs
duty totals only $1,050,000. This represents a savings of $450,000.
While at first glance it might look like the Zones program is simply
benefiting an importer, it is important to remember that its competitors
making the same product overseas already have the benefit of not
having to pay on the yield loss in the production of their hydroxywidgitpropolyne.
- Weekly Entry Savings-On May 18, 2000 the Trade and Development
Act of 2000 was passed and signed by President Clinton. This Act
had a provision in it that allowed the use of the Weekly Entry
procedure for all manufacturing and distribution Foreign-Trade
Zones.
Weekly Entry (allowed only to Foreign-Trade Zone users) provides
economies for both Customs and Foreign-Trade Zone users. Under Weekly
Entry procedures, the zone user files only one Customs Entry per
week, rather than filing one Customs Entry per shipment. Customs
no longer has to process an entry for each and every shipment being
imported into the zone, and the Foreign-Trade Zone community no
longer has to pay for the processing of each and every entry.
Companies located outside Foreign-Trade Zones pay a .21% merchandise
processing for each and every formal entry processed by U.S. Customs.
There is a minimum $25 processing and a maximum $485 processing
fee per Entry, regardless of the duty rate on the imported merchandise.
The maximum processing fee is reached for Entries (shipments) with
a value over $230,952. Companies often receive many shipments over
this amount.
FOR EXAMPLE: 10 shipments per week,
each with a value of over $230,952, would amount to a merchandise
processing fee of $4,850 ($485 x 10) per week. If this number is
annualized the amount is $252,200 (52 x $4,850) per year.
Companies in a Foreign-Trade Zone may take advantage of the Weekly
Entry procedure. In the case of the above example, Weekly Entry
would provide for one Entry per week. For example: the 10 ($230,952)
shipments per week would be filed as a single shipment of $2,309,520
each week. The merchandise processing fee would amount to the maximum
of $485 total for the week. If this fee is annualized utilizing
Weekly Entry it is a total of only $25,220 yearly. In this example
Weekly Entry provides a savings of $226,980 per year. Each company's
savings could be significantly more or less depending on the number
of shipments received during the year. A graphic example of Weekly
Entry savings is shown below.


- Duty Deferral-Again, since Foreign-Trade Zones are outside the
Customs territory of the United States, goods are not imported
until they leave the zone. Therefore, Customs duty is deferred
until merchandise is imported from a Foreign-Trade Zone into the
United States. So, instead of companies having substantial monies
tied up in Customs duties on their inventory, they have use of
that money for other purposes.
There are many other substantial benefits that the Zones program
has to offer manufacturers and distributors in the United States,
but the benefits listed are the key benefits that attract most companies
to the Zones program. More and more companies look globally when
deciding to locate or expand a new manufacturing or processing facility.
When these companies make these location and expansion decisions,
they do take into account all costs of manufacturing in a certain
country. Unfortunately, there are unintended import tax penalties
for many companies located in, or considering locating in, the United
States. The Foreign-Trade Zones program plays an important role
in providing a level playing field when investment and production
decisions are made. While the U.S. government might incur a reduction
in Customs duty revenue by the use of the Zones program, it more
than makes up for it by the income tax it gains from the jobs created
or retained. In addition, local governments benefit from sales and
property taxes.
The Foreign-Trade Zones program has proven to be a successful trade
program by consistently creating and retaining jobs and capital
investment in the United States.
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