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- Introduction
- Customs Administration of The Netherlands (CAN)
- Challenge of Customs
- Trade Facilitation & Trade Compliance
- Experiences from The Netherlands
Introduction
- Guusta Visser
- Customs Attaché, Customs attache Customs Administration of The Netherlands (CAN)
- Customs officer for over 20 years
- +65 8499 3195
Organisation Chart
Ministry of Finance
Secretary General
Directorate-General for Tax, Customs Policy,
Legislation
Directorate-General for the
Tax and Customs Administration
Tax Administration
Customs Administration
Fiscal Information and Investigation Service
Directorate-General of the
BudgetTreasury
Secretary-General Cluster
European Union = Customs Union
European Union
28 Member States24 official languages
28 Customs Administrations One Customs Union
Customs Union
- No internal borders
- Free movement of goods
- No internal customs controls or customs duties
- Import and export of goods across the external borders is subject to one EU legislation
- One "Common Customs Tariff", integrating all tariff related measures
- One set of EU rules for tariff classification
Customs
Customs is the enforcement authority that is responsible for the supervision of the EU external cross-border trade.
Customs deals with levying and collecting duties for the EU, national excises and consumption taxes, and is responsible for the enforcement in this field.
Some figures in declarations
Number of declarations
Import 164.726.388
Export 14.483.059
Incoming couriers 6.429.525
Outgoing couriers 5.441.127
Entry 8.412.178
Exit 20.896.103
Transit 2.971.658
Increasing flow of goods
- Flow of goods is vital to our economic growth and the flow will increase the coming years, because of:
- Brexit
- New legislation, UCC
- eCommerce
- Inbound, outbound and transit of goods subject to inspections and enforcement
Challenge for Customs
- Supervise all cross-border movements of goods
AND
- Enforce all national and international laws
WHILST
- Restricting hold-ups, hassle and bureaucratic interventions to an absolute minimum
Trade Facilitation & Trade Compliance
- Trade Facilitation: responsibility of governments
The process simplifications, modernization and harmonization of
export and import processes. How can procedures and controls be improved to reduce associated business cost and burdens to maximize efficiency and at the same time safeguarding laws and regulation.
- Trade Compliance: responsibility of trade
Companies comply with all laws and regulation of the countries that
goods are shipped to and with all internal company policies & logistic procedures. To reduce direct and indirect logistical cost.
Both: strong emphasis on simplification, harmonization, reduction of burdens and costs
Trade Facilitation & Trade Compliance
- Regular Customs-Business Consultations
- Three innovation-paths to break with the old way of thinking and acting:
- System Based Control
- Coordinated Border Management
- Pushing Controls Out the Border
Project Royal FloraHolland
- Data pipeline, interconnected source systems
- Potential benefits for business:
- Quality of the data
- Increasing visibility
- More predictability
- Status information
Experiences from the Netherlands
Coordinated Border Management:
- Single Window
a system that allows traders to lodge information with a single
body to fulfil ALL import and export related regulatory.
submission of data is a one-time transaction, 1 MIG!!!
- One Stop Shop
Coordination, optimization and interlinking of controls
Air side: Joint Inspection Center
Maritime side: State Inspection Center
Succesfactoren
Commitment Financiering Governance
StatusinformatieSupd@x
Da
ta
Single Window
Maritime
Air
Rail
InlandShipping
Road
Pipeline
Lange termijn ontwikkelingen Cassandra Data Pipe Line Extended Gate Concept informatie recherche Migratie OTP
Overheden
Transport
Safety and Security
Customs
Food Safety
Health
Environment/Inspection
Systemen
SPOC NL
API 3
DMF
VGC
EU
DG TAXUD DG MOVE DG SANCO
Richtlijn 2010/65 Maritiem SW
CORE
Gezamenlijktoezichtproces
On
e St
op
Sh
op
Inte
llige
nce