[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 2]

[Revised as of April 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR152.105]



[Page 213-215]

 

                        TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

 

   CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF 

        HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 152_CLASSIFICATION AND APPRAISEMENT OF MERCHANDISE--Table of Contents

 

                   Subpart E_Valuation of Merchandise

 

Sec.  152.105  Deductive value.



    (a) Merchandise concerned. For the purposes of deductive value, 

``merchandise concerned'' means the merchandise being appraised, 

identical merchandise, or similar merchandise.

    (b) Merchandise of the same class or kind. For the purposes of 

deductive value, ``merchandise of the same class or kind'' includes 

merchandise imported from the same country as well as other countries as 

the merchandise being appraised.

    (c) Prices. The deductive value of the merchandise being appraised 

is whichever of the following prices (as adjusted under paragraph (d) of 

this section) is appropriate depending upon when and in what condition 

the merchandise concerned is sold in the United States:

    (1) If the merchandise concerned is sold in the condition as 

imported at or about the date of importation of the merchandise being 

appraised, the price is the unit price at which the merchandise 

concerned is sold in the greatest aggregate quantity at or about such 

date.

    (2) If the merchandise concerned is sold in the condition as 

imported but not sold at or about the date of importation of the 

merchandise being appraised, the price is the unit price at which the 

merchandise concerned is



[[Page 214]]



sold in the greatest aggregate quantity after the date of importation of 

the merchandise being appraised but before the close of the 90th day 

after the date of such importation.

    (3) If the merchandise concerned was not sold in the condition as 

imported and not sold before the close of the 90th day after the date of 

importation of the merchandise being appraised, the price is the unit 

price at which the merchandise being appraised, after further 

processing, is sold in the greatest aggregate quantity before the 180th 

day after the date of such importation. This provision will apply to 

appraisement of merchandise only if the importer so elects at the time 

of filing the entry summary.

    (d) Deductions from price. The price determined under paragraph (c) 

of this section will be reduced by an amount equal to:

    (1) Any commission usually paid or agreed to be paid, or the 

addition usually made for profit and general expenses, in connection 

with sales in the United States of imported merchandise that is of the 

same class or kind, regardless of the country of exportation, as the 

merchandise concerned;

    (2) The actual costs and associated costs of transportation and 

insurance incurred with respect to international shipments of the 

merchandise concerned from the country of exportation to the United 

States;

    (3) The usual costs and associated costs of transportation and 

insurance incurred with respect to shipments of the merchandise 

concerned from the place of importation to the place of delivery in the 

United States, if those costs are not included as a general expense 

under paragraph (d)(1) of this section;

    (4) The customs duties and other Federal taxes currently payable on 

the merchandise concerned by reason of its importation, and any Federal 

excise tax on, or measured by the value of, the merchandise for which 

vendors in the United States ordinarily are liable; and

    (5) But only in the case of price determined under paragraph (c)(3) 

of this section, the value added by the processing of the merchandise 

after importation to the extent that the value is based on sufficient 

information relating to the cost of that processing.

    (e) Profit and general expenses; special rules. (1) The deduction 

made for profit and general expenses (taken as a whole) will be based 

upon the importer's profit and general expenses, unless the profit and 

general expenses are inconsistent with those reflected in sales in the 

United States of imported merchandise of the same class or kind from all 

countries, in which case the deduction will be based on the usual profit 

and general expenses reflected in those sales, as determined from 

sufficient information. Any State or local tax imposed on the importer 

with respect to the sale of imported merchandise will be treated as a 

general expense.

    (2) In determining deductions for commissions and usual profit and 

general expenses, sales in the United States of the narrowest group or 

range of imported merchandise of the same class or kind, including the 

merchandise being appraised, for which sufficient information can be 

provided, will be examined.

    (f) Packing costs. The price determined under paragraph (c) of this 

section will be increased, but only to the extent that the costs are not 

otherwise included, by an amount equal to the packing costs incurred by 

the importer or the buyer with respect to the merchandise concerned.

    (g) Assists. For purposes of determining deductive value, any sale 

to a person who supplies any assist for use in connection with the 

production or sale for export of the merchandise concerned will be 

disregarded.

    (h) Unit price in greatest aggregate quantity. The unit price will 

be established after a sufficient number of units have been sold to an 

unrelated person. The unit price to be used when the units have been 

sold in different quantities will be that at which the total volume sold 

is greater than the total volume sold at any other unit price.

    (1) Interpretative note 1. Merchandise is sold to an unrelated 

person from a price list which grants favorable unit prices for 

purchases made in larger quantities:



[[Page 215]]







------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                  Total

                                                                quantity

          Sale quantity             Unit     Number of sales     sold at

                                   price                          each

                                                                  price

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1-10 units......................     $100  10 sales of 5 units        65

                                  .......  5 sales of 3 units.

11-25 units.....................       95  5 sales of 11 units        55

Over 25 units...................       90  1 sale of 30 units.        80

                                  .......  1 sale of 50 units.  ........

------------------------------------------------------------------------





The greatest number of units sold at a price is 80; therefore, the unit 

price in the greatest aggregate quantity is $90.

    (2) Interpretative note 2. Two sales to unrelated persons occur: in 

the first sale, 500 units are sold at a price of $95 each; in the second 

sale, 400 units are sold at a price of $90 each. In this example, the 

greatest number of units sold at a particular price is 500; therefore, 

the unit price in the greatest aggregate quantity is $95.

    (3) Interpretative note 3. Various quantities are sold to unrelated 

persons at various prices:



                                (i) Sales

------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                  Unit

                        Sale quantity                            price

------------------------------------------------------------------------

40 units.....................................................       $100

30 units.....................................................         90

15 units.....................................................        100

50 units.....................................................         95

25 units.....................................................        105

35 units.....................................................         90

5 units......................................................        100

------------------------------------------------------------------------





                               (ii) Totals

------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                  Unit

                     Total quantity sold                         price

------------------------------------------------------------------------

65...........................................................        $90

50...........................................................         95

60...........................................................        100

25...........................................................        105

------------------------------------------------------------------------





In this example, the greatest number of units sold at a particular price 

is 65; therefore, the unit price in the greatest aggregate quantity is 

$90.

    (i) Further processing--(1) Quantified data. If merchandise has 

undergone further processing after its importation into the United 

States and the importer elects the method specified in paragraph (c)(3) 

of this section, deductions made for the value added by that processing 

will be based on objective and quantifiable data relating to the cost of 

the work performed. Accepted industry formulas, recipes, methods of 

construction, and other industry practices would form the basis for the 

deduction. That deduction also will reflect amounts for spoilage, waste, 

or scrap derived from the further processing.

    (2) Loss of identity. If the imported merchandise loses its identity 

as a result of further processing, the method specified in paragraph 

(c)(3) of this section will not be applicable unless the value added by 

the processing can be determined accurately without unreasonable 

difficulty for either importers or Customs. If the imported merchandise 

maintains its identity but forms a minor element of the merchandise sold 

in the United States, the use of paragraph (c)(3) of this section will 

be unjustified. The port director shall review each case involving these 

issues on its merits.



    Example. A foreign shipper sells merchandise to a related U.S. 

importer. The foreign shipper does not sell to any unrelated person. The 

transaction between the foreign shipper and the U.S. importer is 

determined to have been affected by the relationship. There is no 

identical or similar merchandise from the same country of production. 

The U.S. importer further processes the product and sells the finished 

product to an unrelated buyer in the U.S. within 180 days of the date of 

importation. No assists from the unrelated U.S. buyer are involved, and 

the type of processing involved can be accurately costed.

    How should the merchandise be appraised?

    The merchandise should be appraised under deductive value with 

allowances for profit and general expenses, freight and insurance, 

duties and taxes, and the cost of processing.



[T.D. 81-7, 46 FR 2600, Jan. 12, 1981, as amended by T.D. 85-123, 50 FR 

29956, July 23, 1985]