Monday, May 20, 2013

Cross-border shoppers plan bigger hauls

OTTAWA—Canadians are in a U.S. shopping state of mind this summer thanks to changes in regulations that allow them to buy more without paying duty, a new survey suggests.
The Canadian Press-Harris Decima poll on relaxed cross-border shopping limits that went into effect June 1 found a large majority in favour of the changes—and 54 percent of those planning a trip stateside said they intended to spend more.

Additionally, four in 10 said they were likely to purchase more duty-free goods.
The telephone survey of 1,000 was conducted between June 14 and 18 and is considered accurate plus or minus 3.2 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
As outlined in the March budget, the duty-free threshold on stays longer than 24 hours rose to $200 from $50 beginning this month.
The limit on stays longer than 48 hours increased to $800 from the current two-tiered levels of $400 and $750, depending on the length of stay.
In the poll, seven in 10 Canadians said they supported the higher duty-free limits, and eight of 10 of vacationers to the U.S. backed the changes.
“The potential number of Canadians travelling to the U.S. this summer is over four million,” said Patricia Thacker, Harris Decima’s vice-president of travel and leisure.
“With 54 percent likely to purchase more under the new duty-free limits, that’s over two million Canadians spending more in the U.S. this summer alone.”
The changes have been criticized by the Retail Council of Canada as just one more blow to merchants who cope with higher costs and must compete with U.S. competitors that often get a better deal from suppliers.
With the new rules in place for a little more than three weeks, it is still too early to determine if Canadians have stepped up their shopping habits, said Karen Proud of the Retail Council.
But she believes there will be an impact on retailers.
“We’ve seen increases in cross-border shopping ever since the loonie gained parity,” she said. “There’s been an increase of Canadians shopping in the U.S. and a decrease in Americans coming across the border to shop here.
“The (higher limits are) just added incentive.”
Proud said Ottawa erred in enacting the duty-free changes, which now match those in the U.S., in isolation of other measures to help Canadian retailers compete, including reducing tariffs and tackling the supply management system that protects dairy and poultry farmers in Canada.
A comparison study published by the Bank of Montreal in April found that despite the near-parity of the Canadian and U.S. dollars in most months since 2007, consumer items are still on average 14 percent more expensive in Canada, and that is before the HST tax is added. Some surveys have found a bigger gap.
The report estimated that Canadian store owners lose about $20 billion a year to cross-border shopping, although with many shoppers not reporting purchases, the exact worth of cross-border shopping is difficult to calculate.

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