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CUSTOMS


'Customs' is an authority or agency in a country responsible for collecting customs duties and for controlling the flow of animals and goods (including personal effects and hazardous items) in and out of a country. Depending on local legislation and regulations, the import or export of some goods may be restricted or forbidden, and the customs agency enforces these rules. The customs agency may be different from the immigration authority, which monitors persons who leave or enter the country, checking for appropriate documentation, apprehending people wanted by international search warrants, and impeding the entry of others deemed dangerous to the country.
A customs duty is a tariff or tax on the import of or export of goods. In England, customs duties were traditionally part of the ''customary revenue'' of the king, and therefore did not need parliamentary consent to be levied, unlike excise duties, land tax, or other impositions.
Commercial goods not yet cleared through customs are held in a customs area until processed.

Contents
Red and Green Channels
See also
General
Customs Service by Country
References
External links

Red and Green Channels


Customs for arriving passengers at many international airports, and some road crossings, are separated into Red and Green Channels.[1][2] Passengers with goods to declare (carrying items above the permitted customs limits and/or carrying prohibited items) should go through the 'Red Channel'. Passengers with nothing to declare (carrying goods within the customs limits only and not carrying prohibited items) can go through the 'Green Channel'. Passengers going through the Green Channel are only subject to spot checks and save time. But, if a passenger going through the Green Channel is found to have goods above the customs limits on them or carrying prohibited items, they may be prosecuted for making a false declaration to customs, by virtue of having gone through the Green Channel.
Airports within the EU also have a 'Blue Channel'.[3] As the EU is a customs union, travellers between EU countries do not have to pay customs duties, so long as the goods they are carrying are for personal use only (will not be sold). Passengers arriving from other EU countries should go through the Blue Channel. Luggage tickets for checked in luggage within the EU are green-edged so they may be identified.[4][5]

See also


General


Advance Passenger Information System

Bonded warehouse

Border

Border control

Customs area

Carnet de Passage

Corporate governance

Customary international law

Custom (law)

Customs and Economic Union of Central Africa

Customs and Excise

Customs broking

Customs union

Customs war

Directorate-General for Taxation and Customs Union (EU)

Duty (economics)

Effective rate of protection

Government

Harmonized System

List of international trade topics

Norman law

Russian Customs Tariff

Southern African Customs Union

U.S. Customs and Border Protection

World Customs Organization

Her Majesty's Customs and Excise

Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs
Customs Service by Country


Australian Customs Service

Chinese Maritime Customs Service

Federal Customs Service of Russia

New Zealand Customs Service

United States Customs Service

References


1. http://app.ica.gov.sg/travellers/entry/dual_channel.asp
2. http://www.toll.no/upload/Dokumenter/brosjyrer_veiledere/Reisende_ENG.pdf
3. http://www.revenue.ie/leaflets/pn1878.pdf
4. http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/customs/customs_controls/baggage_controls/index_en.htm#exit
5. http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/resources/images/etiquette_verte.gif

External links



World Customs Organisation

Australian Harmonized System 2007

Indian Harmonized System 2007

Indian Import Duty

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