The US Postal Service’s flip-flop on inbound international packages from China and Hong Kong is throwing Chinese retailers ...
A sweeping new U.S. tariff on products made in China is expected to increase the prices American consumers pay for a wide array of products, from the ultra-cheap apparel sold on online shopping ...
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Hosted on MSNUSPS accepts packages from China and Hong Kong after suspensionUSPS announced Wednesday it will continue to accept packages from China and Hong Kong, after suspending them late Tuesday.
The U.S. Postal Service is reversing course a day after it said it would not accept packages from China and Hong Kong. The ban came after the U.S. imposed an additional 10% tariff on Chinese goods.
Temu has onboarded more sellers with U.S. inventory in recent years as lawmakers have zeroed in on the de minimis exemption.
In a matter of hours, USPS suspended and then resumed accepting packages from China and Hong Kong after Trump's tariffs went ...
The trade loophole is meant to ease small-scale sales — but critics say it's been abused and gives Chinese firms an unfair ...
Many items shipped from China or Hong Kong are likely to get more expensive and take longer to arrive now that an exemption that allowed items under $800 to arrive duty-free and with minimal ...
The reversal reflects the challenge that shipping and delivery companies will face as a result of President Trump’s executive ...
The ban was implemented on Feb. 4 after President Donald Trump directed the United States to implement an additional 10% ...
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