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Refunds are actually common in the customs world. For instance, if a company accidentally pays too much in tariffs, it can ask Customs and Border Protection to give that money back. “You have to provide the evidence that maybe you filed under the wrong code, and you feel like you’re owed a refund,” said Ryan Petersen, the CEO of Flexport, a supply chain management firm that helps companies request tariff refunds. Petersen said the process normally takes six to nine months.
“It’ll depend on how good your case is, and if your paperwork is clear, if they sort of ask follow-up questions, and push on it, and stuff like that,” Petersen said. So, if the government has to repay $90 billion worth of tariffs? The backlog could pile up.
“So, I think that the most likely approach would be like, alright, well there’s a legal process for this. Everyone get your receipts, find our forms, file the forms, dot all the Is, cross all the Ts,” said Rachel Brewster, a professor at Duke Law School. Brewster said that takes time and resources. “And you could imagine that for some small businesses who are really being hurt by the tariffs
, the idea of hiring the lawyers or the accountants to put together the records to get that money back, might simply not be a cost-benefit proposition,” said Brewster. |