De minimis overhaul will start before next president: former Biden official
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address during a joint meeting of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol on March 7, 2024, in Washington, DC. · Supply Chain Dive · Chip Somodevilla / Staff via Getty Images

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The regulatory process to overhaul the de minimis exemption will commence before either Kamala Harris or Donald Trump take over as president, a former White House supply chain official said Friday.

Speaking on a Cart.com webinar, Tim Manning, former White House COVID-19 supply coordinator in the Biden-Harris administration, said he is "100% confident" the administration will issue a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on the matter soon. The notice, or NPRM, is a document detailing an agency's plan for a particular problem or goal before being implemented as a final rule.

"I can't see a world where it happens before the election, but I would expect it's very likely to see an NPRM sometime through late November, maybe early December," Manning said.

Through the plan announced in September, the Biden-Harris administration wants to limit the types of products that can be shipped via de minimis, which exempts shipments of less than $800 from import duties and taxes. Goods the White House is targeting include those covered by Section 201, 232 and 301 tariffs, which would hike costs for companies reliant on low-cost shipping between the U.S. and China.

With Election Day on Tuesday and the next president slated to take office on Jan. 20, it's unlikely for the final rule on the de minimis changes to be issued before the end of the Biden-Harris administration, Manning said. The rule must clear several regulatory hurdles after the notice is issued.

Once the NPRM is published, a comment period of 30 to 60 days is provided for the general public to weigh in on the proposed rule. Assuming no comments led to significant changes in the proposal, the president and the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs may review the draft of the final rule before it's published and implemented.

"There's really no knowing what either President Harris or President Trump would do with a proposed final rule once it gets through all of that," Manning said.

While the rulemaking process is likely to stretch into the early days of the next administration, Manning said there was still enough time for the current White House to issue a final rule before the next president takes over. However, it would require an aggressive timeline with an NPRM published by mid-November.

The Biden-Harris administration's goals could be advanced quicker if Congress passes de minimis reform legislation, which the White House encouraged when it announced its plan in September, Manning noted.