In This Article:
(Bloomberg) -- The latest casualty of President Donald Trump’s trade war? One-dollar yoga pants.
Trump’s order that the U.S. Postal Service withdraw from an obscure 192-nation postal treaty threatens to hit American shoppers who have grown used to bargains on platforms such as EBay Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.
Because of the postal treaty, shipping the goods directly to consumers was relatively affordable. When the U.S. pulls out, thousands of listings from China-based companies hawking dirt-cheap consumer goods will likely disappear.
The treaty sets fees that national postal services charge to deliver mail and small packages from other countries, and gives poor and developing markets lower shipping rates than developed nations. The agreement -- and another one that China and the U.S. signed in 2011 -- has essentially given Chinese merchants a $170 million annual subsidy to ship products directly to American homes.
“Chinese sellers on EBay and other platforms may disappear, or at the very least they will not find it so easy to sell to Americans anymore,” said Gary Huang, chairman of the supply chain committee for the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai. “This has been a big advantage for them for many years and how they’ve beat out the American seller on their own turf.”
$1 Yoga Pants
The postal loophole can be seen in the shipping options offered by Chinese EBay sellers and others on major e-commerce portals.
On Thursday, hundreds of EBay sellers from China advertised women’s workout leggings, including ones for little as 76 cents that could be purchased instantly. The seller, China-based Webstainless, has racked up more than 21,680 positive reviews from buyers in the last 12 months, according to the e-commerce site. Webstainless offers free shipping to the U.S.
On AliExpress, Internet giant Alibaba’s e-commerce portal for international buyers, shipping is free if a pair of $10.29 yoga pants are transported via ePacket, the name of the subsidized service by the U.S. Postal Service. Other shipping options from companies like FedEx Corp., United Parcel Service Inc. or DHL Worldwide Express range from $40 to $60, raising the cost of the cheap pants so much that a buyer might as well get them from a store or seller in the U.S.
Trump’s directive to eliminate the postal discounts could potentially raise costs for Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., while helping FedEx and other international shipping companies.
Any changes to international postal rates potentially disrupts cross-border e-commerce, the sale of goods from a retailer in one country directly to consumers in another. That business, enabled by platforms such as Amazon, EBay and Alibaba, is expected to reach $1 trillion by 2020.