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Old 01-28-2014, 03:52 PM   #31
Nugundam2.0
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

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Originally Posted by UltraMarknus View Post
These are the kind of things that have made eBay my destination for cheap stuff from China, only. elastic bands for my daughter, nail caps for my cats, cheapo iphone cases, etc. That is about it. And selling...they are taking 10% plus the PayPal %. Its sickening.

Yeah I found Kijiji and Craigs works better for me as of late. Plus Im getting tired of troglodyte Fatmerican Simians
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Old 01-28-2014, 04:17 PM   #32
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

Pitney Bowes is also evil that is the partner in this evil trifecta
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Old 01-28-2014, 04:49 PM   #33
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

I never bothered with American sellers as even without the import charge shipping was always way too much for collectables.

I only use ebay to get cheap stuff from china.
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Old 01-28-2014, 05:49 PM   #34
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

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I don't agree with that part about negative feedback automatically being removed. If the item gets damaged during the trip from Pitney Bowes in Kentucky to the buyer, obviously it's PB's fault and the seller should not be negged because of that, especially given that PB repackages the items..."
I wasn't aware that the items were repackaged when they arrive in Kentucky. I'm not doubting this in any way but I guess I don't understand why they would be doing that. Any ideas?
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Old 01-28-2014, 06:04 PM   #35
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

Kijiji owned by Ebay,... the brokerage fees are whats behind all this extra cash grab by ebay.... and off topic ever notice how many people selling on Ebay.ca (canadaians site) are 90% americans where the hell are all the canadian sellers .....anyone?
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Old 01-28-2014, 06:58 PM   #36
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

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Originally Posted by justprime View Post
Kijiji owned by Ebay,... the brokerage fees are whats behind all this extra cash grab by ebay.... and off topic ever notice how many people selling on Ebay.ca (canadaians site) are 90% americans where the hell are all the canadian sellers .....anyone?
Best thing to do is narrow the search by selecting only items located in Canada.
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Old 01-28-2014, 07:15 PM   #37
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

i dont really get the import fees??? thou ebay has been a help with items im sellin but this really sucks....
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Old 01-28-2014, 08:14 PM   #38
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

The least I can say is that this GSP is discouraging... I can't see how it could be bad for our Canadian sellers though. I'll be more than happy to give my money to a Canadian seller. Unfortunately, the wallet has always the last word. We'll see and hunt!
Thanks for reading me.
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Old 01-29-2014, 12:12 AM   #39
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

Canadians like being reamed
MMMmmmm

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Having lived for so long in the savagely competitive American marketplace, I'm always amazed when I return to Canada at how some of my more bovine fellow citizens are willing to rationalize being milked.
Whenever the discussion drifts to how just about everything in Canada costs more than it does across the nearby American border, some trusting soul pipes up with something like: "Well, that's just the price we pay for our health-care system."
Or: "If that's what it costs to have a more caring society, then I'm willing to pay it."
Even a few years ago, when the loonie was powerful and rising, you'd hear nonsense like that.
For some reason, Canadians tend to conflate the higher taxes we pay, which do go toward financing social programs like health care, and the higher prices we pay, which simply go into some greedy company's bank account.
If you had the gall, as I did after the loonie shot well past the U.S. dollar in 2007, to call one of those companies — say, a clothing retailer, or a big car company like Honda — and ask why Canadian prices were so slow to drop, you'd run into a trained shill who'd rattle off practiced talking points.
Such as: "We still have a lot of inventory in the system that we paid for when the Canadian dollar was weaker."
Or: "We discounted for many years when the Canadian dollar was weaker, so it's only fair that we'd want to recoup some of those losses now."
Well, now that the loonie is down and dropping fast, this "price stickiness" is vanishing. Suddenly, the market is a picture of flow-through efficiency.
Canada's travel industry is now deploying the wonderfully self-referential euphemism "currency surcharge" to cover itself from the falling dollar.
Air Canada, always brilliant at using its market position to maximize profits, is tacking the "surcharge" onto its vacation packages for those trying to escape winter. Other tour operators are doing the same.
It's a way to jack up prices without explicitly admitting it. And you can bet corporate directives are being issued at Canadian retailers and manufacturers to pile on.
Where was the currency discount?

Fair enough, I suppose; businesses pretty much always pass on rising costs of production to consumers.
But I don't recall anyone inventing a "currency discount" back when the loonie was strong.
"It's pure greed," says Bruce Cran of the Consumers' Association of Canada, which monitors a basket of dozens of goods available in both the Canadian and American markets.
Cran says the prices of those goods did narrow somewhat over the years, but Canadians always paid at least 15 per cent more than Americans, even when the U.S. dollar was at its weakest.
A study by the Senate of Canada agreed, although it was unable to articulate any definitive reasons.
A common excuse, says Cran, is "It's the cost of shipping." That one, he says, was particularly rich coming from retailers of Canadian-made goods that sold for less all over the U.S.

Canadian retailers, who have been losing business to internet and cross-border shoppers, may do better if the lower loonie means consumers spend their money closer to home. That's provided that their suppliers don't want to be paid in the U.S. greenback. (Canadian Press)

The Acura MDX sport utility vehicle, manufactured in Ontario, is one example.
Another, says Cran, is Bombardier's snowmobiles, which it sold for up to 40 per cent less in North Dakota than neighbouring Manitoba, and "turned handsprings to prevent Canadians from crossing the border to purchase them."
Cran says Canadian retailers are not always greed-heads, and that sometimes they are dragged into price-fixing schemes against their wills.
He says he was once shown correspondence between a Canadian retailer and the U.S. firm that supplied it with jeans.
"The American company was tacking on 35 per cent because they thought they were entitled to it in Canada. The Canadian company was advised they would lose the franchise if they raised a problem."
Still, Cran suspects the real reason Canadians pay more is that in the end they're willing to: "Some people seem to regard it as some sort of patriotic gesture.
"As a consumer advocate, I find that very frustrating, but that is the thinking on the part of a surprising number of people.
"I've actually received hate calls, from Canadians, for pointing out the lower prices charged in the United States."
Bye-bye purchasing power

Now that Canada's already-high prices are on the rise, though, consumers who've endured years of erosion to their real incomes will have to either band together and get assertive, or strangle.
As Cran points out, "we've lost 10 per cent of our purchasing power. It's happened like lightning. People have to be prepared to do whatever they can to protect themselves."
The Consumers' Association suggests using the internet to find out what an item is selling for elsewhere in Canada and in the U.S., and then using that information to bargain.
At least be aware before making a spending decision, advises Cran.
What Canadian consumers really need to do is assert their collective power, which, even if the will were there, would be more difficult than it sounds.
Big retailers make a tonne of money by keeping the North American markets separate, and aim to keep it that way.
Also, ordinary Canadians can do very little about the international forces that determine what their dollar is worth.
It wasn't so long ago, 2002 in fact, that the Canadian dollar was only worth 62 cents American.

Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz seems to be in no hurry to raise interest rates, which would boost the dollar, any time soon. (Reuters)

I don't remember any credible prediction it would ever go that low, and I don't remember many macroeconomists predicting a loonie worth $1.10 US just five years later.
Some suspect Canada's central bank is promoting a weaker loonie, to boost Canadian exports — and the jobs that might come along with them. (There may be something to that. Lots of other central banks, America's included, have pursued the same goal with winks and nudges.)
But Canadian consumers can do something about being treated like a herd of cows by retailers. It just takes a little un-bovine anger.
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Old 01-29-2014, 12:45 AM   #40
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Re: Ebay charges import fees now? Lame for Transformers collecting

The reason we pay more for toys is simple. New triligual packaging and higher taxes on imports from China. US companies pay something like 2% to bring those products into the USA, Canadian Companies pay way over 10%(I seem to recall 13% being mentioned at one time).

Is it fair? Not really, but it is hardly the fault of the retailers.
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