1 / 19

General Customs Administration of Mexico

General Customs Administration of Mexico. May 23 rd , 2013. The GCA controls 49 customs. Tijuana. Cd. Juárez. Nuevo Laredo. Reynosa. 246 inspection sites. 77, 177 taxpayers registered in the Importers Database.* 5% are large taxpayers. 793 customs brokers. *. Monterrey. Altamira.

cana
Télécharger la présentation

General Customs Administration of Mexico

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. General Customs Administration of Mexico May 23rd, 2013

  2. The GCA controls 49 customs Tijuana Cd. Juárez Nuevo Laredo Reynosa • 246 inspection sites. • 77, 177 taxpayers registered in the Importers Database.* • 5% are large taxpayers. • 793 customs brokers. * Monterrey Altamira Guadalajara Veracruz Toluca Manzanillo AICM Lázaro Cárdenas * Up to April 30th 2

  3. Main Figures • In 2012, international trade represented 63% of Mexico’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). • 49% of value added tax (VAT) is collected through customs. • On daily basis Mexican Customs account for: • Imports and exports of nearly 2.6 billion USD. • More than 900,000 people cross national borders. • 39,884 international passengers arrive by plane. • 25,500 trucks and 162,326 light vehicles drive across the country’s border. 3

  4. Today Outdated facilities • In the past, customs were conceived only as checkpoints for cargo and passengers. • Inspection sites lack technology and infrastructure to provide efficient services and perform custom duties. 4

  5. Today Outdated facilities Cd. Hidalgo Puerto Palomas 5

  6. Today Modern facilities • Customs facilitate trade by optimizing cargo flows and passenger inspection as well as ensuring tax collection is efficient and compliant with security measures. • Mexican Customs work with modern infrastructure and automated services, applying risk assessment models to support operations. 6

  7. Today Modern facilities Inspection areas Light vehicles access area 7

  8. Challenges Customs in the 21st Century The General Customs Administration envisions Mexican Customs in the 21st Century as modern and automated, following the guidelines established by the World Customs Organization: • Trade Single Window • Data Collection Center • Risk assessment models • Nonintrusive Inspection • Vehicle Surveillance and Control System Trade facilitation Tax collection National security Community’s protection Gathering trade data 8

  9. US-MexicoBorder NAFTA, Before & After • US is Mexico's largest trading partner. • Mexico is the US third largest trading partner,after Canada and China. • Last year, trade between Mexico and the US added up to 449 billions USD. Five times greater than in 1993 (409%). • Since NAFTA Mexican exports destined to US have increased by 541.1%. • 78.6% of Mexican exports are destined to the US. • 49.7% of US imports come from Mexico. • In 2012 Mexican investments in the US represented 15.5% of total investments from Latin America and the Caribbean. 9

  10. US-MexicoBorder Infrastructure • The following took place after signing NAFTA: • 70 infrastructure under development. • 2010: Crossings in Reynosa-McAllen and Rio Bravo-Donna. • 2012: Tijuana (El Chaparral) - San Ysidro. • 2013: Railway crossing in Matamoros-Brownsville. • Setting up of 39 X-Ray and 41 Gamma machinesto expedite the inspection. 10

  11. México-US Border Operating 2012: Puerta Mexico-San Ysidro Investment: 20.5 millionUSD - Passengers 2013: Export platform expansion - Mesa de Otay Investment: 12.9 million USD - Cargo exports 2010: Border crossing Anzaldúas-Mission New facilities. - Light vehicles (first stage) 2010: Río Bravo -Donna New facilities. - Light vehicles (first stage) 11

  12. US-MexicoBorder UpcomingProjects 2013: Nogales III- Mariposa - Cargo 2013: Matamoros- Brownsville rail crossing - Cargo 2015: Crossing in Tijuana – San Diego Airport - Passengers 12

  13. US-MexicoBorder UpcomingProjects 2014-2015: Camargo Customs New facilities Investment: 23 million USD - Cargo 2013-2014: Ciudad Juárez-Córdova Facilities redesign Investment: 53 million USD - Cargo and light vehicles 2014: Ciudad Juárez- Zaragoza Facilities redesign Investment: 29 million USD - Cargo and light vehicles Border Crossing at Guadalupe Tornillo New Facilities - Cargo and light vehicles 2014: Ciudad Juárez-San Jerónimo Facilities redesign Investment: 45 million USD - Cargo and light vehicles 13

  14. US-MexicoBorder Bilateral Strategic Plan • Signed in 2007 and revised in 2012. • General guidelines for cooperation between the two nations to foster commercial facilitation and security. • Important Facts • Together, Mexico and US control 19 customs, 50 border crossings and 196 inspection points. • Trade at the US-Mexico border generates 6% of world’s GDP. • Initiatives of the BSP • Coordinated operation to protect intellectual property. • Binational Security Committees in 19 customs. • Working hours homologation. • Information exchange agreement. • Rail single manifest project. 14

  15. US-MexicoBorder Impact of future infrastructure • The economic activity in US-Mexico border is responsible for 6 million jobs. • A 1% increase US GDP represents 2% increase in Mexican exports. • New international bridge projects at the US-Mexico border, such as in the Tijuana-San Diego region, will provide an economic benefit of 30 billion dollars in a 10-year period. • By raising customs efficiency, the final price of goods could decrease up to 5%. 15

  16. SouthernBorder Infrastructure projects • Mexico is developing new facilities in five inspection sites in the Southern border. • Comitán-Trinitaria, Catazajá and Huixtla in the border with Guatemala. • Nuevo Orizaba and Chactemal in the border with Belize. • The project aims to broaden control to prevent illegal trade in 50 checking points. • Total investment of the Southern Border Project: 105 million USD. • Progress • New facilities in Huixtla (May 6th) and Chactemal (May 15th): • Entry lines and inspection checkpoints for trucks and light vehicles. • Nonintrusive inspection systems. • The remaining sites are under construction. 16

  17. SouthernBorder Infrastructure projects 2012: Chactemal New facilities Investment: 2o million USD - Cargo and light vehicles 2012: Huixtla New facilities Investment: 13 million USD - Cargo and light vehicles 17

  18. SouthernBorder Infrastructure projects Huixtla 18

  19. SouthernBorder Infrastructure projects Chactemal 19

More Related