Picture this: Youโre scrolling Temu for that quirky phone charger or rainbow LED lamp โ only to find fewer options and higher prices. Why? A major shift just rocked the e-commerce world ahead of new U.S. tariffs. ๐๐ธ
Days before America ditched its tariff exemption for low-value Chinese imports on May 2, Temu quietly axed thousands of products shipped directly from small vendors in the Chinese mainland. These sellers relied on the now-expired โde minimisโ rule, which let packages under $800 enter the U.S. duty-free. ๐ฆ๐ซ
The result? Cheaper goods shipped individually (think $5 earrings or $10 kitchen gadgets) are vanishing from virtual shelves. With new duties and complex paperwork, Temu is prioritizing bulk shipments stored in U.S. warehouses โ leaving smaller Chinese sellers scrambling and shoppers facing pricier alternatives once local stock runs dry. ๐โ๏ธ๐จ
โItโs like a retail therapy cliffhanger,โ says Austin-based college student Maya Lin, noting her favorite budget-friendly skincare masks became unavailable overnight. โFirst TikTok gets banned, now this?โ ๐ท๐
Experts warn the move could reshape global e-commerce habits: Will consumers pay more for speed, or wait weeks for cheaper items? One thingโs clear โ the US-China trade saga just got a viral supply chain plot twist. ๐ขโจ
Reference(s):
cgtn.com