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Leading High Performing Remote Teams
How can leaders ensure that performance remains high in remote or hybrid-work environments?
Content Marketing
In this course, you’ll learn how compelling blogs, videos, podcasts, and other media can reach customers and drive sales. You’ll also learn steps for creating an effective content marketing plan, and some important ways to measure its impact and success.
Content marketing is a essential digital marketing strategy for companies looking to provide relevant and useful information to support your community and attract new customers.
Get started on your content marketing journey today.
Sustainable Innovation in Times of Disruption: Choices for a Better Society
There are opportunities for progress all around us. The key is to innovate on these opportunities sustainably.
To help identify most effective path forward, you'll need to gain a global perspective to these challenges in an open discussion. How can Japan and the world take action to create a more sustainable, innovative world? Where do you fit in?
It's time to find out.
Social Media & Digital Communications: Impact on Global Public Opinion
Social and digital media have dominated the communications industry for decades. But it's no secret that social media has the power to sway public opinion, and the way in which many companies use these platforms could be seen as manipulative.
What do companies need to be aware of when utilizing social and digital media? How can these mediums be used to better communicate strategically with the world?
Discover what top media and communications experts have to say.
CAGE Distance Framework
Want to expand overseas? The CAGE distance framework can help ensure you're constructing a solid global strategy in four areas: cultural, administrative, economic, and geographic. Learn how to leverage useful differences between countries, identify potential obstacles, and achieve global business success.
Servant Leadership
There's more to leadership than driving a team to profit. In fact, there's a word for looking beyond self-interest to prioritize individual growth: servant leadership. Try this course for a quick breakdown of what that is, how it works, and how it can lead to organizational success.
Strategy: Creating Value Inside Your Company
Have you ever wondered why certain companies are more successful than others? The answer is strategy: internal processes that control costs, allocate resources, and create value. This course from GLOBIS Unlimited can give you the tools you need for that strategic edge.
Strategy: Understanding the External Environment
To plan strategy on any level, you need to understand your company's external environment. In fact, your level of understanding can impact hiring, budgeting, marketing, or nearly any other part of the business world. Want to learn how to do all that? This course from GLOBIS Unlimited is the perfect first step!
Using Japanese Values to Thrive in Global Business
Japanese companies have unique cultural, communication, and operational challenges. But they also have values that have led to remarkable longevity. Check out this seminar to hear how these values help earn trust from overseas head offices and develop employees.
Marketing: Reaching Your Target
Every company works hard to get its products into the hands of customers. Are you doing everything you can to compete? In this course, you’ll find a winning formula to turn a product idea into real sales. Follow along through the fundamentals of the marketing mix and see how companies successfully bring products to market.
Basic Accounting: Financial Analysis
Want to compare your performance vs. a competitor? Or evaluate a potential vendor? Then you'll need to conduct a financial analysis. This course will teach you how to use three financial statements and evaluate financial performance in terms of profitability, efficiency, soundness, growth, and overall strength.
Career Anchors
What drives you to be good at your job?
Career anchors are based on your values, desires, motivations, and abilities. They are the immovable parts of your professional self-image that guide you throughout your career journey.
Try this short GLOBIS Unlimited course to identify which of the eight career anchors is yours!
Leadership with Passion through Kokorozashi
The key ingredient to success? Passion.
Finding your kokorozashi will unify your passions and skills to create positive change in society. This GLOBIS Unlimited course will help you develop the values and lifelong goals you need to become a strong, passion-driven leader.
If you’ve ever ordered a US $20 dress from Shein, cheap kitchen gadgets from Temu or affordable handmade jewelry from an Etsy seller overseas, it may come as a shock to hear that those days have come to an end. Especially if you’re shopping from the United States.
After nearly nine decades, the U.S. government suspended the de minimis rule—an almost 100-year-old trade policy that allowed more than a billion affordable foreign goods to reach American consumers duty-free over the last decade.
This groundbreaking change, implemented last August 29, is sending shockwaves across the international supply chain—from consumers, manufacturers and e-commerce merchants to dropshippers, global postal services and international carriers.
It doesn’t stop there. Entire industries heavily reliant on imports—such as beauty products, consumer electronics and fast fashion—and countries that ship to the U.S. with high duty rates are feeling the impact.
Higher prices and taxes, longer customs clearance times, shipping delays, and reduced shopping options for U.S. consumers are just the tip of an iceberg of socio-economic and political repercussions. But why was de minimis suspended, and how can consumers protect themselves from the aftermath of its end?
What Was the De Minimis Rule?
The term de minimis comes from Latin, meaning “trifling or of little importance.” In U.S. trade policy, it referred to a duty-free exemption for imports below a certain value.
The concept dates back to the Tariff Act of 1930, which first introduced customs and duty fees on products entering the United States. Over time, government officials realized that it wasn’t worth the effort, labor, and time to regulate small imports that yielded little revenue. Eventually, the de minimis rule was introduced in 1938—exempting low-value goods to ease customs congestion.
Over the years, the value of de minis has increased to boost international trade and economic activity. In 2016, Congress raised the de minimis limit from $200 to $800 per shipment–one of the highest duty-free exemptions in the world—paving the way for an explosion in global e-commerce.
Thanks to the rule, online shopping platforms like Shein and AliExpress flourished because they could ship inexpensive items directly to American buyers without unexpected customs fees. Independent Etsy sellers and small overseas businesses also benefited, shipping goods directly to the U.S. market.
Why Was De Minimis Suspended?
The White House and U.S. trade officials cite several reasons for ending the de minimis rule:
Protection of U.S. businesses and industries. Domestic manufacturers and retailers argued that they were being undercut by a flood of cheap imports.
Prevention of counterfeit goods and unsafe products: Officials say the rule was a loophole exploited by sellers of counterfeit electronics, cosmetics, and toys.
National security. The government points to the role of small parcels in smuggling illicit drugs, particularly fentanyl, into the U.S.
Supporters of the change argue that ending de minimis levels the playing field for American businesses and strengthens oversight of what enters the country. Critics, however, say it penalizes consumers, hurts small overseas sellers, and even complicates operations for major American companies like FedEx, which used de minimis in their supply chains.
How the End of De Minimis Will Affect Your Online Shopping.
More than 90% of cargo entering the United States is shipped under the de minimis rule. Without the exemption, all U.S.-bound shipments are now subject to duties and taxes–regardless of value or origin. Consumers can expect major shifts in the online shopping landscape:
Higher Prices.
Expect to pay more at checkout—or upon delivery. Packages entering the U.S. are now subject to new tariffs ranging from 10% to 50%, depending on country of origin. For the next six months, a temporary flat-rate system is also in place: $80, $160, or $200 per package based on weight and size.
Shipping Delays.
International carriers in Asia and Europe have temporarily paused shipments to the U.S. to update their systems. When deliveries resume, stricter customs inspections will slow the process. That means the two-week Temu or Shein delivery window you’re used to could stretch much longer.
Less Variety.
The added complexity and costs are deterring some sellers from shipping to the U.S. at all. Smaller independent businesses may simply decide it’s not worth the trouble. Even larger platforms might scale back product offerings—resulting in fewer low-cost and unique options for American shoppers.
How Much More Will I Pay?
The financial impact caused by the end of de minimis will vary, but here are some examples:
- A $20 Temu gadget could cost nearly $100 once tariffs, shipping and fees are included.
- A $50 order from the United Kingdom may carry a 10% tariff, while an item from India could face a 50% tariff.
- Under the temporary flat-fee system, even a small package could face an $80 surcharge.
In short, bargains that once made international shopping so appealing will now feel far less affordable.
What Can I Do As A Shopper?
While nothing can be done to reverse the removal of de minimis, consumers can still protect themselves in the following ways:
Check retailer policies.
Before buying anything, review updated shipping and return information. Some e-commerce platforms may state new duties and fees.
Pre-pay duties (Delivered Duty Paid, or DDP).
Look for sellers who include all import fees at checkout to avoid surprise charges upon delivery.
Buy domestically.
“Going local” by purchasing from U.S. retailers may not be as exciting as shopping abroad, but doing so avoids the risks of tariffs and delays.
Beware of scams.
Customs-related phishing attempts are expected to rise. Never pay import fees through unsolicited emails or texts. Verify directly with your seller or shipping provider.
The Bottom Line.
The end of de minimis represents a major shift in cross-border selling between the United States and the rest of the world. What was once a simple and inexpensive way for American customers to buy foreign products—and for global businesses to ship items to the U.S–is now more complicated and costly.
Shoppers should brace for higher prices, longer waits and fewer choices. But with careful planning—checking policies, using DDP options, and buying domestically when possible—you can still shop smart in this new environment.
The bargain-hunting days of duty-free imports may be over, but being informed helps you avoid unpleasant surprises the next time you click “buy”.




