They're coming thick and fast this week!
Is this a new body type? I'll admit I had never heard of Kneipp, but a priest in full cassock must have a lot of uses for people (even if he, sadly, can never sit down :lol:)
The "Kneipp" online-shop only sells and posts to 5 or 6 countries.Just so you guys know.
... maybe even ragged and all?
Can you please tell me where did you see that? I found nothing :-[ ::)
Maybe a group order?
I don't necessarily want one of these but don't mind doing another group order, provided I get to know where one can obtain them. I won't be entering the Kneipp Verein, I tell you, and would be quite surprised if this exclusive ends up Playmobil's own web shop. Sebastian Kneipp is just ... too niche.
Sebastian Kneipp is just ... too niche.
Produktinformationen "Playmobilfigur "Sebastian Kneipp"" (https://shop.kneippverlag.de/fuer-kneipp-vereine/kneipp-ist-cool-fuer-kinder/908/playmobilfigur-sebastian-kneipp?fbclid=IwAR0u3j3XUr2V9CBoTyoHlypEcEhO1NS9AU-10yr8ewXzdqbygURYa7hoUig)
No international shipping (not even to other EU countries), as far as I can see...
When registering on the website, there is a drop-down list of countries..Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, The Netherlands, Italy.
When registering on the website, there is a drop-down list of countries..Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, The Netherlands, Italy.
Ah, I didn't try to register... would only do that if actually ordering.
Not shipping (anymore) to other E.U.-states seems to become 'trendy'.
Is that even legal?
There's no legal obligation to sell people things, unless it discriminatory, and geographic location isn't considered to be that.
I thought there was something (recently) about not being allowed to discriminate customers within the EU. Same promotions, same prices (not for shipping, of course).
The EU has all sort of import rules that make it difficult for small sellers to keep up (like having to register and pay an annual fee to import packaging into each country - obviously they can't just slap a stamp on Kneipp and send him on his way -, which means websites are having to prioritize countries that they think will buy enough to compensate for the fee).
Possibly - but anyway, it would surely only apply to companies with a minimum turnover - because we have local, independent shops that will deliver within a certain distance (say 5 or 10 miles) and they couldn't reasonably be expected to send something to Poland. So these guys would probably fall below that.
I thought the point of the Single Market was that is was, well, a SINGLE market?! 8}
I thought the point of the Single Market was that is was, well, a SINGLE market?! 8}
They seem to have forgotten that part somewhere along the way because when it comes to importing and taxation
Like Schiller and (especially) Erhard before him. Yes I know I'm an ignoramus, but I wish the people commemorated were more widely known. Even limiting the choice to Germany and Austria, there must be a dozen composers (for example) who are better known than these three (I've said that before.) At least each composer could be featured holding a musical instrument rather than just (as with writers) a pen!
But, of course, many promo figures are commissioned by people who are interested in a particular historical person, however obscure.
The single market eliminates import duties and taxes between member-states of the E.U.
It does not eliminate import duties and taxes when importing something from outside the E.U. (Unless there is some kind of trade-agreement, with reduces or eliminates import duties.) Those duties and taxes for goods from outside the E.U. can differ - usually slightly - from memberstate to memberstate. The VAT % in Germany f.e. is (or used to be?) slightly lower then in Belgium.
Are import-duties and taxes the same in every U.S. State, when importing from outside the United States?
The way I understood it, is that EU-to-EU shipments are affected by the packaging registration requirement and fee, along with shipments from outside the EU. It's not technically an import duty (which is not applied to EU-to-EU shipments).
Meanwhile, Germany still wants invoices in duplicate, which creates more packaging to be trashed. (That's an extra plastic envelope and two sheets of paper.)
Import duties are not handled by states in the US. They're determined and charged when the package reaches the country (not the destination state)
Clear as mud? :lol:
"Packaging registration requirement and fee"? Never heard of that... But I´m not a sales-expert.The buyer doesn't pay it. It's an annual fee that businesses are supposed to pay to the powers that be for covering the costs of recycling/disposal of the packaging materials that are sent into the country. The consequence is that micro businesses are having to guess which countries will buy enough from them to justify the fee and are removing shipping to countries they know won't. So it might explain why Kneipp can only be ordered from certain EU countries (although maybe they have some completely different reasoning behind this).
When I buy something in another E.U.-memberstate and have it shipped to me, I only pay the purchase-price plus the shipping-cost.
I think it should be in triple, with one for the courrier-company responsible for handling the imported goods and two for the receiver of the goods. Of course only for packages coming from outside the E.U.It may very well be triplicate for packages sent through couriers. We're told duplicate for shipping through the post office. Most countries get by with a stick-on customs label.