NY sales tax is only about 5%, and many shops will pay the tax for you like Ritz camera since you don't have to pay sales tax if the HQ of the company is outside the sate of purchase.
Well that is interesting, and something I was not aware of concerning the HQ location in the US and sales tax.
Your point about paaying import tax is completely irrelevant. An American buying a camera in New York does not pay for UK import tax! 99% of Americans could buy the lens at the $600 list price
I will try to make my self a little clearer as I don't seem to have got my point across on the bit about import tax. Colinuk was making the point that he could fly to New York and buy the lens and bring it back to the UK for less money that he could just buy the lens in the UK. I was pointing out that he had not factored in import duty and vat on bring the lens in to the UK which are meant to be (but are often not) paid.
If the statement had been more along the lines of someone living in the US can buy it for XXX price and it costs me YYY price then import tax would be completely irrelevant as you say. Unfortunately it is not as simple as that as person in the US earns AAA / month and pays BBB in taxes and has CCC living expenses / rent / travel and works DDD hours. Taking the cost of the lens as a percentage of disposable income after including these factors and making allowances due to different working hours / month etc would give a more accurate result (not totally accurate but a much more realistic comparison).
I was looking at the Canon f2.8 70-200mm IS USM lens not so long ago here.
Quoted price was around S$3,000. A quick search of UK web prices give a random sample price of GBP1,200 (I am sure people could find it cheaper but this is just a quick sample).
So on converting them both to GBP prices going with an exchange rate of 3SGD -> 1 GBP and ignoring commission and exchange charges we get Singapore price of GBP1,000.
Great, GBP200 cheaper if bought in Singapore. Now if bought by someone from the UK to take back to the UK then they would also take off 7% GST on departure but should pay 17.5% VAT and import duty (after trawling around on the C&E website it seems you can only get the import duty tariffs if you subscribe. Not exactly transparent is it......). I seem to recall import duty on an expensive SCSI card I bought in the US and had shipped over when added to VAT came to around 40% (Yeah, I was pretty shocked) but lets give a basic 10% for import duty and I will amend if people can give a more accurate figure.
So...... ((((1000/107)*100)*1.175)*1.1) = GBP1207.94 (2dp).
So if you are a good boy / girl and pick this item up on holiday in Singapore and pay all your taxes on arrival to the UK you would still be paying around 8 quid more.
If we look at the impact of buying the lens to disposable income to both a Singapore resident and a UK resident we need to take other factors into account. I will use my own experiences as the job I am doing here is the same as I was in the UK for the same company. I will change the income figures but keep then in the same ratio. I will also use only the biggest basic outgoings for cost of living (rent / work travel).
UK
Income GBP40,000 - ((Rent GBP700 - Work travel GBP160) * 12)
Disposable = GBP29,680
Lens price (random shop I know in London) = GBP1,200
As percentage of disposable = 4.04%
Singapore (converted to GBP on 3 SGD to 1 GBP basis).
Income GBP20,000 - ((Rent GBP470 - Work travel GBP20) * 12)
Disposable = GBP14,120
Lens price (cheapest reported in Singapore high street shops) = GBP1,000
As percentage of disposable = 8.49%
So my conclusion from this (very) rough calculation is that even though the price in Singapore is cheaper than in the UK the impact on disposable income is over double to someone living here than it would be for the same person buying in the UK doing the same job and travelling the same distance to work using the same methods to do so. It also show in this example that even though the price in Singapore is cheaper for this item, if the rules are followed, it works out slightly more expensive to buy it here for someone visiting from the UK.
…and yes, if anyone is wondering why I am using the GBP rather than the pound sign then it is because they use US keyboards here which does not have the pound sign on. I use my good old UK keyboard at home though.
Please feel free to point out any flaws in the calculation / assumptions / figures listed above, and there could be many as this is off the top of my head as I sit at work (in a nice rather than in a ‘you’re a thick as a brick' way), and I will update / amend.
Cheers
RB