Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The decision(s) will cover all future consignments of identical goods.
Costs of identical goods from different duty-free sources can vary widely.
But it will cover subsequent consignments of identical goods.
Perhaps the closest thing to a perfectly competitive market would be a large auction of identical goods with all potential buyers and sellers present.
Identical or nearly identical goods may be available.
This process can result in price discrimination, where a firm charges customers consuming otherwise identical goods or services a different price for doing so.
However, when either a divisible good or multiple identical goods are sold in a single auction, these terms are used differently.
This entry must relate to identical goods exported at or about the same time as the goods to be valued.
The rate of tax due is the one applicable to the supply of identical goods in the UK.
Price discrimination allows a monopolist to increase its profit by charging higher prices for identical goods to those who are willing or able to pay more.
The law of one price is an economic law stated as: "In an efficient market, all identical goods must have only one price."
You must take account of differences between the costs of delivering the identical goods and delivering the goods to be valued.
Price discrimination or price differentiation exists when sales of identical goods or services are transacted at different prices from the same provider.
You base it on a customs value of identical goods already accepted by EC Customs under Method 1.
("Dutch auction" is also sometimes used to describe online auctions where several identical goods are sold simultaneously to an equal number of high bidders.)
This may be seen as just one kind of price discrimination or as an example of its inverse, one buyer buying identical goods at different rates.
For one thing, European consumers have widely varying tastes, which means that identical goods are not sold everywhere and that comparison-pricing across borders can be tricky.
This is due to the economic law of one price which states "that if trade were free, then identical goods should sell for about the same price throughout the world".
With modern microelectronic devices, however, automation is no longer only to be seen in factories that make identical goods in continuous streams, but is spreading to batch production.
According to the law of marginal utility, the value of each good in a stock of identical goods is utility of the last and most easily dispensable unit.
Nevertheless, we cannot continue in the long term to ship goods thousands of kilometres around the globe, with virtually identical goods travelling in the opposite direction, without ensuring the full costs are covered.
Most systems consider a third party price for identical goods, services, or property under identical conditions, called a comparable uncontrolled price (CUP), to be the most reliable indicator of an arm's length price.
A copy of, or the necessary data to enable us to trace, an import entry (with supporting documents) for identical goods where Method 1 has been accepted by us or another EC Customs administration.
Intended mainly as a control on sourcing merchandise, it also meant that customers could shop knowing that they were not paying more at Peter Jones than they could buy identical goods for at other stores.
The findings highlighted retailers' larger margins in the South in relation to their operations in the North and Coughlan queried why the price differential in many identical goods was substantially in excess of 5%.