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The Export Duty Calculator determines export taxes or levies charged by the origin country when goods leave its borders, which are used by some nations to retain raw materials domestically or generate government revenue.
Formula
Export Duty = FOB Export Value × Export Duty Rate (%)
- FOB
- FOB Export Value ($) — Declared value of goods at the port of export
- R
- Export Duty Rate (%) — Country-specific export tax percentage for the product
- C
- Cess/Levy ($) — Additional government surcharge on exports
Guida passo passo
- 1Identify the product and its export tariff code in the origin country
- 2Look up the applicable export duty rate (varies widely by country and product)
- 3Multiply the FOB export value by the export duty percentage
- 4Add any additional export processing fees or cess charges
Esempi risolti
Ingresso
Indonesian palm oil export, FOB $100,000, export duty rate 22%
Risultato
Export Duty = $100,000 × 0.22 = $22,000
Ingresso
Indian iron ore export, FOB $500,000, export duty 30%
Risultato
Export Duty = $500,000 × 0.30 = $150,000
Errori comuni da evitare
- ✕Assuming all countries have export duties — many have zero export taxes
- ✕Not checking for seasonal or sliding-scale export duty rates tied to commodity prices
- ✕Forgetting additional export cess or levies on top of the base export duty
Domande frequenti
Which countries impose export duties?
Major exporters of raw commodities including Indonesia (palm oil, nickel), India (iron ore), Argentina (soybeans), Russia (wheat), and several African nations. Most developed countries do not impose export duties.
Why do countries charge export duties?
To encourage domestic processing of raw materials, stabilize domestic supply and prices, generate government revenue, and as a trade policy tool to retain strategic resources.