The French are ready to act alone in order to slow Chinese imports. (Photo by Cheng Xin/Getty Images)
Getty Images
Fresh from the controversy of last week’s opening of the first Paris store for Shein, France’s parliament is preparing to debate a proposed €2 ($2.15) levy on low-cost fashion imports.
The measure could take effect next year and precede a similar European Union-wide tax that is not expected to be in place before 2028.
The French initiative, intended as a stopgap ahead of the bloc’s delayed plans, would mark one of the first national attempts to rein in the surge of ultra-cheap apparel and merchandise flooding European markets from Asia.
Lawmakers are also considering introducing an additional environmental charge of up to €5 ($5.40) per parcel, which could rise to $10.80 by 2030, reflecting growing political pressure to address the environmental and social costs of fast fashion.
The proposed tax is explicitly aimed at Chinese e-commerce platforms such as industry giants Shein and Temu, whose rock-bottom prices have reshaped consumer habits, especially among Gen Z, and disrupted traditional European retailers.
These platforms have built their success on ultra-cheap supply chains and direct shipping models that allow them to deliver products direct to consumers across the E.U. at minimal cost, often avoiding the customs scrutiny and duties that apply to higher-value goods.
Levy Targets Cheap Imports
The influx of these items has been blamed for undermining European textile producers, depressing wages and contributing to mounting textile waste because of the perceived poor quality and short lifespan of many garments.
According to the European Commission, around 4.6 billion low-value consignments, mostly from China and worth less than €150 ($162), entered the E.U. last year, the equivalent of some 12 million parcels every day.
The Brussels-headquartered E.U. has warned that many of these goods fail to meet European production or safety standards, sometimes contain counterfeit or hazardous materials, and collectively represent a “negative environmental and climate footprint.”
Below the $162 threshold, customs duties are generally waived, though a sales tax remains payable, a loophole that has allowed low-cost Asian retailers to gain a significant competitive edge over European firms.
The French government projects that its proposed levy on small parcels could generate as much as $540 million in revenue by the end of next year. The measure has already cleared an initial vote in the Senate and is now due for debate in the National Assembly, with a first vote expected Monday.
While the sums involved are modest compared with France’s total tax receipts, the bill carries political weight, reflecting both public frustration with the environmental toll of fast fashion and the growing unease about Europe’s dependence on Chinese imports.
French Levy To Be Debated
Budget Minister Amélie de Montchalin has framed the measure as a preparatory step towards the E.U.’s broader customs reforms, due to be implemented in 2028.
“This is not a tax on consumers,” Montchalin said earlier this year, emphasizing that the levy is intended to ensure fairness in global trade.
Since the de minimus clampdown, China has redirected exports towards Europe. (Photo by China Photos/Getty Images)
Getty Images
The possible measures reflect the new transatlantic trade backdrop. Washington’s approach to low-value imports is no longer the incremental tightening pursued by the previous administration but, under President Donald Trump, a harder line that has closed the de minimis exemption that once allowed parcels below a set value to enter the U.S. duty-free.
By removing the de minimis safety valve for low-value shipments, the U.S. has made it significantly more costly and administratively burdensome to export tiny parcels from China, which has already reshaped parcel flows, slowed some shipments and encouraged sellers to seek alternative distribution strategies, redirecting Chinese exports towards markets such as the E.U.
Industry body Eurocommerce is concerned about the accelerated, massive influx of non-compliant products coming to Europe from China, with projections this could hit 6 billion in 2025.
“Eurocommerce has been supporting trade diversification and has also called on European and national authorities to increase the enforcement of European rules and standards to contain non-compliant products,” EuroCommerce Director General Christel Delberghe insisted.
Whatever the outcome in the French parliament, the proposed $2.15 levy is small in cash terms but significant in intent as E.U. markets rclamp down on Chinese exports.