Excuse my deviation from the original subject. My point was to show that "high-tax areas" typically have superior services. But that may not always be the case. I have never had to pay a customs duty on anything, nor pay a VAT.
Here, my state+local sales tax is 6% (food is not taxed unless it is in a restaurant setting). My annual property tax is about 0.3% of "market valuation". There is a federal income tax, but no state or local income taxes. Fuel taxes are insanely low. Overall, taxes in this rural state are VERY low. However, since I don't reside in the nearby town of 30,000 souls (which includes the headcount of 11,000 university students)...
- I must transport my trash/garbage to the "local" landfill and pay a slight fee.
- Law enforcement is provided by the County Sheriff, a staff of 6 to 8 deputies to cover Albany County's 4,309 sq mi (11,160 km2).
- There's no professional, paid, fire department that covers my residence. It's a volunteer department about 8 miles away, who handles grassland/woodland fires only (not structures). Fire insurance isn't cheap.
- I have no community water or sewage. Well and septic works just fine but has an initial capital cost and infrequent maintenance cost.
- The landline works "almost" all the time. Cell phone signal is absent (or very weak). My internet speed (via line-of-sight wireless ) is limited to 850 kbbs up and down.
- "Ranch power" requires the use of a few UPS power supplies, and a back-up generator for the longer outages, while the local Rural Electric Association calls around to find out "who has the truck today".
- I have to pay additionally for local road maintenance and snow removal (about 2 miles of private gravel roads to reach a federal paved road). And, that federal road can be closed frequently due to winter weather for a day or two. Be prepared!
- I get one (1) TV station over the air, due to a repeater about 20 miles away for PBS.
BUT, I can own all the firearms I want, and pot is legal only 13 miles to the south!
I do not know about international shipping, but domestically in the US, you declare a price on your US Postal Service (USPS) package for insurance purposes only, not for taxation purposes. You can declare any dollar amount you wish but must be able to provide proof of value if a claim is made on a damaged or missing package.I bet you are afraid that even postal office is spying on you and you would be afraid to declare lower price for a parcel too.