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Customs is the oldest government department in New Zealand. [3] Formed on 5 January 1840, it pre-dates the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi by one month. [4] Its early establishment was necessary to collect revenue for the fledgling government, and over the years duties, tariffs and taxes collected by Customs have remained a major source of revenue for the country, although customs has also ...
Veterans' Affairs New Zealand (Te Tira Ahu Ika a Whiro) (semi-autonomous body) Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives (Te Tari o te Manahautū o te Whare Māngai) Reporting Services (Hansard) Parliamentary Counsel Office (New Zealand) (Te Tari Tohutohu Paremata) Parliamentary Service [7] [3] (includes the Parliamentary Library)
Customs Street is a street in the Auckland City Centre, New Zealand, located between Hobson Street and Beach Road. The street is split into two sections at the junction of Queen Street , Customs Street West and Customs Street East .
Customs House is a historic neoclassical building in Timaru, New Zealand. Opened in 1902 it served the Customs Department until the 1970s. It later became a restaurant and has a category 1 registration with Heritage New Zealand .
SmartGate (eGate in New Zealand) is an automated self-service border control system operated by the Australian Border Force (ABF) and New Zealand Customs Service (NZCS) and located at immigration checkpoints in departure and arrival halls in ten Australian international airports, and 4 New Zealand international airports (as eGate).
The ECN Group operates in electronic data interchange, business process management and system integration. ECN provides all export and import messaging services to and from NZ Customs. ECN has over 3,500 customers. ECN's head office is in Wellington, New Zealand; it also has offices in Auckland, Sydney and Manila. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of New Zealand Post. [6] References ^ "About the ...
The Minister of Customs is a minister in the New Zealand Government appointed by the Prime Minister to be in charge of matters of border control, international trade and travel and the collection of import duties and taxes to New Zealand.
In 1995, a Rewrite Advisory Panel was established to consider and advise on issues arising during the rewriting of the income tax legislation, as part of New Zealand tax reform arising from the Working Party on the Reorganisation of the Income Tax Act 1976. The panel was disestablished in 2014 at the completion of the tax reform. [4]