Why Are Paperclips Protected By Law?

By on December 8, 2012 in News


Photo by ccharmon

Did you know that if you live in the United States nearly every paperclip you’ve ever used has been manufactured domestically?

Why? Do we make the best paperclips in the world?

Not necessarily. According to the Wall Street Journal, paperclips are protected by a 127% tariff!

The two main U.S. makers — ACCO and Officemate International Corp. of Edison, N.J. — have survived in that business mainly because, since 1994, import tariffs ranging up to 127% of the base price have protected U.S. clip makers from what the federal government deemed unfair Chinese competition. In June, the U.S. government renewed those tariffs for another five years. ACCO and Officemate also have kept costs low through automation.

A bigger mystery is what Americans do with the estimated 11 billion clips sold annually in the U.S. That works out to about 35 per American. “We actually can’t understand how the U.S. consumption can be so huge,” says Martin Yang, a senior vice president at Officemate.

Photo by ccharmon.

government paperclips tariffs


Business Opportunities Weblog editor and publisher Dane Carlson lives in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, just 15 miles from Yosemite National Park. He accidentally became a professional blogger in 2001. He has added 12,203 posts to the site.

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  • http://wahm.business-opportunities.biz Angela Shupe

    As it is, paper clips are really cheap. Just how cheap would they be if the tariff was lifted and they were imported from China? I never really thought of paper clips as being a highly competitive business.

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