On 01 Apr 13:26, Sasa Ostrouska wrote: > On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 12:04 PM, Cédric Krier <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On 01 Apr 11:15, Sasa Ostrouska wrote: > > > On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 10:43 AM, Cédric Krier <[email protected]> > > wrote: > > > > > > > On 01 Apr 00:52, Cédric Krier wrote: > > > > > It is not for direct taxes which are managed by the tax system in > > > > > account module. > > > > > > > > Indeed, I should not have talked about "direct"/"indirect" taxes > > because > > > > it is not the right name. > > > > The difference here between customs duty and standard Tryton taxes is > > > > that custom duties are not on the invoice. Indeed who is paying the > > duty > > > > depend on the agreement between the supplier and the customer. This > > part > > > > is not covered by the blueprint but it will be a first step for such > > > > management. > > > > > > > > > > One thing IMHO is that you have to think that not everywhere in the > > world > > > the customs duties > > > are treated the same way. As far as I know in most countries they go > > summed > > > to the product cost > > > when you import a product. > > > > I don't understand what you mean. > > > > I mean that not in every country the customs duty is treated as cost and > gets added to the product. > When you import a product the product cost in Brasil for exemple is > composed of the product vaalue, > transport charges and customs duty as a base for the other taxes > calculation.
Of course the cost price of a product is linked to many extra costs. But which taxes are you talking about? -- Cédric Krier - B2CK SPRL Email/Jabber: [email protected] Tel: +32 472 54 46 59 Website: http://www.b2ck.com/
