Efective Date and
Termination of Duty-Free Treatment: Chapter effective Dec. 4, 1991,
and duty-free treatment to expire no later than 10 years after such date,
see section 3206 of this title.
Short Title: Section 201 of title II of Pub. L. 102-182 provided that:
''This title (enacting this chapter) may be cited as the 'Andean Trade
Preference Act'.''
� 3201. Authority to grant
duty-free treatment.
� 3202. Beneficiary country.
(a) Definitions.
(b) Countries eligible for designation; congressional notification.
(c) Limitations on designation.
(d) Factors affecting designation.
(e) Withdrawal or suspension of designation.
(f) Triennial report.
� 3203. Eligible articles.
(a) In general.
(b) Exceptions to duty-free treatment.
(c) Duty reductions for certain goods.
(d) Suspension of duty-free treatment.
(e) Emergency relief with respect to perishable products.
(f) Fees under section 624 of title 7.
(g) Tariff-rate quotas.
� 3204. International Trade Commission reports on impact of this chapter.
(a) In general.
(b) Report requirements.
(c) Submission dates; public comment.
� 3205. Impact study by Secretary of Labor.
� 3206. Effective date and termination of duty-free treatment. (a) Effective date.
(b) Termination of duty-free treatment.
Sec. 3201. Authority to grant
duty-free treatment
The President may proclaim duty-free treatment for all eligible articles
from any beneficiary country in accordance with the provisions of this
chapter.
Sec. 3202. Beneficiary country
(a) Definitions
For purposes of this chapter -
(1) The term ''beneficiary country'' means any country listed in
subsection (b)(1) of this section with respect to which there is in effect
a proclamation by the President designating such country as a beneficiary
country for purposes of this chapter.
(2) The term ''entered'' means entered, or withdrawn from warehouse for
consumption, in the customs territory of the United States.
(3) The term ''HTS'' means Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United
States.
(b) Countries eligible for designation; congressional notification
(1) In designating countries as beneficiary countries under this chapter,
the President shall consider only the following countries or successor
political entities:
Bolivia
Ecuador
Colombia
Peru.
(2) Before the President designates any country as a beneficiary country
for purposes of this chapter, he shall notify the House of Representatives
and the Senate of his intention to make such designation, together with
the considerations entering into such decision.
(c) Limitations on designation
The President shall not designate any country a beneficiary country under
this chapter -
(1) if such country is a Communist country;
(2) if such country -
(A) has nationalized, expropriated or otherwise seized ownership or
control of property owned by a United States citizen or by a corporation,
partnership, or association which is 50 percent or more beneficially owned
by United States citizens,
(B) has taken steps to repudiate or nullify -
(i) any existing contract or agreement with, or
(ii) any patent, trademark, or other intellectual property of, a United
States citizen or a corporation, partnership, or association, which is 50
percent or more beneficially owned by United States citizens, the effect
of which is to nationalize, expropriate, or otherwise seize ownership or
control of property so owned, or
(C) has imposed or enforced taxes or other exactions, restrictive
maintenance or operational conditions, or other measures with respect to
property so owned, the effect of which is to nationalize, expropriate, or
otherwise seize ownership or control of such property, unless the
President determines that -
(i) prompt, adequate, and effective compensation has been or is being made
to such citizen, corporation, partnership, or association,
(ii) good-faith negotiations to provide prompt, adequate, and effective
compensation under the applicable provisions of international law are in
progress, or such country is otherwise taking steps to discharge its
obligations under international law with respect to such citizen,
corporation, partnership, or association, or
(iii) a dispute involving such citizen, corporation, partnership, or
association, over compensation for such a seizure has been submitted to
arbitration under the provisions of the Convention for the Settlement of
Investment Disputes, or in another mutually agreed upon forum, and
promptly furnishes a copy of such determination to the Senate and House of
Representatives;
(3) if such country fails to act in good faith in recognizing as binding
or in enforcing arbitral awards in favor of United States citizens or a
corporation, partnership, or association which is 50 percent or more
beneficially owned by United States citizens, which have been made by
arbitrators appointed for each case or by permanent arbitral bodies to
which the parties involved have submitted their dispute;
(4) if such country affords preferential treatment to the products of a
developed country, other than the United States, and if such preferential
treatment has, or is likely to have, a significant adverse effect on
United States commerce, unless the President -
(A) has received assurances satisfactory to him that such preferential
treatment will be eliminated or that action will be taken to assure that
there will be no such significant adverse effect, and
(B) reports those assurances to the Congress;
(5) if a government-owned entity in such country engages in the broadcast
of copyrighted material, including films or television material, belonging
to United States copyright owners without their express consent or such
country fails to work towards the provision of adequate and effective
protection of intellectual property rights;
(6) unless such country is a signatory to a treaty, convention, protocol,
or other agreement regarding the extradition of United States citizens;
and
(7) if such country has not or is not taking steps to afford
internationally recognized worker rights (as defined in section 2467(4) of
this title) to workers in the country (including any designated zone in
that country). Paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (5), and (7) shall not prevent
the designation of any country as a beneficiary country under this chapter
if the President determines that such designation will be in the national
economic or security interest of the United States and reports such
determination to the Congress with his reasons therefor.
(d) Factors affecting designation
In determining whether to designate any country a beneficiary country
under this chapter, the President shall take into account -
(1) an expression by such country of its desire to be so designated;
(2) the economic conditions in such country, the living standards of its
inhabitants, and any other economic factors which he deems appropriate;
(3) the extent to which such country has assured the United States it will
provide equitable and reasonable access to the markets and basic commodity
resources of such country;
(4) the degree to which such country follows the accepted rules of
international trade provided for under the WTO Agreement and the
multilateral trade agreements (as such terms are defined in paragraphs (9)
and (4), respectively, of section 3501 of this title);
(5) the degree to which such country uses export subsidies or imposes
export performance requirements or local content requirements which
distort international trade;
(6) the degree to which the trade policies of such country as they relate
to other beneficiary countries are contributing to the revitalization of
the region;
(7) the degree to which such country is undertaking self-help measures to
protect its own economic development;
(8) whether or not such country has taken or is taking steps to afford to
workers in that country (including any designated zone in that country)
internationally recognized worker rights;
(9) the extent to which such country provides under its law adequate and
effective means for foreign nationals to secure, exercise, and enforce
exclusive rights in intellectual property, including patent, trademark,
and copyright rights;
(10) the extent to which such country prohibits its nationals from
engaging in the broadcast of copyrighted material, including films or
television material, belonging to United States copyright owners without
their express consent;
(11) whether such country has met the narcotics cooperation certification
criteria set forth in section 2291(h)(2)(A) [1] of title 22 for
eligibility for United States assistance; and
(12) the extent to which such country is prepared to cooperate with the
United States in the administration of the provisions of this chapter.
(e) Withdrawal or suspension of designation
(1) The President may - (A) withdraw or suspend the designation of any country as a beneficiary
country, or
(B) withdraw, suspend, or limit the application of duty-free treatment
under this chapter to any article of any country, if, after such
designation, the President determines that as a result of changed
circumstances such a country should be barred from designation as a
beneficiary country. (2) (A) The President shall publish in the Federal Register notice of the
action the President proposes to take under paragraph (1) at least 30 days
before taking such action.
(B) The United States Trade Representative shall, within the 30-day period
beginning on the date on which the President publishes under subparagraph
(A) notice of proposed action - (i) accept written comments from the public regarding such proposed
action,
(ii) hold a public hearing on such proposed action, and
(iii) publish in the Federal Register -
(I) notice of the time and place of such hearing prior to the hearing, and
(II) the time and place at which such written comments will be accepted.
(f) Triennial report
On or before the 3rd, 6th, and 9th anniversaries of December 4, 1991, the
President shall submit to the Congress a complete report regarding the
operation of this chapter, including the results of a general review of
beneficiary countries based on the considerations described in subsections
(c) and (d) of this section. In reporting on the considerations described
in subsection (d)(11) of this section, the President shall report any
evidence that the crop eradication and crop substitution efforts of the
beneficiary are directly related to the effects of this chapter.
Sec. 3203. Eligible articles
(a) In general
(1) Unless otherwise excluded from eligibility by this chapter, the
duty-free treatment provided under this chapter shall apply to any article
which is the growth, product, or manufacture of a beneficiary country if -
(A) that article is imported directly from a beneficiary country into the
customs territory of the United States; and
(B) the sum of -
(i) the cost or value of the materials produced in a beneficiary country
or 2 or more beneficiary countries under this chapter, or a beneficiary
country under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (19 U.S.C. 2701 et
seq.) or 2 or more such countries, plus
(ii) the direct costs of processing operations performed in a beneficiary
country or countries (under this chapter or the Caribbean Basin Economic
Recovery Act), is not less than 35 percent of the appraised value of such
article at the time it is entered. For purposes of determining the
percentage referred to in subparagraph (B), the term ''beneficiary
country'' includes the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the United States
Virgin Islands. If the cost or value of materials produced in the customs
territory of the United States (other than the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico) is included with respect to an article to which this paragraph
applies, an amount not to exceed 15 percent of the appraised value of the
article at the time it is entered that is attributed to such United States
cost or value may be applied toward determining the percentage referred to
in subparagraph (B).
(2) The Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe such regulations as may
be necessary to carry out subsection (a) of this section including, but
not limited to, regulations providing that, in order to be eligible for
duty-free treatment under this chapter, an article must be wholly the
growth, product, or manufacture of a beneficiary country, or must be a new
or different article of commerce which has been grown, produced, or
manufactured in the beneficiary country; but no article or material of a
beneficiary country shall be eligible for such treatment by virtue of
having merely undergone -
(A) simple combining or packaging operations, or
(B) mere dilution with water or mere dilution with another substance that
does not materially alter the characteristics of the article.
(3) As used in this subsection, the phrase ''direct costs of processing
operations'' includes, but is not limited to -
(A) all actual labor costs involved in the growth, production,
manufacture, or assembly of the specific merchandise, including fringe
benefits, on-the-job training and the cost of engineering, supervisory,
quality control, and similar personnel; and
(B) dies, molds, tooling, and depreciation on machinery and equipmentwhich
are allocable to the specific merchandise. Such phrase does not include
costs which are not directly attributable to the merchandise concerned or
are not costs of manufacturing the product, such as (i) profit, and (ii)
general expense of doing business which are either not allocable to the
specific merchandise or are not related to the growth, production,
manufacture, or assembly of the merchandise, such as administrative
salaries, casualty and liability insurance, advertising, interest, and
salesmen's salaries, commissions or expenses.
(4) If the President, pursuant to section 223 of the Caribbean Basin
Economic Recovery Expansion Act of 1990, considers that the implementation
of revised rules of origin for products of beneficiary countries
designated under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (19 U.S.C. 2701
et seq.) would be appropriate, the President may include similarly revised
rules of origin for products of beneficiary countries designated under
this chapter in any suggested legislation transmitted to the Congress that
contains such rules of origin for products of beneficiary countries under
the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act.
(b) Exceptions to duty-free treatment
The duty-free treatment provided under this chapter shall not apply to -
(1) textile and apparel articles which are subject to textile agreements;
(2) footwear not designated at the time of the effective date of this
chapter as eligible for the purpose of the generalized system of
preferences under title V of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2461 et
seq.);
(3) tuna, prepared or preserved in any manner, in airtight containers;
(4) petroleum, or any product derived from petroleum, provided for in
headings 2709 and 2710 of the HTS;
(5) watches and watch parts (including cases, bracelets and straps), of
whatever type including, but not limited to, mechanical, quartz digital or
quartz analog, if such watches or watch parts contain any material which
is the product of any country with respect to which HTS column 2 rates of
duty apply;
(6) articles to which reduced rates of duty apply under subsection (c) of
this section;
(7) sugars, syrups, and molasses classified in subheadings 1701.11.03,
1701.12.02, 1701.99.02, 1702.90.32, 1806.10.42, and 2106.90.12 of the HTS;
or
(8) rum and tafia classified in subheading 2208.40.00 of the HTS.
(c) Duty reductions for certain goods
(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the President shall proclaim reductions in
the rates of duty on handbags, luggage, flat goods, work gloves, and
leather wearing apparel that -
(A) are the product of any beneficiary country; and
(B) were not designated on August 5, 1983, as eligible articles for
purposes of the generalized system of preferences under title V of the
Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2461 et seq.).
(2) The reduction required under paragraph (1) in the rate of duty on any
article shall -
(A) result in a rate that is equal to 80 percent of the rate of duty that
applies to the article on December 31, 1991, except that, subject to the
limitations in paragraph (3), the reduction may not exceed 2.5 percent ad
valorem; and
(B) be implemented in 5 equal annual stages with the first 1/5 of the
aggregate reduction in the rate of duty being applied to entries, or
withdrawals from warehouse for consumption, of the article on or after
January 1, 1992.
(3) The reduction required under this subsection with respect to the rate
of duty on any article is in addition to any reduction in the rate of duty
on that article that may be proclaimed by the President as being required
or appropriate to carry out any trade agreement entered into under the
Uruguay Round of trade negotiations; except that if the reduction so
proclaimed -
(A) is less than 1.5 percent ad valorem, the aggregate of such proclaimed
reduction and the reduction under this subsection may not exceed 3.5
percent ad valorem, or
(B) is 1.5 percent ad valorem or greater, the aggregate of such proclaimed
reduction and the reduction under this subsection may not exceed the
proclaimed reduction plus 1 percent ad valorem.
(d) Suspension of duty-free treatment
(1) The President may by proclamation suspend the duty-free treatment
provided by this chapter with respect to any eligible article and may
proclaim a duty rate for such article if such action is proclaimed under
chapter 1 of title II of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2251 et seq.) or
section 1862 of this title.
(2) In any report by the United States International Trade Commission to
the President under section 202(f) of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C.
2252(f)) regarding any article for which duty-free treatment has been
proclaimed by the President pursuant to this chapter, the Commission shall
state whether and to what extent its findings and recommendations apply to
such article when imported from beneficiary countries.
(3) For purposes of section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2253),
the suspension of the duty-free treatment provided by this chapter shall
be treated as an increase in duty.
(4) No proclamation providing solely for a suspension referred to in
paragraph (3) of this subsection with respect to any article shall be
taken under section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2253) unless
the United States International Trade Commission, in addition to making an
affirmative determination with respect to such article under section
202(b) of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2252(b)), determines in the
course of its investigation under such section that the serious injury (or
threat thereof) substantially caused by imports to the domestic industry
producing a like or directly competitive article results from the
duty-free treatment provided by this chapter.
(5)
(A) Any action taken under section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C.
2253) that is in effect when duty-free treatment is proclaimed under
section 3201 of this title shall remain in effect until modified or
terminated.
(B) If any article is subject to any such action at the time duty-free
treatment is proclaimed under section 3201 of this title, the President
may reduce or terminate the application of such action to the importation
of such article from beneficiary countries prior to the otherwise
scheduled date on which such reduction or termination would occur pursuant
to the criteria and procedures of section 204 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19
U.S.C. 2254).
(e) Emergency relief with respect to perishable products
(1) If a petition is filed with the United States International Trade
Commission pursuant to the provisions of section 201 of the Trade Act of
1974 (19 U.S.C. 2251) regarding a perishable product and alleging injury
from imports from beneficiary countries, then the petition may also be
filed with the Secretary of Agriculture with a request that emergency
relief be granted pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection with
respect to such article.
(2) Within 14 days after the filing of a petition under paragraph (1) of
this subsection -
(A) if the Secretary of Agriculture has reason to believe that a
perishable product from a beneficiary country is being imported into the
United States in such increased quantities as to be a substantial cause of
serious injury, or the threat thereof, to the domestic industry producing
a perishable product like or directly competitive with the imported
product and that emergency action is warranted, he shall advise the
President and recommend that the President take emergency action; or
(B) the Secretary of Agriculture shall publish a notice of his
determination not to recommend the imposition of emergency action and so
advise the petitioner.
(3) Within 7 days after the President receives a recommendation from the
Secretary of Agriculture to take emergency action pursuant to paragraph
(2) of this subsection, he shall issue a proclamation withdrawing the
duty-free treatment provided by this chapter or publish a notice of his
determination not to take emergency action.
(4) The emergency action provided by paragraph (3) of this subsection
shall cease to apply - (A) upon the taking of action under section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974
(19 U.S.C. 2253),
(B) on the day a determination by the President not to take action under
section 203(b)(2) of such Act becomes final,
(C) in the event of a report of the United States International Trade
Commission containing a negative finding, on the day of the Commission's
report is submitted to the President, or
(D) whenever the President determines that because of changed
circumstances such relief is no longer warranted. (5) For purposes of this subsection, the term ''perishable product'' means
- (A) live plants and fresh cut flowers provided for in chapter 6 of the
HTS;
(B) fresh or chilled vegetables provided for in headings 0701 through 0709
(except subheading 0709.52.00) and heading 0714 of the HTS;
(C) fresh fruit provided for in subheadings 0804.20 through 0810.90
(except citrons of subheadings 0805.90.00, tamarinds and kiwi fruit of
subheading 0810.90.20, and cashew apples, mameyes colorados, sapodillas,
soursops and sweetsops of subheading 0810.90.40) of the HTS; or
(D) concentrated citrus fruit juice provided for in subheadings
2009.11.00, 2009.19.40, 2009.20.40, 2009.30.20, and 2009.30.60 of the HTS.
(f) Fees under section 624 of title 7 No proclamation issued pursuant to
this chapter shall affect fees imposed pursuant to section 624 of title 7.
(g) Tariff-rate quotas No quantity of an agricultural product subject to a
tariff-rate quota that exceeds the in-quota quantity shall be eligible for
duty-free treatment under this chapter.
(f) Fees under section 624 of title 7
No proclamation issued pursuant to this chapter shall affect fees imposed
pursuant to section 624 of title 7.
(g) Tariff-rate quotas
No quantity of an agricultural product subject to a tariff-rate quota that
exceeds the in-quota quantity shall be eligible for duty-free treatment
under this chapter.
Sec. 3204. International Trade
Commission reports on impact of this chapter
(a) In general
The United States International Trade Commission (hereinafter in this
section referred to as the ''Commission'') shall prepare, and submit to
the Congress, a report regarding the economic impact of this chapter on
United States industries and consumers, and, in conjunction with other
agencies, the effectiveness of this chapter in promoting drug-related crop
eradication and crop substitution efforts of the beneficiary countries,
during - (1) the 24-month period beginning with December 4, 1991; and
(2) each calendar year occurring thereafter until duty-free treatment
under this chapter is terminated under section 3206(b) of this title. For
purposes of this section, industries in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
and the insular possessions of the United States shall be considered to be
United States industries. (b) Report requirements
(1) Each report required under subsection (a) of this section shall
include, but not be limited to, an assessment by the Commission regarding
- (A) the actual effect, during the period covered by the report, of this
chapter on the United States economy generally as well as on those
specific domestic industries which produce articles that are like, or
directly competitive with, articles being imported into the United States
from beneficiary countries;
(B) the probable future effect that this chapter will have on the United
States economy generally, as well as on such domestic industries, before
the provisions of this chapter terminate; and
(C) the estimated effect that this chapter has had on the drug-related
crop eradication and crop substitution efforts of the beneficiary
countries. (2) In preparing the assessments required under paragraph (1), the
Commission shall, to the extent practicable - (A) analyze the production, trade and consumption of United States
products affected by this chapter, taking into consideration employment,
profit levels, and use of productive facilities with respect to the
domestic industries concerned, and such other economic factors in such
industries as it considers relevant, including prices, wages, sales,
inventories, patterns of demand, capital investment, obsolescence of
equipment, and diversification of production; and
(B) describe the nature and extent of any significant change in
employment, profit levels, and use of productive facilities, and such
other conditions as it deems relevant in the domestic industries
concerned, which it believes are attributable to this chapter. (c) Submission dates; public comment (1) Each report required under
subsection (a) of this section shall be submitted to the Congress before
the close of the 9-month period beginning on the day after the last day of
the period covered by the report. (2) The Commission shall provide an
opportunity for the submission by the public, either orally or in writing,
or both, of information relating to matters that will be addressed in the
reports.
Sec. 3205. Impact study by
Secretary of Labor
The Secretary of Labor, in consultation with other appropriate Federal
agencies, shall undertake a continuing review and analysis of the impact
that the implementation of the provisions of this chapter has with respect
to United States labor; and shall make an annual written report to
Congress on the results of such review and analysis.
Sec. 3206. Effective date and
termination of duty-free treatment
(a) Effective date
This chapter shall take effect on December 4, 1991.
(b) Termination of duty-free treatment
No duty-free treatment extended to beneficiary countries under this
chapter shall remain in effect 10 years after December 4, 1991.
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