Sec. 301. USMCA ARTICLE IMPACT IN IMPORT RELIEF CASES UNDER THE TRADE ACT OF 1974
379 words·~2 min read·
/statute-compilations/comps-15732/sec-301A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
## SEC. 301 USMCA ARTICLE IMPACT IN IMPORT RELIEF CASES UNDER THE TRADE ACT OF 1974 **[**[19 U.S.C. 4551](/us/usc/t19/s4551)**]** ###
(a)In General If, in any investigation initiated under chapter 1 of title II of the Trade Act of 1974, the International Trade Commission makes an affirmative determination (or a determination which the President may treat as an affirmative determination under such chapter by reason of section 330(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930), the International Trade Commission shall also find (and report to the President at the time such injury determination is submitted to the President) whether— ####
(1)imports of the article from a USMCA country, considered individually, account for a substantial share of total imports; and ####
(2)imports of the article from a USMCA country, considered individually or, in exceptional circumstances, imports from USMCA countries considered collectively, contribute importantly to the serious injury, or threat thereof, caused by imports. ###
(b)Factors ####
(1)Substantial import share In determining whether imports from a USMCA country, considered individually, account for a substantial share of total imports, such imports normally shall not be considered to account for a substantial share of total imports if that country is not among the top 5 suppliers of the article subject to the investigation, measured in terms of import share during the most recent 3-year period. ####
(2)Application of “contribute importantly” standard In determining whether imports from a USMCA country or countries contribute importantly to the serious injury, or threat thereof, the International Trade Commission shall consider such factors as the change in the import share of the USMCA country or countries, and the level and change in the level of imports of such country or countries. In applying the preceding sentence, imports from a USMCA country or countries normally shall not be considered to contribute importantly to serious injury, or the threat thereof, if the growth rate of imports from such country or countries during the period in which an injurious increase in imports occurred is appreciably lower than the growth rate of total imports from all sources over the same period. ###
(c)Definition For purposes of this section and section 302(a), the term “contribute importantly” refers to an important cause, but not necessarily the most important cause.
Connectionstraces to 1
Traces to 1 document
Citation graph
cites case law
Sec. 301
USMCA ARTICLE IMPACT IN IMPORT RELIEF CASES UNDER THE TRADE ACT OF 1974
Cites 1Cited by 0 across 0 sources