Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - TARIFF ACT OF 1930 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IV— - COUNTERVAILING AND ANTIDUMPING DUTIES › Part Part I— - Imposition of Countervailing Duties › § 1671d
The administering authority (the agency that decides if a government is giving unfair subsidies) must make a final decision about subsidies within 75 days after its preliminary decision. If a related investigation under part II is happening at the same time, the petitioner can ask to move the final decision to match the other investigation’s final date. If the final decision says there is a subsidy, the agency must also say whether the subsidy breaks the Subsidies Agreement and whether there were massive imports in a short time when critical circumstances were claimed. The agency must ignore any subsidy that is de minimis (as defined in section 1671b(b)(4)). The Commission (the agency that decides if U.S. industry is hurt) must decide whether an industry is materially injured, is threatened with material injury, or if establishing an industry is being delayed. If the administering authority’s preliminary decision was affirmative, the Commission must decide by the later of the 120th day after that preliminary decision or the 45th day after the administering authority’s final affirmative decision. If the administering authority’s preliminary decision was negative but its final decision is affirmative, the Commission must decide within 75 days after that final decision. If both agencies’ final decisions are affirmative, the administering authority will issue a countervailing duty order. If either final decision is negative, the investigation ends, suspensions of liquidation stop, and any bonds or cash deposits are released and refunded. The administering authority must share its information with the Commission, set estimated subsidy rates for individually examined exporters and an “all-others” rate (using a weighted average that excludes zero and de minimis rates, or another reasonable method if needed), or set a single country-wide rate if allowed, and require cash deposits or other security based on those rates. If findings about retroactive suspension are negative, the agency must end the retroactive suspension and refund deposits; if affirmative, it will continue or modify suspensions and apply them to entries back to the date 90 days before suspension was first ordered in some cases. Both agencies must notify parties and publish their findings in the Federal Register. The administering authority must also have a process to correct ministerial errors (math or clerical mistakes) and let interested parties comment.
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Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 1671d
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73