Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - TRADE ACT OF 1974 › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - NEGOTIATING AND OTHER AUTHORITY › Part Part 3— - Hearings and Advice Concerning Negotiations › § 2151
The President must publish and give the International Trade Commission lists of products and, when relevant, non-tariff issues that might be changed under a proposed trade agreement. For any product where a duty rate might be raised or lowered, the list must say which part of the law allows that review. The Commission must advise the President on each item’s likely economic effect on U.S. producers of similar or competing goods and on consumers. The Commission has 6 months to give that advice, or 90 days when the list is tied to a trade agreement. The advice can also say whether any duty cuts should happen more slowly than the minimum time in section 4202(a)(4)(A). The Commission must also do studies and reports if the President or the U.S. Trade Representative asks. These studies must look at how changing trade barriers would affect workers, industries, buyers, prices, and quantities sold. To prepare advice, the Commission must study competition between foreign and U.S. producers; analyze production, trade, and use of goods; and consider jobs, profits, plant use, prices, wages, sales, inventories, demand, investment, and equipment age. It must describe likely changes to employment, profits, and plant use and the overall effect on competitiveness. The Commission may do special studies (for example, real wages in supplying countries) when needed, and it must hold public hearings after giving reasonable notice.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 2151
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73