Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - TRADE ACT OF 1974 › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - GENERALIZED SYSTEM OF PREFERENCES › § 2462
The President can name countries as beneficiary developing countries and can also call some of them least-developed beneficiary developing countries, using the listed rules and factors. The President may not name Australia, Canada, European Union member states, Iceland, Japan, Monaco, New Zealand, Norway, or Switzerland. A country also cannot be named if it is a Communist country that does not meet three conditions (nondiscriminatory treatment for its products, membership in the World Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund, and not being controlled by international communism), or if it takes part in actions that withhold vital commodities and hurt the world economy, gives harmful trade preference to another developed country, seizes U.S.-owned property without proper compensation or dispute resolution, refuses to enforce arbitration awards for U.S. interests, shelters terrorists or fails to help fight terrorism, denies internationally recognized worker rights, or has not acted to eliminate the worst forms of child labor. When deciding, the President must consider the country’s request, its level of economic development (including per-capita income and living standards), whether other major developed countries give it tariff preferences, assurances of fair market access and export practices, protection of intellectual property, steps to reduce trade-distorting investment rules and barriers to trade in services, and worker rights. The President can withdraw, suspend, or limit duty-free treatment and must use these same factors when doing so. If a country becomes a “high income” country by the official statistics of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, its designation ends effective January 1 of the second year after that determination. The President must notify Congress before making a designation, must give Congress at least 60 days’ notice before naming a least-developed beneficiary, and must notify Congress and the country at least 60 days before ending a designation.
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Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
19 U.S.C. § 2462
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73