Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 24— - BIPARTISAN TRADE PROMOTION AUTHORITY › § 3802
Requires the United States to push for trade deals that open foreign markets, cut unfair trade barriers, and make trade rules and dispute methods stronger. It must also try to grow the U.S. economy and jobs, protect the environment, and promote core worker rights and child‑labor protections (including urging ratification of ILO Convention No. 182). Deals should not encourage countries to weaken their own labor or environmental laws, and they should help small businesses get fair access to markets. Also requires specific goals for goods, services, investment, intellectual property, transparency, and new areas like electronic commerce and textiles. Key aims include lowering tariffs and nontariff barriers, fair rules for foreign investment, strong IP protection that respects the TRIPS Doha Declaration of November 14, 2001, more open trade rulemaking and dispute settlement, and strong trade remedies and border‑tax rules. For agriculture it seeks tariff and subsidy cuts, protection for family farms, better rules for perishable products, and an effort to complete a broad multilateral round by January 1, 2005. The President must work with the WTO and ILO, set up consultative mechanisms to help partners meet labor and environmental standards, do environmental reviews under Executive Order 13141 (November 16, 1999), report to Congress on labor and child‑labor laws before implementing agreements, and make regular reports (including one within 12 months after applying a penalty). The U.S. Trade Representative must keep Congress and key committees fully informed and consult them closely during negotiations, with extra consultation for agricultural talks.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 3802
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73