Title 19Customs DutiesRelease 119-73

§4405 Trade Enforcement Trust Fund

Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - TRADE FACILITATION AND TRADE ENFORCEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - ADDITIONAL ENFORCEMENT PROVISIONS › § 4405

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Creates a trust fund in the U.S. Treasury called the Trade Enforcement Trust Fund. The Treasury must put $15,000,000 into the fund each fiscal year that starts on or after February 24, 2016 through fiscal year 2026, unless the fund would hit its $30,000,000 limit. The fund can never hold more than $30,000,000. Money must be moved at least every quarter so the cap is not broken. Cash that is not needed right away can be invested in U.S. government-backed securities, and any interest or sale proceeds go back into the fund. The U.S. Trade Representative, using advice from the Trade Policy Committee and only as Congress allows, can use or give money from the fund to federal agencies to pay for enforcing WTO and free trade agreement rules, monitoring other countries’ implementation, investigating certain petitions under sections 2412 and 2411, and supporting capacity-building to help partners meet trade commitments across many areas (for example: goods, services, agriculture, investment, intellectual property, digital trade, state-owned enterprises, labor, environment, currency, anticorruption, trade remedies, textiles, and commercial partnerships). The fund cannot pay for negotiating new trade deals entered into on or after February 24, 2016, but it can help with implementation and capacity-building before a deal starts. Within 18 months after any new free trade agreement entered into after February 24, 2016, the USTR must report to Congress on actions taken. The Comptroller General must study federal trade enforcement spending and staff and report to Congress within one year after February 24, 2016. Definitions: Trade Policy Committee (TPC) — the interagency trade group; WTO — World Trade Organization; WTO Agreement — the WTO treaty and its annexes.

Full Legal Text

Title 19, §4405

Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)There is established in the Treasury of the United States a trust fund to be known as the Trade Enforcement Trust Fund (in this section referred to as the “Trust Fund”), consisting of amounts transferred to the Trust Fund under subsection (b) and any amounts that may be credited to the Trust Fund under subsection (c).
(b)(1)The Secretary of the Treasury shall transfer to the Trust Fund, from the general fund of the Treasury, for each fiscal year that begins on or after February 24, 2016, through fiscal year 2026, an amount equal to $15,000,000 (or a lesser amount as required pursuant to paragraph (2)).
(2)The total amount in the Trust Fund at any time may not exceed $30,000,000.
(3)The Secretary shall transfer amounts required to be transferred to the Trust Fund under paragraph (1) not less frequently than quarterly from the general fund of the Treasury to the Trust Fund in a manner that ensures that the total amount in the Trust Fund at the end of the quarter does not exceed the limitation established under paragraph (2).
(c)(1)The Secretary shall invest such portion of the Trust Fund as is not required to meet current withdrawals in interest-bearing obligations of the United States or in obligations guaranteed as to both principal and interest by the United States.
(2)The interest on, and the proceeds from the sale or redemption of, any obligations held in the Trust Fund shall be credited to and form a part of the Trust Fund.
(d)(1)The United States Trade Representative shall, on the basis of the advice of the Trade Policy Committee and relevant subordinate bodies of the TPC, use or transfer for the use by Federal agencies represented on the TPC amounts in the Trust Fund, only as provided by appropriations Acts, for making expenditures for any of the following:
(A)To seek to enforce the provisions of and commitments and obligations under the WTO Agreements and free trade agreements to which the United States is a party and resolve any actions by foreign countries that are inconsistent with those provisions, commitments, and obligations.
(B)To monitor and ensure the full implementation by foreign countries of the provisions of and commitments and obligations under free trade agreements to which the United States is a party for purposes of systematically assessing, identifying, investigating, or initiating steps to address inconsistencies with those provisions, commitments, and obligations.
(C)To thoroughly investigate and respond to petitions under section 2412 of this title requesting that action be taken under section 2411 of this title.
(D)To support capacity-building efforts undertaken by the United States pursuant to any free trade agreement to which the United States is a party and to prioritize and give special attention to the timely, consistent, and robust implementation of the commitments and obligations of a party to that free trade agreement, including commitments and obligations related to trade in goods, trade in services, trade in agriculture, foreign investment, intellectual property, digital trade in goods and services and cross-border data flows, regulatory practices, state-owned and state-controlled enterprises, localization barriers to trade, labor and the environment, currency, foreign currency manipulation, anticorruption, trade remedy laws, textiles, and commercial partnerships.
(E)To support capacity-building efforts undertaken by the United States pursuant to any such free trade agreement and to include performance indicators against which the progress and obstacles for the implementation of commitments and obligations can be identified and assessed within a meaningful time frame.
(2)Amounts made available in the Trust Fund may not be used to offset costs of conducting negotiations for any free trade agreement to be entered into on or after February 24, 2016, but may be used to support implementation and capacity building prior to entry into force of a free trade agreement.
(e)Not later than 18 months after the entry into force of any free trade agreement entered into after February 24, 2016, the United States Trade Representative, in consultation with the Federal agencies represented on the TPC, shall submit to Congress a report on the actions taken under subsection (d) in connection with that agreement.
(f)(1)The Comptroller General of the United States shall conduct a study that includes the following:
(A)A comprehensive analysis of the trade enforcement expenditures of each Federal agency with responsibilities relating to trade that specifies, with respect to each such Federal agency—
(i)the amounts appropriated for trade enforcement; and
(ii)the number of full-time employees carrying out activities relating to trade enforcement.
(B)Recommendations on the additional employees and resources that each such Federal agency may need to effectively enforce the free trade agreements to which the United States is a party.
(2)Not later than one year after February 24, 2016, the Comptroller General shall submit to Congress a report on the results of the study conducted under paragraph (1).
(g)In this section:
(1)The terms “Trade Policy Committee” and “TPC” mean the interagency organization established under section 1872 of this title.
(2)The term “WTO” means the World Trade Organization.
(3)The term “WTO Agreement” has the meaning given that term in section 3501(9) of this title.
(4)The term “WTO Agreements” means the WTO Agreement and agreements annexed to that Agreement.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

19 U.S.C. § 4405

Title 19Customs Duties

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73