Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 26— - AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - COMMODITY BENEFITS › § 616
When a processing tax starts, ends, or changes, people holding goods that were made mostly from a taxed commodity must have their tax charges adjusted. If the tax starts, anyone holding those processed articles for sale on the start date (including items in transit) must pay the tax that would be due if the processing had happened that day. Imported items in customs must pay before release. For sugar, non-retail floor stocks are taxed in the month they are sold or used under IRS rules approved by the Treasury. If the tax ends, holders get a refund, credit, or abatement equal to the tax that would have been due if processing had happened on the end date. How the relief is given depends on whether the holder already paid the tax or is the processor. If there was a rate increase before June 1, 1934, refunds cannot exceed the original rate in effect then. Retail stocks held by stores on the start date are generally exempt, but not stocks in warehouses or stocks not sold within 30 days. Special rules limit exemptions for flour, certain wheat products, sugar and cotton products. Sugar bought or held under certain conditions before April 25, 1934, and sugar imported that paid the duty rate in effect on January 1, 1934, can be exempt. The Secretary of Agriculture may buy up to 300,000 tons (raw value) of surplus beet-area sugar at no more than market price and may sell or distribute it; proceeds are available for specified USDA purposes. If the processing tax rate changes on or after June 1, 1934, holders get a refund or extra charge equal to the rate difference (with a special restriction for hogs and limited application to certain wheat and sugar products). If the Secretary of Agriculture certifies a suspension or revocation under section 615(a), the refund or charge rules described above apply. These rules do not apply to rice.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 616
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73