Title 19 › Chapter 24— BIPARTISAN TRADE PROMOTION AUTHORITY › § 3802
Requires the United States to follow a set of clear goals when it negotiates trade agreements. The goals include opening markets, cutting trade barriers that hurt U.S. exporters, strengthening international trade rules and dispute procedures, and promoting U.S. economic growth and jobs. Negotiators must also try to make trade and environmental policies work together, protect worker and child rights (including pushing for ILO Convention No. 182), avoid deals that encourage lowering domestic environmental or labor protections, help small businesses get fair access to foreign markets, and push for universal ratification of ILO Convention No. 182. It also lists many specific aims negotiators must seek. They must reduce tariffs and other barriers and get reciprocal market access; open services markets; limit unfair rules against foreign investment while not giving foreign investors greater rights than U.S. investors; create fair investor protections, clear rules on expropriation, and transparent, efficient dispute processes (including public access and a way for third parties to submit views). They must push for strong, up-to-date intellectual property rules and fair market access for IP users, and respect the WTO Doha declaration of November 14, 2001. Transparency at the WTO and in trade talks must be increased. The U.S. should seek rules against bribery, improve WTO coverage, make foreign regulations more open and science-based, protect electronic commerce (including extending the WTO moratorium on duties on electronic transmissions), and pursue fair treatment in textiles, border taxes, and trade remedies. Agriculture goals include equal competitive opportunities, cutting tariffs and harmful subsidies, addressing state trading enterprises and unfair sanitary or technical barriers, protecting perishable crops, and trying to finish a broad multilateral round by January 1, 2005. Negotiators must also seek enforceable labor and environmental commitments, strong dispute-settlement rules, and prevent trade measures from hiding discrimination. The President must coordinate with the WTO and ILO, carry out environmental and labor reviews (including under Executive Order 13141 of November 16, 1999), consult Congress and relevant agencies during talks, report to Congress on labor and child-labor laws of negotiating partners, and consider how well a country has met its Uruguay Round obligations before starting 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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60