Title 19 › Chapter 27— BIPARTISAN CONGRESSIONAL TRADE PRIORITIES AND ACCOUNTABILITY › § 4201
Sets the goals the United States must follow when negotiating trade agreements. It says the U.S. must push for more open and fair market access, fewer trade barriers and distortions, stronger international trade rules and dispute processes, and policies that help U.S. growth, jobs, and living standards. The goals include protecting the environment, promoting worker and child labor rights (including supporting ILO Convention No. 182), avoiding trade incentives that weaken domestic labor or environmental laws, and helping small businesses get fair access to foreign markets. The U.S. must also recognize the growing role of the Internet in trade, protect important public interests like health, safety, security, and consumers, consider religious freedom in partners, and not agree to changes that would alter U.S. immigration law or require new U.S. greenhouse gas commitments. It lists detailed aims for different areas. For goods and services the U.S. must seek wider, reciprocal market access and cut tariffs and unfair rules that block trade. For agriculture it must push for science-based sanitary rules, tariff cuts with transition periods for sensitive crops, limits on harmful subsidies and state trading practices, better dispute tools, fair treatment for perishable goods, and transparency on tariff quotas and geographical indications. For investment the goals include national treatment, free fund transfers, limits on performance rules and forced technology transfer, fair expropriation rules, due process, strong dispute procedures, faster arbitration, public participation, and transparency including public proceedings and amicus submissions. For intellectual property the U.S. must seek protections like U.S. law for new technologies and digital distribution, strong enforcement, nondiscrimination, and respect for the TRIPS and Public Health Declaration of November 14, 2001. For digital trade it must make sure existing WTO and other trade rules cover digital goods and cross‑border data, treat electronic delivery no worse than physical delivery, limit data localization requirements, and extend the WTO moratorium on duties on electronic transmissions. Other goals cover clearer, science‑based regulation and better regulatory cooperation; fair play by state‑owned enterprises; ending localization requirements; labor and environmental obligations that are enforceable and do not allow backsliding; rules to prevent currency manipulation; stronger WTO rules and participation; more transparency in trade institutions; stronger anti‑corruption rules including support for the OECD Anti‑Bribery Convention (December 17, 1997); effective, timely, and transparent dispute settlement with equal access and remedies; preservation of U.S. trade remedy laws; reform of WTO border tax rules; fair access in textiles and apparel; discouraging trade partners from boycotting Israel; building partners’ capacity to strengthen governance and rule of law; and fair treatment and subsidy limits in fisheries plus action on illegal fishing. The President must direct agencies to consult with and help partners on customs, sanitary and technical rules, IP, labor, and environment, provide technical assistance when needed, promote consultative mechanisms on standards, consider multilateral environmental agreements, and report each year to the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees about capacity‑building work.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 4201
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60