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             CingreSsionadearch Sectio 3  a



Enforcing U.S. Trade Laws: Section 301 and China


Overview
Concerns over China's policies on intellectual property
(IP), technology, and innovation led the Trump
Administration in August 2017 to launch a Section 301
investigation of those policies. Consequently, the United
States has implemented three rounds of tariff increases on a
total of $250 billion worth of Chinese products, while
China has increased tariffs on $110 billion worth of U.S.
products. The Trump Administration has threatened to
increase tariffs on nearly all remaining imports from China.
What   Is Section 301 and  How   Does  It Work?
Sections 301 through 310 of the Trade Act of 1974, as
amended,  are commonly referred to as Section 301. It is
one of the principal statutory means by which the United
States enforces U.S. rights under trade agreements and
addresses unfair foreign barriers to U.S. exports. Section
301 procedures apply to foreign acts, policies, and practices
that the USTR determines either (1) violate, or are
inconsistent with, a trade agreement; or (2) are unjustifiable
and burden or restrict U.S. commerce. The measure sets
procedures and timetables for actions based on the type of
trade barrier(s) addressed. Once the USTR begins a Section
301 investigation, it seeks a negotiated settlement with the
foreign country concerned (either through compensation or
an elimination of the particular barrier or practice. For cases
involving trade agreements, such as those under the
Uruguay  Round (UR)  agreements in the World Trade
Organization (WTO), the USTR  is required to use the
formal dispute proceedings specified by the agreement. For
Section 301 cases (except those involving a trade agreement
or an IPR issue) the USTR has 12 to 18 months to seek a
negotiated resolution. If one is not obtained, the USTR
determines whether to retaliate (which usually takes the
form of increased tariffs on selected imports) at a level
equivalent to the estimated economic losses incurred by
U.S. firms from the foreign barrier or practice.
After the United States implemented the UR agreements
and joined the WTO in 1995, the USTR still sometimes
began Section 301 investigations but then brought the
issues at hand to the WTO for dispute resolution. After
2010, the USTR  brought all trade disputes involving WTO
members  directly to the WTO for adjudication. The Trump
Administration's use of Section 301, rather than solely
utilizing the WTO dispute settlement process to address the
issues of concern, is a departure from past U.S. practices.
New   U.S. Section  301 Measures   Against China
On March  22, 2018, President Trump signed a
Memorandum   on Actions by the United States Related to
the Section 301 Investigation. Described by the White
House  as a targeting of China's economic aggression, the
memorandum   identified four broad policies that justified
U.S. action against China under Section 301. It said China
*  uses joint venture requirements, foreign investment
   restrictions, and administrative review and licensing


Updated June 26, 2019


   processes to force or pressure technology transfers from
   U.S. companies to a Chinese entity;
*  maintains unfair licensing practices that prevent U.S.
   firms from getting market-based returns for their IP;
*  directs and facilitates investments and acquisitions
   which generate large-scale technology and IP transfer to
   support China's industrial policy goals, such as the
   Made  in China 2025 (MIC 2025) initiative; and
*  conducts and supports cyberintrusions into U.S.
   computer networks to gain access to valuable business
   information.
Subsequently, the Trump Administration increased tariffs
by 25%  on three tranches of tariff products with combined
value of $250 billion worth of imports from China and has
threatened to boost tariffs on nearly all remaining products
from China (valued at $300 billion). China has increased
tariffs (at rates ranging from 5% to 25%) on $110 billion
worth imports from the United States (see table and figure).

Table  I. U.S.-China Section 301 Tariff Action

               Ad
  Country    Valorem      Stated
  Imposing    Tariff     Imports     Tariff Actions and
  Tariff      Rates     Impacted           Dates

  U.S.                              Implemented
    Trache   25%        $34 billion 7621
 Tranche I                          7/6/2018

 China                              Implemented
 Tranche I                          7/6/2018

 U.S.                               Implemented
 Tranche 2                          8/23/2018

 China                              Implemented
 Tranche 2                          8/23/2018

 U.S.        1000, then             10% hike effective
                        $200 billion 9/24/2018; raised to
 Tranche 3   25%                    2%b     1521
                                    25% by 6/1I5/201I9

                                    5% and 10% hikes on
 China       5% and                 9/24/2018; increased
             10%, then              to 10%, 20%, and
 Tranche 3              $60 billion
 (4 l        10%, 20%,              25% on selective
             and 25%                products, effective
                                    6/1/2019

 U.S.                               Draft USTR notice
 Tranche 4   25%        $300 billion issued 5/13/20 19
 proposed                           (action pending)
 Sources: USTR and Chinese Ministry of Finance.


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