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Team 4: The byrd amendment. Tendai Kavu Jay Knodel Christian Koschil. The History of the Byrd Amendment. Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act of 2000 (CDSOA). What is the Byrd Amendment?.
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Team 4: The byrd amendment Tendai Kavu Jay Knodel Christian Koschil
The History of the Byrd Amendment Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act of 2000 (CDSOA)
What is the Byrd Amendment? • Under the Byrd Amendment (which amended the Tariff Act of 1930, the principal U.S. trade remedy statute), anti-dumping and countervailing duties are given to U.S. producers who supported those trade remedy actions. These duties were previously deposited in the U.S. Treasury. • Slide 1 of 25
How did the CDSOA pass? • Main Proponent - Democratic Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia • Originally authored by Senator DeWine of Ohio but couldn’t pass the house for “legality” reasons. • Byrd affixed the CDSOA to the 2006 Omnibus Agricultural Spending bill, Public Law 106-387. • President Clinton signed the bill under the condition that the CDSOA later be removed. • The CDSOA remained in effect until the end of September of this year. • Slide 2 of 25
Where are we now? • Slide 3 of 25
Main WTO Issues: Is the CDSOA legal or does it break WTO rules? • Contested Measure • How the Byrd Amendment Works • Provisions involved • Slide 4 of 25
The Main WTO Issue • Contested Measure • US Continued Dumping and Subsidy Act of 2000 (CDSOA) • aka Byrd Amendment • “revenue from unfair trade should be used to help those hurt by trade” • Slide 5 of 25
The Main WTO Issue • How the Byrd Amendment Works • Slide 6 of 25
The Main WTO Issue • Provisions involved: • ADA Art. 18.1 and ASCM Art. 32.1 • Specific action • ADA Art. 5.4 and ASCM Art. 11.4 • Initiation of investigation • WTO Agreement Art. XVI:4 • Conformity of laws • Slide 7 of 25
Parties to the Amendment • Defendant: US • Plaintiffs: EU, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Japan, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Thailand. • Slide 8 of 25
Position of the Main Parties • US enacted the CDSOA to protect domestic producers from unfairly priced imports. • In fiscal year 2002, US claimants received disbursements of $329 million. • US argued that the CDSOA constituted a spending decision and did not violate any agreements. • Slide 9 of 25
CDSOA was inserted into an Farm appropriations bill without committee or floor amendment. • President Bush budget for 2004 called for a repeal of the law after the disbursements of that year. • Senator Charles Grassley stated that “a repeal is unlikely, if not impossible. • Slide 10 of 25
WTO and the complainants to the case saw the CDSOA as more than a safeguard. • Imports were assessed an AD or CVD’s and the money paid out to domestic producers each year. • As the architect of the WTO the US should be one setting an example for others to follow. A rules based system upon which the WTO was founded. • Slide 11 of 25
National vs. International Interests • Few companies benefited from the CDSOA. • As the CDSOA is still in effect until 09/30/2007 the US continues to be hit with higher tariffs by other member states. • The CDSOA indicates a case of good politics at the expense of good governance. • Slide 12 of 25
CDSOA Provisions • Slide 13 of 25
Provisions • ADA Art. 18.1 and ASCM Art. 32.1 • Specific actions • Slide 14 of 25
Provisions • ADA Art. 5.4 and ASCM Art. 11.4 • Initiation of investigation • Slide 15 of 25
Provisions • WTO Agreement Art. XVI:4 • Conformity of laws • Slide 16 of 25
Decisions of the Panel • Specific Action • Investigations • Negotiating Undertakings • Slide 17 of 25
Decisions of the AB • Specific Action • Investigations • Negotiating Undertakings • Slide 18 of 25
Implementation And Sanctions • Slide 19 of 25
Implementation and Sanctions • 6/13/ 2003 Arbitrator issues awards to the parties. • US was given 11 months in which to implement the DSB recommendations and rulings. • Expiration of this “reasonable time” was set for 12/27/2003. • Slide 20 of 25
1/15/2004 Brazil, Chile, EC, Japan, Korea, Canada, Mexico request DSB authorization to suspend concessions. • 1/23/2004 US requests arbitration regarding suspension of concessions. • Arbitrator disagreed with the interpretation of the complainants as it was not supported by the terms of Article XXIII of GATT 1994 or the DSU. • Slide 21 of 25
11/10/2004 Brazil, EC, India, Japan, Korea, Canada, Mexico requested authorization to suspend concessions under Article 22.7 of the DSU. • 11/26/2004 DSB authorized suspension of concessions. • 12/6/2004 Chile requested authorization to suspend concessions. • 12/17/2004 DSB authorized suspension of concessions. • Slide 22 of 25
2/17/2006 Congress approved the Deficit Reduction Act bringing the US into compliance. • Complainants welcomed the steps taken but disagreed that the US was now in compliance. • 4/28/2006 EC notified DSB of a new list of products on which additional duty would apply. • 4/19/2007 EC notified DSB of a new list of products that would be subject to additional duties. • Slide 23 of 25
Recap & Conclusion • Main WTO Issue • Specific actions • Main parties • EU and 10 other Member countries • Decision • Panel/AB concluded nonconformity • Implementation • 15% tariffs on selected goods • Status • Repealed on 02/2006 • Ended on 09/2007 • Slide 24 of 25