WASHINGTON, DC–Ambassador Susan C. Schwab announced today
the outcome of the Bush Administration’s 2006 Annual Review of the Generalized
System of Preferences (GSP), a program created in 1974 that provides duty-free
treatment to nearly 5,000 products exported to the United States
from 131 beneficiary developing countries. As a result of this year’s
review, the Administration will continue GSP eligibility for 115 exports from
specific countries whose trade exceeded statutory limits in 2006 and terminate
GSP eligibility for 21 products from specific beneficiary countries in order to
advance a more targeted and effective program to promote economic
development.
“Congress created the GSP program to serve as a bridge for
developing countries as they increase their participation in the global
trading
system. It also helps to expand choices for
U.S. consumers
and
industry,” U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said today. “The
GSP program has proven to be very successful in expanding
U.S. trade with
developing
countries. In part due to the GSP program, the
United
States is one of the world’s most open
economies to products of developing countries."
In 2006, U.S. imports from beneficiary
developing countries under the GSP program totaled $32.6 billion, a 22
percent
increase over 2005. U.S. imports under GSP constituted a significant
share of total U.S.
imports
from several beneficiary countries, including
Fiji, Kazakhstan, Paraguay, Tunisia, and Yemen.
The GSP Annual Review focused on several key areas,
including
consideration of: 1) whether to continue GSP eligibility for products
from specific countries that exceeded statutory competitiveness
limitations; 2)
whether to terminate GSP eligibility for products that
could be found
competitive or meet other pertinent statutory criteria;
and 3) petitions
challenging the continued eligibility of certain
beneficiary countries for the
GSP program. In this year’s review,
the Administration granted waivers of
the competitive need limitations
to ensure continued GSP duty-free benefits to
115 products from 19
beneficiary countries, with an approximate import value of
$618 million
in 2006.
Consistent with the statutory provisions concerning
product
competitiveness and after extensive analysis, the Administration
determined that 21 products from beneficiary countries can compete
effectively
in the U.S. market and will no longer be
eligible for duty-free treatment under the GSP program. In 2006,
such
imports were valued at approximately $4.8 billion. This
group includes 13
products that exceeded the statutory “competitive
need limitations” (CNLs) and
eight products that had been granted
waivers to the CNLs at least five years ago
and are now subject to
statutory “super-competitiveness” thresholds.
With respect to this year’s decision to revoke waivers
that had
previously afforded GSP preferences to certain globally competitive
foreign suppliers, Schwab commented, “The eligibility determinations
made in
this year’s review fulfill the intent of the recent
Congressional amendment that
GSP continue to serve as a powerful
development tool, particularly for the
world’s poorest countries.
The statute indicates that well-established,
globally competitive
industries based in developing countries should compete on
a level
playing field with their counterparts. This will preserve GSP
tariff advantages for nascent sectors that are intended to be the focus
of the
GSP program. Indeed, the ability of these industries to
compete in global
markets is testament to the success of the GSP
program in helping to cultivate
competitive industries in a number of
developing countries."
Imports that exceeded the new statutory threshold in 2006
established by Congress and that have been removed from GSP eligibility
are:
brake and brake parts and ferrozirconium from Brazil; kola nuts
from Cote
d’Ivoire; gold jewelry and brass lamps from India; wiring
harnesses from the
Philippines; gold jewelry from Thailand; and
methanol from Venezuela.
The Annual Review also involved an analysis of petitions
to withdraw
or limit a country’s GSP benefits for not meeting GSP eligibility
criteria. These criteria include the extent to which a country
provides
adequate and effective protection of intellectual property
rights (IPR) and
whether a country is taking steps to afford
internationally recognized worker
rights. During the Annual
Review process, a review of the worker rights
petition regarding
Uganda was closed without altering
the country's GSP eligibility. This was based on the country's
progress in
implementing key labor reforms, which included passing a
series of new labor
laws, crafted with the assistance of the
International Labour Organization, and
taking steps to promote
labor-management dialogue and collective bargaining in
the
textile/apparel sector.
Petitions involving the following GSP beneficiaries remain
under
review: Lebanon,
Uzbekistan and
Russia regarding IPR
concerns, and Niger regarding worker rights.
With respect to the Russia IPR petition, the Bush Administration
continues to
monitor closely the Russian government’s progress in
meeting the commitments it
undertook in the November 2006 Agreement on
IPR and to seek further progress in
the context of ongoing WTO
accession discussions.
Background
The Trade Act of 1974 created the GSP program. Under
the
program, 131 beneficiary developing countries, including 42 least-developed
beneficiary developing countries, currently export approximately 5,000
products
duty-free to the United
States.
In 2006, the United
States extended duty-free
treatment
under the GSP program to imports worth $32.6 billion from eligible
beneficiary countries, an increase of 22 percent over 2005. The
majority
of products imported from beneficiary countries are eligible
for GSP benefits,
with a significant exception being textile and
apparel products.
Each year, the United
States conducts an annual review under the GSP
program to
determine if there are certain imports currently eligible
for benefits that
could compete effectively in the U.S. market if
imported at normal
tariff rates. In making decisions on product
eligibility, the
Administration considers petitions to continue
duty-free treatment, holds public
hearings, and reviews analyses
prepared by the U.S. International Trade
Commission of the economic
impact of eligibility decisions on domestic
industries.
The GSP statute includes two “competitive need
limitations” (CNLs)
on the eligibility of a product for benefits under
GSP: (i) if
the annual trade of a product from a specific country exceeds
a
value-based threshold ($125 million in 2006); or (ii) if the annual trade of a
product from a specific country exceeds 50 percent of total U.S.
imports of that
product. The statute also authorizes the
President to waive the
application of these limitations if certain
statutory conditions are met.
Any CNL waiver granted remains in effect until the
President
determines that such waiver is no longer warranted due to changed
circumstances. In December 2006, Congress amended the GSP statute
to
provide that the President should revoke any existing CNL waiver
that has been
in effect for five years or more if a GSP-eligible
product from a specific
country has an annual trade level in the
previous calendar year that exceeds 150
percent of the annual trade cap
or 75 percent of all U.S. imports of that
product.
USTR
will publish further details on the results of the annual review in the
Federal
Register.