Trade Preferences and American Manufacturing Competitiveness Act of 2021
Bill journey · stage 2 of 5
Under committee review
What it doesSummary introduced in house (Jun 22, 2021)
Trade Preferences and American Manufacturing Competitiveness Act of 2021
This bill reauthorizes and revises specified U.S. trade programs and provisions.
Specifically, the bill extends through January 1, 2027, the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), which provides duty-free treatment to products imported from designated beneficiary countries. The bill makes various changes to the GSP, including by (1) adding human rights, environmental, and other criteria for designation as a beneficiary developing country; (2) requiring an assessment of how the GSP supports worker and gender rights; and (3) requiring a study on rules of origin and GSP utilization rates.
Additionally, the bill provides through December 31, 2023, and retroactively applies to 120 days before this bill's enactment, temporary duty suspensions or reductions to eligible imported products. This authorization is commonly known as the Miscellaneous Tariff Bill (MTB). The last version of the MTB was enacted in September 2018 and the temporary treatment for those products listed in the MTB expired on December 31, 2020.
The bill also extends the American Manufacturing Competitiveness Act of 2016 for two future MTB cycles (one in 2022 and one in 2025). This extension allows the U.S. International Trade Commission to conduct the MTB petition, review, and recommendation process for those additional cycles.
The bill extends customs user fees through June 21, 2031.
What just happenedJun 22, 2021
Referred to the Subcommittee on Trade.
Who’s behind it
- Introduced in HouseJun 22, 2021
- Jun 22, 2021Committee
Referred to the Subcommittee on Trade.
Trade Subcommittee - Jun 22, 2021IntroReferralH11100
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Ways and Means Committee - Jun 22, 2021IntroReferralIntro-H
Introduced in House
- Jun 22, 2021IntroReferral1000
Introduced in House