                        TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES
 
                   CHAPTER 20--ANDEAN TRADE PREFERENCE
 
Sec. 3203. Eligible articles


(a) In general

    (1) Unless otherwise excluded from eligibility by this chapter, the 
duty-free treatment provided under this chapter shall apply to any 
article which is the growth, product, or manufacture of a beneficiary 
country if--
        (A) that article is imported directly from a beneficiary country 
    into the customs territory of the United States; and
        (B) the sum of--
            (i) the cost or value of the materials produced in a 
        beneficiary country or 2 or more beneficiary countries under 
        this chapter, or a beneficiary country under the Caribbean Basin 
        Economic Recovery Act [19 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.] or 2 or more such 
        countries, plus
            (ii) the direct costs of processing operations performed in 
        a beneficiary country or countries (under this chapter or the 
        Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act),

    is not less than 35 percent of the appraised value of such article 
    at the time it is entered.

For purposes of determining the percentage referred to in subparagraph 
(B), the term ``beneficiary country'' includes the Commonwealth of 
Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands. If the cost or value 
of materials produced in the customs territory of the United States 
(other than the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) is included with respect to 
an article to which this paragraph applies, an amount not to exceed 15 
percent of the appraised value of the article at the time it is entered 
that is attributed to such United States cost or value may be applied 
toward determining the percentage referred to in subparagraph (B).
    (2) The Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe such regulations 
as may be necessary to carry out subsection (a) of this section 
including, but not limited to, regulations providing that, in order to 
be eligible for duty-free treatment under this chapter, an article must 
be wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of a beneficiary country, 
or must be a new or different article of commerce which has been grown, 
produced, or manufactured in the beneficiary country; but no article or 
material of a beneficiary country shall be eligible for such treatment 
by virtue of having merely undergone--
        (A) simple combining or packaging operations, or
        (B) mere dilution with water or mere dilution with another 
    substance that does not materially alter the characteristics of the 
    article.

    (3) As used in this subsection, the phrase ``direct costs of 
processing operations'' includes, but is not limited to--
        (A) all actual labor costs involved in the growth, production, 
    manufacture, or assembly of the specific merchandise, including 
    fringe benefits, on-the-job training and the cost of engineering, 
    supervisory, quality control, and similar personnel; and
        (B) dies, molds, tooling, and depreciation on machinery and 
    equipment which are allocable to the specific merchandise.

Such phrase does not include costs which are not directly attributable 
to the merchandise concerned or are not costs of manufacturing the 
product, such as (i) profit, and (ii) general expense of doing business 
which are either not allocable to the specific merchandise or are not 
related to the growth, production, manufacture, or assembly of the 
merchandise, such as administrative salaries, casualty and liability 
insurance, advertising, interest, and salesmen's salaries, commissions 
or expenses.
    (4) If the President, pursuant to section 223 of the Caribbean Basin 
Economic Recovery Expansion Act of 1990, considers that the 
implementation of revised rules of origin for products of beneficiary 
countries designated under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (19 
U.S.C. 2701 et seq.) would be appropriate, the President may include 
similarly revised rules of origin for products of beneficiary countries 
designated under this chapter in any suggested legislation transmitted 
to the Congress that contains such rules of origin for products of 
beneficiary countries under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act.

(b) Exceptions to duty-free treatment

    The duty-free treatment provided under this chapter shall not apply 
to--
        (1) textile and apparel articles which are subject to textile 
    agreements;
        (2) footwear not designated at the time of the effective date of 
    this chapter as eligible for the purpose of the generalized system 
    of preferences under title V of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 
    2461 et seq.];
        (3) tuna, prepared or preserved in any manner, in airtight 
    containers;
        (4) petroleum, or any product derived from petroleum, provided 
    for in headings 2709 and 2710 of the HTS;
        (5) watches and watch parts (including cases, bracelets and 
    straps), of whatever type including, but not limited to, mechanical, 
    quartz digital or quartz analog, if such watches or watch parts 
    contain any material which is the product of any country with 
    respect to which HTS column 2 rates of duty apply;
        (6) articles to which reduced rates of duty apply under 
    subsection (c) of this section;
        (7) sugars, syrups, and molasses classified in subheadings 
    1701.11.03, 1701.12.02, 1701.99.02, 1702.90.32, 1806.10.42, and 
    2106.90.12 of the HTS; or
        (8) rum and tafia classified in subheading 2208.40.00 of the 
    HTS.

(c) Duty reductions for certain goods

    (1) Subject to paragraph (2), the President shall proclaim 
reductions in the rates of duty on handbags, luggage, flat goods, work 
gloves, and leather wearing apparel that--
        (A) are the product of any beneficiary country; and
        (B) were not designated on August 5, 1983, as eligible articles 
    for purposes of the generalized system of preferences under title V 
    of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2461 et seq.].

    (2) The reduction required under paragraph (1) in the rate of duty 
on any article shall--
        (A) result in a rate that is equal to 80 percent of the rate of 
    duty that applies to the article on December 31, 1991, except that, 
    subject to the limitations in paragraph (3), the reduction may not 
    exceed 2.5 percent ad valorem; and
        (B) be implemented in 5 equal annual stages with the first \1/5\ 
    of the aggregate reduction in the rate of duty being applied to 
    entries, or withdrawals from warehouse for consumption, of the 
    article on or after January 1, 1992.

    (3) The reduction required under this subsection with respect to the 
rate of duty on any article is in addition to any reduction in the rate 
of duty on that article that may be proclaimed by the President as being 
required or appropriate to carry out any trade agreement entered into 
under the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations; except that if the 
reduction so proclaimed--
        (A) is less than 1.5 percent ad valorem, the aggregate of such 
    proclaimed reduction and the reduction under this subsection may not 
    exceed 3.5 percent ad valorem, or
        (B) is 1.5 percent ad valorem or greater, the aggregate of such 
    proclaimed reduction and the reduction under this subsection may not 
    exceed the proclaimed reduction plus 1 percent ad valorem.

(d) Suspension of duty-free treatment

    (1) The President may by proclamation suspend the duty-free 
treatment provided by this chapter with respect to any eligible article 
and may proclaim a duty rate for such article if such action is 
proclaimed under chapter 1 of title II of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 
U.S.C. 2251 et seq.] or section 1862 of this title.
    (2) In any report by the United States International Trade 
Commission to the President under section 202(f) of the Trade Act of 
1974 [19 U.S.C. 2252(f)] regarding any article for which duty-free 
treatment has been proclaimed by the President pursuant to this chapter, 
the Commission shall state whether and to what extent its findings and 
recommendations apply to such article when imported from beneficiary 
countries.
    (3) For purposes of section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 
2253], the suspension of the duty-free treatment provided by this 
chapter shall be treated as an increase in duty.
    (4) No proclamation providing solely for a suspension referred to in 
paragraph (3) of this subsection with respect to any article shall be 
taken under section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2253] unless 
the United States International Trade Commission, in addition to making 
an affirmative determination with respect to such article under section 
202(b) of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2252(b)], determines in the 
course of its investigation under such section that the serious injury 
(or threat thereof) substantially caused by imports to the domestic 
industry producing a like or directly competitive article results from 
the duty-free treatment provided by this chapter.
    (5)(A) Any action taken under section 203 of the Trade Act of 1974 
[19 U.S.C. 2253] that is in effect when duty-free treatment is 
proclaimed under section 3201 of this title shall remain in effect until 
modified or terminated.
    (B) If any article is subject to any such action at the time duty-
free treatment is proclaimed under section 3201 of this title, the 
President may reduce or terminate the application of such action to the 
importation of such article from beneficiary countries prior to the 
otherwise scheduled date on which such reduction or termination would 
occur pursuant to the criteria and procedures of section 204 of the 
Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2254].

(e) Emergency relief with respect to perishable products

    (1) If a petition is filed with the United States International 
Trade Commission pursuant to the provisions of section 201 of the Trade 
Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2251] regarding a perishable product and alleging 
injury from imports from beneficiary countries, then the petition may 
also be filed with the Secretary of Agriculture with a request that 
emergency relief be granted pursuant to paragraph (3) of this subsection 
with respect to such article.
    (2) Within 14 days after the filing of a petition under paragraph 
(1) of this subsection--
        (A) if the Secretary of Agriculture has reason to believe that a 
    perishable product from a beneficiary country is being imported into 
    the United States in such increased quantities as to be a 
    substantial cause of serious injury, or the threat thereof, to the 
    domestic industry producing a perishable product like or directly 
    competitive with the imported product and that emergency action is 
    warranted, he shall advise the President and recommend that the 
    President take emergency action; or
        (B) the Secretary of Agriculture shall publish a notice of his 
    determination not to recommend the imposition of emergency action 
    and so advise the petitioner.

    (3) Within 7 days after the President receives a recommendation from 
the Secretary of Agriculture to take emergency action pursuant to 
paragraph (2) of this subsection, he shall issue a proclamation 
withdrawing the duty-free treatment provided by this chapter or publish 
a notice of his determination not to take emergency action.
    (4) The emergency action provided by paragraph (3) of this 
subsection shall cease to apply--
        (A) upon the taking of action under section 203 of the Trade Act 
    of 1974 [19 U.S.C. 2253],
        (B) on the day a determination by the President not to take 
    action under section 203(b)(2) of such Act becomes final,
        (C) in the event of a report of the United States International 
    Trade Commission containing a negative finding, on the day of the 
    Commission's report is submitted to the President, or
        (D) whenever the President determines that because of changed 
    circumstances such relief is no longer warranted.

    (5) For purposes of this subsection, the term ``perishable product'' 
means--
        (A) live plants and fresh cut flowers provided for in chapter 6 
    of the HTS;
        (B) fresh or chilled vegetables provided for in headings 0701 
    through 0709 (except subheading 0709.52.00) and heading 0714 of the 
    HTS;
        (C) fresh fruit provided for in subheadings 0804.20 through 
    0810.90 (except citrons of subheadings 0805.90.00, tamarinds and 
    kiwi fruit of subheading 0810.90.20, and cashew apples, mameyes 
    colorados, sapodillas, soursops and sweetsops of subheading 
    0810.90.40) of the HTS; or
        (D) concentrated citrus fruit juice provided for in subheadings 
    2009.11.00, 2009.19.40, 2009.20.40, 2009.30.20, and 2009.30.60 of 
    the HTS.

(f) Fees under section 624 of title 7

    No proclamation issued pursuant to this chapter shall affect fees 
imposed pursuant to section 624 of title 7.

(g) Tariff-rate quotas

    No quantity of an agricultural product subject to a tariff-rate 
quota that exceeds the in-quota quantity shall be eligible for duty-free 
treatment under this chapter.

(Pub. L. 102-182, title II, Sec. 204, Dec. 4, 1991, 105 Stat. 1239; Pub. 
L. 103-465, title IV, Sec. 404(e)(2), Dec. 8, 1994, 108 Stat. 4961.)

                       References in Text

    This chapter, referred to in subsecs. (a)(1)(B), (b)(2), and (g), 
was in the original ``this Act'' and was translated as reading ``this 
title'', meaning title II of Pub. L. 102-182 which enacted this chapter, 
to reflect the probable intent of Congress.
    The Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act, referred to in subsec. 
(a)(1)(B), (4), is title II of Pub. L. 98-67, Aug. 5, 1983, 97 Stat. 
384, as amended, which is classified principally to chapter 15 
(Sec. 2701 et seq.) of this title. For complete classification of this 
Act to the Code, see Short Title note set out under section 2701 of this 
title and Tables.
    Section 223 of the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Expansion Act 
of 1990, referred to in subsec. (a)(4), is section 223 of Pub. L. 101-
382, title II, Aug. 20, 1990, 104 Stat. 659, which is not classified to 
the Code.
    The effective date of this chapter, referred to in subsec. (b)(2), 
means the date of enactment of Pub. L. 102-182, which was approved Dec. 
4, 1991. See section 3206(a) of this title.
    The Trade Act of 1974, referred to in subsecs. (b)(2), (c)(1)(B), 
and (d)(1), is Pub. L. 93-618, Jan. 3, 1975, 88 Stat. 1978, as amended. 
Chapter 1 of title II of the Act is classified generally to part 1 
(Sec. 2251 et seq.) of subchapter II of chapter 12 of this title. Title 
V of the Act is classified generally to subchapter V (Sec. 2461 et seq.) 
of chapter 12 of this title. For complete classification of this Act to 
the Code, see section 2101 of this title and Tables.


                               Amendments

    1994--Subsec. (g). Pub. L. 103-465 added subsec. (g).


                    Effective Date of 1994 Amendment

    Amendment by Pub. L. 103-465 effective on the date of entry into 
force of the WTO Agreement with respect to the United States [Jan. 1, 
1995], except as otherwise provided, see section 451 of Pub. L. 103-465, 
set out as an Effective Date note under section 3601 of this title.

                  Section Referred to in Other Sections

    This section is referred to in title 7 section 7236.
