Skip to main content
Global Arbitration, Trade and Advocacy Update

U.S. Commerce Department Expands Its Tool Belt to Apply Countervailing Duties to Currency Undervaluation

February 7, 2020

On February 4, 2020, the Office of Enforcement and Compliance within the International Trade Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce (Commerce) issued a Final Rule, available here, that expands the tools by which it may determine that foreign governments have provided subsidies to encourage the production and export of goods — triggering Commerce’s authority to apply countervailing duties on U.S. imports of those products.1

Commerce has done so in two significant and hotly contested ways. First, the Final Rule establishes a methodology by which Commerce will determine whether a foreign producer or exporter has benefited from foreign government policies that cause its currency to be undervalued, and to quantify any such undervaluation. Second, the Final Rule expands the definition of a “group” to include a collection of “enterprises that buy or sell goods internationally,” for the purpose of determining whether an alleged subsidy is “specific” to a “group of enterprises or industries.” This “specificity” requirement is a prerequisite to a finding by Commerce that a subsidy may be countervailed.

弁護士広告—Sidley Austin LLP はグローバルな法律事務所です。当事務所の所在地および連絡先情報は、www.sidley.com/en/locations/offices に掲載されています。

Sidley は、本情報をクライアントおよび関係者の皆様へのサービスとして、教育目的のみに提供しています。本情報は、法的助言として解釈または依拠されるべきものではなく、また弁護士と依頼者の関係を生じさせるものでもありません。読者は、専門家の助言を求めることなく本情報に基づいて行動すべきではありません。Sidley および Sidley Austin とは、www.sidley.com/disclaimer に記載のとおり、Sidley Austin LLP およびその関連パートナーシップを指します。

© Sidley Austin LLP

お問い合わせ

この Sidley Update に関してご質問がある場合は、通常ご担当されている Sidley の弁護士、またはご連絡ください。