Order Code 98-545
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
The Jackson-Vanik Amendment:
A Survey
Updated August 1, 2005
Vladimir N. Pregelj
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

The Jackson-Vanik Amendment: A Survey
Summary
The enactment of the so-called Jackson-Vanik amendment as part of the Trade
Act of 1974 was directly a U.S. reaction to the severe restrictions the Soviet Union
had placed in late 1972 on the emigration of its citizens, but was expanded in its
scope to apply to all so-called “nonmarket economy” (NME) countries. The
amendment, in effect, requires compliance with its specific free-emigration criteria
as a key condition for the restoration of certain benefits theretofore denied to NME
countries in their economic relations with the United States. These benefits — access
to nondiscriminatory (most-favored-nation; normal-trade-relations) treatment in
trade; access to U.S. government financial facilities; ability to conclude a trade
agreement with the United States) — may be extended to an NME country subject
to the amendment only if the President determines that the country is not in violation
of (i.e., is in full compliance with) the free-emigration criteria of the amendment, or
if he waives, under specified conditions, the requirement of full compliance with the
criteria. Such determinations or waivers must be renewed periodically.
Congressional involvement in the implementation of the provision is limited.
The initial application, periodic renewals, or subsequent changes (other than
termination) of the requirements of either type of compliance with the Jackson-Vanik
amendment freedom-of-emigration requirements take place, under existing
legislation, by Executive action. Such action does not require congressional approval;
however, Congress may disapprove an initial determination of “no violation” and,
annually, its extension, as well as annual extensions of a waiver, at the time of such
renewals, by the enactment of joint resolutions of disapproval, for which a special
fast-track procedure is provided. Although frequently initiated in the past,
congressional attempts to disapprove waiver renewals have invariably been
unsuccessful. Action disapproving an initial “no violation” determination or its
renewal has never been attempted. Under these provisions, since 1975 waivers have
been granted to 25 countries, most of which have been subsequently determined to
be in full compliance, but still subject to the amendment. The application of the
amendment to several of these has later, by law or other circumstance, been
terminated.
In consequence, there are, at present, still 12 countries subject to the
amendment, three of which (Belarus, Turkmenistan, and Vietnam) are under the
waiver provision and seven (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan,
Ukraine, and Uzbekistan) under a determination of “no violation”; two countries
(Cuba and North Korea) are still not in either form of compliance (and, hence,
continue to be denied the benefits contingent on such compliance).
There are several possible actions in which the Congress can become involved
legislatively with respect to the application of the Jackson-Vanik amendment:
adoption of a joint resolution disapproving a relevant Executive action (renewal of
a waiver, or a determination of “no-violation” or its renewal), specific termination
of the application of the Amendment to one or more countries, mostly by terminating
the application of the Amendment as part of the legislation authorizing the extension
of permanent NTR treatment to a country, and repeal of the Amendment.

Contents
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Provisions of the Amendment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Congressional Role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Application and Implementation of the Amendment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Practical Consequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Possible Congressional Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

The Jackson-Vanik Amendment: A Survey
Background
The enactment of the so-called Jackson-Vanik (“freedom-of-emigration”)
amendment (Section 402) of the Trade Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-618; January 3, 1975)
was a U.S. reaction to the Soviet Union’s highly restrictive emigration policy of the
time, but particularly to the assessment, begun in August 1972, of exorbitant
“education reimbursement fees” (also referred to as “diploma taxes”) on its citizens
wishing to emigrate to nonsocialist countries. Although this restrictive policy applied
to all such prospective emigrants, it affected in practice primarily Soviet Jews
wanting to emigrate to Israel or the United States. These fees, which could be as high
as the equivalent of several tens of thousands of dollars, were assessed as a
reimbursement to the Soviet state of its expenditures for the free higher education
that the prospective emigrant had received and, because of his departure, would no
longer use for the benefit of the Soviet society. The fees were geared to the level of
education received (a factor of increase) and the length of time elapsed since
obtaining the education, that is, the time during which the Soviet society had
benefitted from that education (a factor of decrease).
The institution of these fees took place at a time when the United States and the
Soviet Union already had negotiated several bilateral economic agreements and were
in the process of negotiating others. Among the latter was a trade agreement,
including a reciprocal grant of “most-favored-nation” (MFN; nondiscriminatory)
tariff treatment. Although included in a specific bilateral agreement, the restoration
of the MFN status to the Soviet Union (or to any other communist country whose
MFN tariff status had been suspended1) could not take place without authorizing
legislation, which was then being considered by Congress.
To counteract primarily the Soviet Union’s restrictive emigration policy (but
broadened to apply also to other communist countries), legislation sponsored
principally by Senator Henry M. Jackson and Representative Charles A. Vanik and
cosponsored by a large number of Members of both houses, was introduced in early
October 1972 as a free-standing measure in the House and as an amendment to the
East-West Trade Relations Act in the Senate. The legislation would condition the
restoration of most-favored-nation status to nonmarket economy (NME) countries
1 As provided by Section 5 of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1951 (P.L. 82-50),
the President suspended the MFN tariff treatment (i.e., application of tariff concessions
granted by the United States to any trading partner in a multilateral or bilateral trade
agreement, but no other aspects of the MFN policy then in effect) of all then communist
countries except Yugoslavia. Prior to the enactment of the Jackson-Vanik amendment,
Poland’s nondiscriminatory tariff status had been restored by presidential action in 1960,
and Cuba’s suspended in 1962.

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(including the Soviet Union), their access to U.S. financial facilities, and their ability
to conclude a trade agreement with the United States on their compliance with the
free-emigration criteria of the proposed legislation. Notwithstanding the concurrent
consideration of this adverse legislation, a trade agreement providing for reciprocal
most-favored-nation treatment was signed with the Soviet Union in mid-October
1972.
Neither the East-West Trade Relations Act nor the free-standing freedom-of-
emigration legislation was enacted in 1972; however, virtually identical language was
included the following year, in the next Congress, as an original provision2 in the
Trade Reform Act of 1973 (eventually enacted as the Trade Act of 1974) and
somewhat expanded during the legislative process, even though the Soviet Union
already in late 1972 had ceased assessing the fees. The Soviet Union objected to the
provision, considering it an intrusion into its domestic policy and, after its enactment
in January 1975, declined to have the restoration of its access to nondiscriminatory
tariff status as provided for in the agreement and other benefits subjected to its
conditions.
Provisions of the Amendment
The Jackson-Vanik amendment (Section 402 of the Trade Act of 1974, as
amended; 19 U.S.C. 2432), in effect, sets a policy of free emigration as a condition
and key element of the restoration3 of certain specific economic benefits to a
“nonmarket economy” (NME) country and of their subsequent continuation in force,
under the relevant provisions of Title IV of the Act. These benefits are: the country’s
nondiscriminatory (most-favored-nation4; MFN) tariff status in its trade with the
United States; its access to U.S. government financial facilities (export credits, export
2 The provision, however, has continued to be referred to as the Jackson-Vanik
“amendment.”
3 The suspensions of the nondiscriminatory tariff status of “communist countries,” based on
the 1951 Act, in effect at the time of the enactment of the Trade Act of 1974 and contained
then in General Headnote 3(d)of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (now General
Headnote 3(b) of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States - HTSUS; 19 U.S.C.
1202), have been specifically continued in force by Section 401 of the Trade Act (19 U.S.C.
2431). The nondiscriminatory (“most-favored-nation”) tariff status suspended under the
1951 legislation was at the time applied unconditionally to all U.S. trading partners under
the provisions of Section 350(a)(2) of the Tariff Act of 1930 as added by the Reciprocal
Trade Agreements Act of 1934 (P.L. 73-316). That law authorized the President to enter into
trade-barrier-reducing agreements with foreign countries and apply the resulting concessions
to all trading partners. The equivalent present MFN-granting statute is Section 126 of the
Trade Act of1974 (19 U.S.C. 2136).
4 Although the term “most favored nation” has been replaced by law (Section 5003, Internal
Revenue Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998; 19 U.S.C. 2481 note) in existing and future
U.S. statutes with that of “normal trade relations (NTR)” or another appropriate term, it is
still used in this report for reasons of historical continuity and because of its continued
universal use in international trade relations and agreements, including those to which the
United States is a party. Instead of either term, the term “nondiscriminatory” is often used
as an equivalent substitute.

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credit guarantees, and investment guarantees)5; and its ability to conclude a bilateral
trade agreement with the United States (on the basis of which the nondiscriminatory
status is granted).
Neither the amendment nor any other statute in effect at the time of its
enactment contained a definition of a “nonmarket economy country”6 or provided
a specific list or even a functional description of the affected countries, which could
be used to determine precisely the country applicability of Title IV as a whole
(containing, in addition to the Jackson-Vanik amendment, other provisions affecting
NME countries). As reflected in the implementation of certain provisions of Title IV
in subsequent practice, an NME country has generally been considered to be any
communist country.
A special case was Yugoslavia. Although initially included among the countries
subject to certain reporting requirements of Title IV, applicable to trade with NME
countries,7 it was dropped for various economic as well as political reasons from that
category in early 1981 at the suggestion of the U.S. Trade Representative and after
consultation with the appropriate congressional committees. This action was also
supported by the opinion of many analysts that the country was not appropriately
classified as an NME country.8
Somewhat better defined is the country applicability of the amendment itself
in its role as a means for the restoration of the covered benefits. In its subsection (e),
the amendment specifically exempts from its purview “any country the products of
which are eligible for the rates set forth in rate column numbered 1 of the Tariff
Schedules of the United States9 on the date of the enactment of [the Trade Act of
1974]”; that is, any country to which nondiscriminatory tariff treatment was being
accorded by the United States on January 3, 1975. Among the relevant countries are
Poland and Yugoslavia.
5 Access to such facilities is also subject to other restrictions, which, however, may be —
and, as needed, have been — waived by the President.
6 Formal, statutory criteria for defining a “nonmarket economy country” (which could, in
principle, be used to determine this specific aspect of the applicability of the Jackson-Vanik
amendment) were not enacted until the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988
(Section 1316(b), amending Section 771 of the Tariff Act of 1930; 19 U.S.C. 1677, item
(18)) in the context of antidumping action; a virtually identical practical definition by
regulation has been in use since 1984 in countervailing action against subsidized imports.
7 Sections 410 (East-West Trade Statistics Monitoring System) and 411 (East-West Foreign
Trade Board) of the Trade Act of 1974 (respectively 19 U.S.C. 2440 and 2441), both
subsequently repealed (respectively, by Section 17 of the Miscellaneous Trade and
Technical Corrections Act of 1996; P.L. 104-295, and Section 1001(a)(4) of the
Miscellaneous Trade and Technical Corrections Act of 1999; P.L. 106-36).
8 U.S. International Trade Commission. 27th quarterly report to the Congress and the Trade
Policy Committee on trade between the United States and the nonmarket economy countries
during April-June 1981
. USITC Publication 1188. September 1981. p. 1.
9 Namely, rates resulting from U.S. tariff concessions accorded to any country in various
trade agreements and applied to trading partners in a nondiscriminatory manner.

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Moreover, the applicability of the amendment to individual countries is
operationally tied to Section 401 of the Trade Act (19 U.S.C. 2431). This section
provides for continued denial of the nondiscriminatory treatment of countries subject
to Section 5 of the 1951 Act, but is modified by subsection (e) of the Jackson-Vanik
amendment and, together with it, indirectly provides a functional definition of the
countries to which the amendment applies (without, however, specifically defining
their NME status). In effect, Section 401 requires that the suspensions of
nondiscriminatory tariff treatment of individual countries under the 1951 Act
continue in force, unless revoked under the relevant provisions of Title IV of the
Trade Act, including its Section 402. It provides that
[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this title [i.e., Title IV of the Trade Act], the
President shall continue to deny nondiscriminatory treatment to the products of
any country, the products of which were not eligible for the rates set forth in rate
column number 1 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States on the date of the
enactment of this Act.
In explaining the provisions of Section 401, the relevant Senate report contains
a list naming (in a somewhat simplified form) individually the countries and areas
which were at the time of the enactment of that Act being denied nondiscriminatory
status10, and explains further that that means all then-communist countries or areas
except Poland and Yugoslavia (exempted under Section 402 (e), because both, at the
time, already had most-favored-nation status).11 The official list of countries denied
such status and, hence, ineligible for concessional duty rates in column 1, was
contained at the time in General Headnote 3(e) of the Tariff Schedules of the United
States (TSUS) under the title Products of Communist Countries. The provision has
continued to apply to the same countries or their successors (except those that have
since been removed from its applicability temporarily under the provisions of Title
IV, or permanently by specific legislation, or in some other way12), although most of
them are no longer communist.
The list was a consolidation of individual country suspensions of MFN
treatment put into effect in a series of presidential documents promulgated in 1951
and 1952 under the authority of Section 5 of the Trade Agreements Extension Act of
1951 (P.L. 82-50; 65 Stat. 73), and still reflected the immediate post-WWII changes
of international borders before these were definitively settled. Although the names
of several countries were already outdated at the time, their list became part of the
10 Albania, Bulgaria, China, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Estonia, Hungary, those
parts of Indochina (Cambodia, Laos, or Vietnam) under communist control or domination,
North Korea, the Kurile Islands, Latvia, Lithuania, Outer Mongolia, Romania, Southern
Sakhalin, Tanna Tuva, Tibet, and the USSR. The list initially included also “Poland and area
under Polish domination or control” (see also footnote 1).
11 U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance. Trade Reform Act of 1974; report ... on
H.R. 10710.
93d Congress. 2d Session. (S.Rept. 93-1298). November 26, 1974. Washington,
U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1974. p. 201. Yugoslavia’s MFN status was never affected by the
1951 Act suspensions, whereas Poland’s, which had been suspended under that Act, was
restored in 1960.
12 See pp. 9-14.

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U.S. tariff law after their consolidation and incorporation without changes of names
as General Headnote 3(e) (later renumbered as 3(d)) into the totally revised and
restructured basic tariff document, the TSUS (enacted by Section 101 of the Tariff
Classification Act of 1962 (P.L. 87-456; 76 Stat.72), effective January 1, 1963). They
remained unchanged13 until January 1, 1989, when the tariff schedules were again
radically restructured in the form of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United
States (HTSUS) (enacted by Section 1204 of the Omnibus Trade and
Competitiveness Act of 1988; P.L. 100-418; 19 U.S.C. 3004).
In the HTSUS, the country list has been simplified to conform to the current
names of the countries involved, including a belated change of its applicability from
the communist controlled areas of Cambodia (in the HTSUS called Kampuchea),
Laos, and Vietnam to the entire areas of those countries. The provision also became
General note 3(b) with its title changed to Rates of Duty Column 2 (i.e., duty rates
applicable to countries without the nondiscriminatory tariff status).
Although the introductory sentence of the Jackson-Vanik amendment mentions
“the continued dedication of the United States to fundamental human rights,” its
operative provisions condition the restoration of the access of an NME country to
the covered benefits solely on the country’s freedom-of-emigration policy.
The amendment prohibits the restoration of nondiscriminatory status and
access to U.S. government financial facilities to an NME country denied such
benefits, and disallows the conclusion of a commercial agreement with it, if that
country
(1) denies its citizens the right or opportunity to emigrate;
(2) imposes a more than nominal tax on emigration or on documents
required for emigration; or
(3) imposes a more than nominal tax, fee, or any other charge on any
citizen because of his desire to emigrate to the country of his choice.14
The amendment also provides that its prohibitions apply to an NME country
“during the period beginning with the date on which the President determines that
13 Being a current list of countries denied the nondiscriminatory status (rather than a list of
countries subject to the Jackson-Vanik amendment), the TSUS note (and later the
comparable HTSUS note) has at no time contained the names of the countries whose
nondiscriminatory status had meanwhile been restored conditionally under the provisions
of Title IV, but to which the amendment has continued to apply.
14 In identical operative language, Section 409 of the Trade Act of l974 deals with temporary
restoration of benefits covered by the Jackson-Vanik amendment, in the context of denial
of the right to emigrate to join a very close relative in the United States; and Section 403
denies the restoration of the same benefits in the context of an NME’s cooperation with the
United States in accounting for, repatriation, or return of remains of U.S. personnel missing
in action in Southeast Asia. Neither section applies to an NME country to which NTR
treatment applies; and Section 409 does not apply to an NME country with regard to which
a waiver under Section 402 is in effect.

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such country [engages in any of the listed freedom-of-emigration restricting
practices] and ending on the date on which the President determines that such country
is not in violation of [the amendment’s prohibitions].” In actual practice, however,
there have been no formal presidential determinations of either the onset or the
cessation of the application of the prohibition with respect to any country.
Determinations of cessation of violation, however, can be considered as being at least
constructively — if not specifically — made by the President’s submission to
Congress of the requisite waivers and their renewals, or of initial and subsequent
semiannual no-violation reports (see next four paragraphs).
The denial of an NME country’s access to the benefits to which the amendment
applies may be suspended temporarily and such suspension subsequently maintained
in effect if the President initially, and then semiannually (by June 30 and December
31), determines and in detail reports to Congress that the NME country in question
is not in violation of the prohibition of emigration-restricting practices. Alternatively,
the President may initially and then in mid-year (by June 3) annually waive full
compliance with the free-emigration criteria if he reports to Congress (1) that he has
determined that the waivers will henceforth substantially promote the free-emigration
objectives of the amendment and (2) that he has received assurances that the
emigration practices of the country will lead substantially to the achievement of the
amendment’s objectives.15
The Executive function and authority to make reports and determinations of
“no violation” (i.e., of full compliance) is open-ended and can be used and
implemented initially with respect to any country at any time without the need for
congressional approval. It is, however, subject to a possible disapproval through the
enactment of a joint resolution. Once initially made, such reports and determinations
must be renewed semiannually (by June 30 and December 31) with respect to each
country for which they are to be continued in force. Like the initial determination, the
year-end (but not the mid-year) determination is also subject to disapproval by joint
resolution. The enactment of such disapproval resolution precludes the initial or
subsequent extension of nondiscriminatory tariff treatment to the country (or
countries) in question.
The waiver procedure is somewhat different. The overall waiver authority,
which can be used initially with respect to any individual country at any time (and the
initial use of which is not subject to disapproval by joint resolution), was granted to
the President (with effect on January 3, 1975) for an initial period of 18 months. Its
initial use was subject to the President’s report to Congress that he
(1) has determined that such waiver will substantially promote the objectives of
the Jackson-Vanik amendment, and
15 The functions of submitting to Congress (1) the semiannual full-compliance reports and
(2) the annual waiver extension reports have been delegated to the Secretary of State by,
respectively, Executive Orders 13313 (68 F. R. 46073; August 5, 2003), effective July 31,
2003; and 13346 (69 F.R. 41905; July 13, 2004), effective July 13, 2004. The President,
however, has retained the authority for initial determinations of full compliance and
issuance of initial waivers. In the relevant accompanying text, references to “President”
should, where appropriate, be understood as meaning “Secretary of State.”

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(2) has received assurances that the emigration practices of that country will
henceforth lead substantially to the achievement of the objectives of the
Jackson-Vanik amendment.
If the waiver authority and any waivers issued under it are to remain in force,
they need to be extended for additional 12-month periods, expiring each year on July
3, by the President’s recommendation of such extension to Congress. Such
recommendation is subject to the same conditions as the initial grant of the waiver
authority and its application to individual countries, and must be made at least 30
days before the prospective annual expiration of the authority (i.e., by June 3 of every
year). It must be made in a document transmitted to both houses of Congress, in
which the President must state his reasons for recommending the extension of the
overall waiver authority. He also must determine for each country with respect to
which a waiver already in effect is to be renewed that such renewal will substantially
promote the objectives of the amendment, and state his reasons therefor. Like the
renewals of “no-violation” determinations, annual extensions of the waiver authority
and any waivers in force are subject to joint resolutions of disapproval.
Congressional Role
Congressional role in the implementation of the Executive Jackson-Vanik
authority is limited. Determinations, reports, and/or recommendations, required for
the initial granting and/or periodic continuation of a country’s eligibility, under the
amendment, for the covered benefits, operate automatically and need not be approved
by Congress.16 They are, however — as stated earlier — subject to potential
congressional disapproval.
The initial and the year-end report of “no violation” of (i.e., of full compliance
with) the free-emigration criteria, or the annual mid-year recommendation to extend
the waiver authority and any extant waiver, may be disapproved by joint resolution
of Congress. Such a resolution can, technically, be initiated in either house but, in
view of its being considered a revenue measure, must eventually be enacted as a
House measure. Hence, disapproval of a “no-violation” determination or of a waiver
renewal cannot take place if no relevant disapproval resolution has been introduced
in the House, or if the House resolution has been defeated.
A joint resolution disapproving the initial or the year-end report and
determination of “no violation” must be enacted under its specific fast-track
procedure (Section 152 of the Trade Act; 19 U.S.C. 2192): the operative language of
the resolution is prescribed by law; after its introduction and referral to the
appropriate committee of jurisdiction (House Ways and Means; Senate Finance), the
resolution must be reported within 30 days of session; if the committee does not
16 The key benefit conditioned on compliance with the Jackson-Vanik amendment — the
restoration of nondiscriminatory tariff treatment in trade — however, is subject to initial
Congressional approval (by joint resolution) of a Presidential proclamation of a bilateral
trade agreement, among other provisions extending nondiscriminatory status to the country
in question, and to subsequent triennial Presidential renewals of the agreement.

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report it by that deadline, a motion to discharge it from further consideration of the
resolution may be made under a specially provided procedure; the resolution is
nonamendable on the floor and debate on it is limited; if the House and the Senate
resolutions are not identical (e.g., apply to different countries), the final language is
determined by conference; the resolution must be enacted (as a House measure17)
within 90 days of session from the date on which the President’s (actually, the
Secretary of State’s; see footnote 15) report has been delivered to Congress; if the
resolution is vetoed by the President and the veto overridden, the resolution is treated
as enacted on the day by which the veto was overridden either within the 90-day
deadline or within 15 days of session after the veto message had been delivered to
Congress, whichever is later. Both, the 90- and the 15-days-of-session period are
computed “by excluding — (1) the days on which either house is not in session
because of an adjournment of more than three days to a day certain or an adjournment
of the Congress sine die, and (2) any Saturday and Sunday, not excluded under
paragraph (1), when either house is not in session.”18
A joint resolution disapproving the mid-year recommendation to extend the
waiver authority (in its entirety or, more likely, with respect to individual countries),
is considered and adopted by Congress under its own specific fast-track procedure,
very similar to that for disapproving the “no violation” report, discussed above. This
procedure, set out principally in Section 153 of the Trade Act (19 U.S.C. 2193),
differs from the other one only in that it sets the deadline for the committee report on
the resolution at 30 calendar (rather than session) days after its introduction; allows
amendments to the resolution, but only with respect to the country or countries to
which it applies; and, in view of this change, modifies slightly the Senate floor debate
procedure. The resolution must be adopted and transmitted to the President within
60 calendar days from the date the waiver authority of the prior year would have
expired without the recommendation for extension (i.e., by August 31). If the
resolution is vetoed, the vote to override it must be taken within the 60-calendar-day
period or within 15 days of session (computed as in the preceding paragraph) after
the Congress has received the veto message, whichever is later.19
17 See also footnote 20.
18 For statutory details of the procedure governing the consideration and enactment of a
joint resolution disapproving a no-violation report, consult, in addition to the Jackson-Vanik
amendment itself, Sections 152(a)(2)-(f), 154(b), and 407(c)(2) of the Trade Act (19 U.S.C.
2192(a)(2)-(f), 2194(b), and 2437(c)(2)).
19 As in the case of the disapproval of the no-violation report (see previous footnote), much
of the legislative procedure for the consideration of resolutions disapproving the extension
of the waiver authority is not contained in the Jackson-Vanik amendment. The key statute
is Section 153 of the Trade Act (19 U.S.C. 2193) in conjunction with its Section 152 (19
U.S.C. 2192). Both sections are considered an exercise of the rulemaking power of either
house of Congress and may be changed by either house with respect to its own procedure
in the same manner and to the same extent as any other rule (Section 151(a), Trade Act of
1974; 19 U.S.C. 2191(a)). — Detailed step-by-step procedure for the enactment of a joint
resolution disapproving the annual extension of the waiver authority (focusing specifically
on China, but applicable generally) is described in CRS Report 96-490, Legislative
Procedure for Disapproving the Renewal of China’s Most-Favored-Nation Status
.

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If a waiver disapproval resolution has been adopted in either house, the same
house may not consider another resolution with respect to the same recommendation
(other than a resolution adopted by and received from the other house).20
A joint resolution disapproving either the initial or the year-end report of “no
violation” of the Jackson-Vanik criteria or the mid-year extension of the waiver
authority takes effect on the 61st day after its enactment and as of that date terminates
the determination of “no violation” or the country’s waiver. Any country’s waiver
can also be terminated at any time by law or executive order, or, at the time of its
annual renewal, by not being recommended for renewal.
The discontinuance of either type of a country’s compliance with the
requirements of the Jackson-Vanik amendment, whether by presidential action or
legislative disapproval, brings about the termination not only of the country’s
nondiscriminatory tariff status but also of its access to the other benefits covered by
the amendment. On the other hand, although the tariff and financial benefits involved
both depend on compliance with the Jackson-Vanik amendment requirements, they
are not interdependent: denial of the nondiscriminatory status — on whatever
grounds — does not result in denial of financial benefits (and vice versa), as long as
the Jackson-Vanik amendment requirements are being complied with. Consequently,
a country subject to (and in compliance with) the requirements of the Jackson-Vanik
amendment need not have had its nondiscriminatory (at present, referred to in U.S.
statutes as “normal trade relations” (NTR); see footnote 4) status restored — a
procedure requiring also a somewhat lengthy negotiation and conclusion of a bilateral
trade agreement — if it is to regain access to the financial benefits, provided that the
restrictions on such benefits contained in their specific authorizing legislation have
been overcome (usually by a presidential waiver).
Application and Implementation of the Amendment21
The provisions of the Jackson-Vanik amendment for temporary restoration of
nondiscriminatory treatment (which continues to be denied under Section 401 of the
Trade Act of 1974) are applicable but have not been applied with respect to two
20 Nevertheless, since a waiver disapproval resolution is considered a “revenue” measure and
as such — as required by the Constitution — must originate in the House, and, moreover,
the disapproval procedure itself precludes the referral of a Senate-passed Senate disapproval
resolution to the House, the House could not vote on a Senate resolution after its own
resolution had been defeated.
21 For key actions in the implementation of the Jackson-Vanik amendment with respect to
individual countries, and their underlying documents, see Table 1. Application of the
Jackson-Vanik Amendment by Country,
on p. 17. The table provides the date of entry into
effect, the identification (statute, Presidential proclamation, executive order, Presidential
determination, notice of the exchange of note of acceptance) and citation to the Federal
Register
of the implementing document, for the initial issuance of a waiver, or, where
applicable, of the initial determination of “no violation” and of the termination of the
application of the waiver or “no-violation” determination, for each country with regard to
which any such action has been taken under the Jackson-Vanik amendment.

CRS-10
countries: Cuba and North Korea, the only two countries still listed in General note
3(b) of the HTSUS (see p. 5). Other than by specific legislation, either country can
gain access to the economic benefits subject to the amendment only by complying
with its freedom-of-emigration requirements.
With regard to countries which had their nondiscriminatory status restored under
the Jackson-Vanik amendment in either of the two ways of complying with the
Jackson-Vanik requirements, the waiver provision has been used more frequently
and always as the initial way. It was applied for the first time on April 24, 1975 —
still under the initial waiver authority and only a few months after its enactment —
in connection with the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment to Romania. On
March 17, 1978, Romania was followed by Hungary, and further initial waivers were
issued for China (with Tibet) (October 23, 1979); Czechoslovakia (February 20,
1990); East Germany (August 15, 1990); Soviet Union (including the three Baltic
republics: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania22) (December 29, 1990); Bulgaria (January
22, 1991); Mongolia (January 23, 1991); Romania (second waiver; see next
paragraph) (August 17, 1991); Armenia (April 6, 1992); Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
Ukraine, and Uzbekistan (April 16, 1992); Albania, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
Kazakhstan, and Moldova (June 3, 1992); Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan23 (June 24,
1992); Vietnam (April 9, 1998); and Turkmenistan (August 8, 2003; second waiver;
see footnote 28 and accompanying text). In each of these instances except East
Germany (see footnote 33 and accompanying text), the issuance of a waiver has been
followed by the temporary restoration of nondiscriminatory status, based on a trade
agreement. In every case, the waiver opened up the possibility of access to other
benefits involved (some of which are subject to autonomous restrictions, which can
be — and have been — overcome by requisite presidential waiver or determination).
Annual recommendations of the extension of the Jackson-Vanik waiver
authority and waivers for the gradually shrinking number of countries subject to it
have been made regularly (except for Romania, see below; and Belarus, see footnote
26), and at present waivers apply only to Belarus, Turkmenistan, and Vietnam.
From 1988 through 1991, Romania was excluded from the group of countries
for which waiver extensions were recommended because, in June 1988, it had
formally renounced its nondiscriminatory status subject to the conditions of the
Jackson-Vanik amendment. The renunciation and the expiration of the waiver (with
effect on July 3, 1988) were formally acknowledged in Presidential Proclamation
22 Neither the Presidential determination to issue a waiver for the Soviet Union nor the
executive order granting it specifically mentioned their applicability to the three Baltic
republics, then still de facto part of the Soviet Union. Their inclusion in the Soviet Union’s
waiver was noted only in the President’s letter notifying congressional leaders of his
determination to issue the waiver, with the explanation that it in no way affected the long-
standing U.S. policy of not recognizing their incorporation into the Soviet Union (see
footnote 31). Under the same policy, their nondiscriminatory status had been suspended in
1951 individually and separately from the Soviet Union, with formal acquiescence by their
individual diplomatic representations in Washington, which continued to be recognized by
the United States.
23 But see also footnote 30 and accompanying text on p. 13.

CRS-11
5836. Romania’s waiver was restored on August 17, 1991, in preparation for the
restoration of Romania’s nondiscriminatory status under a new trade agreement with
the United States, eventually concluded in April 1992.
Since the beginning of the program, congressional action to disapprove the
extension of any country’s waiver by means of a joint (prior to mid-1990, a one-
house24) resolution has focused on only four countries. In 1975-1984 (94th-98th
Congresses), 11 such resolutions were introduced in either house with respect to
Romania; one each in 1982 and 1983 (97th and 98th Congresses), with respect to
China; and in 1983 (98th Congress), one with respect to Hungary. None of these
were approved in either house. Seven of them (among them all four Senate
resolutions) died in committee; one was in effect defeated in the House, when a
motion to discharge the Ways and Means Committee from its consideration was
tabled; the remainder were either defeated or indefinitely postponed in floor votes.
No disapproval resolutions were introduced in the 99th and 100th Congresses and in
the first session of the 101st Congress (1985-1989). Since then, waiver disapproval
resolutions have been introduced only with respect to China (until the restoration of
its permanent NTR treatment in January 2002) and, until 2003, Vietnam.
Congressional action to disapprove the extension of China’s waiver was
triggered by the Tiananmen Square incident of June 4, 1989. Yet, although the
incident occurred only a few days after the President recommended the waiver
extension for all countries, including China (which would have made possible the
adoption of a resolution disapproving China’s waiver by the statutory deadline of
August 31), no disapproval resolutions were introduced in 1989. Since then (and up
to the statutory extension of permanent nondiscriminatory status to China in 2002),
however, disapproval resolutions of waiver extensions for China have been
introduced in every session: five were introduced in 1990 (101st Congress, 2nd
session), of which one was passed by the House but did not come to vote in the
Senate.25 In both sessions of the 102nd Congress (1991-1992), disapproval
resolutions were adopted by the House but indefinitely postponed or not acted upon
by the Senate. The waiver disapproval resolutions introduced — only in the House
— every mid-year after that were defeated on the House floor or died in the Ways
and Means Committee, thus precluding any action by the Senate. Thus, all attempts
at disapproving the annual renewal of China’s waiver have been unsuccessful.
Similarly, no disapproval resolution of annual extensions of Vietnam’s waiver,
since it was initially issued in April 1998, has been adopted by either house. In the
24 The type of the disapproval resolution was changed — with some delay — by Section
132(a) of P.L. 101-382 of August 20, 1990, from simple to joint because of the June 23,
1983, decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
v. Chadha
, which found legislative vetoes (e.g., disapproval, by concurrent or simple
resolution, of presidential action taken under statutory authority) unconstitutional.
25 In the 101st Congress and in most Congresses since (particularly in the 108th Congress),
however, various bills have been introduced to terminate, restrict, or further condition
China’s nondiscriminatory tariff status, the principal benefit subject to the Jackson-Vanik
requirements. Only two were enacted by Congress (in 1992) but vetoed by the President and
the veto was upheld by the Senate.

CRS-12
Senate, the disapproval resolution was merely ordered reported unfavorably in mid-
1998; in 1999, the motion to discharge it was defeated; and, in 2000, the measure
died in committee. No disapproval resolutions have been introduced since in the
Senate. In the House, the resolution was introduced every year through 2003, and,
through 2002, reported adversely and defeated on the floor; it died in committee in
2003.
As has been clear ever since the beginning of congressional action to disapprove
the annual extensions of the Jackson-Vanik waiver authority, a variety of issues other
than freedom of emigration have been given as reasons for such disapprovals. This
has been the case particularly with extensions of China’s waiver: violation of human
rights in general (restriction of religious freedom and ethnic minority rights, forced
labor), unfair trade practices, U.S. bilateral trade deficits (focusing on the trade
effects of reduced import-duty rates due to nondiscriminatory treatment),
proliferation of nuclear and other weapons, China’s manipulation of yuan-dollar
exchange rate, and some others. In the case of Vietnam, opposition to the waiver
extension has been based on Vietnam’s unsatisfactory emigration policy, denial of
human and religious rights, and lack of proper accounting for the POWs and MIAs.
At present, Jackson-Vanik waivers are in effect with respect to only three of the
12 countries still subject to the amendment, namely Belarus,26 Turkmenistan,27 and
Vietnam. Most of the remaining countries subject to the Jackson-Vanik amendment
(and to which initially its waiver provision applied) have been “upgraded” by having
been determined as not in violation of the amendment’s requirements, although they
still remain subject to it. Others have been removed from its application entirely by
enactment or other appropriate action whereby permanent NTR treatment has been
restored to them (see p. 13).
Consequently, there remain at present only two countries (Cuba and North
Korea) to which the NTR treatment is being denied due to noncompliance with the
Jackson-Vanik amendment.
In 17 instances, determinations of “no violation” of the freedom-of-
emigration requirements have been made by the President28 for NME countries to
which nondiscriminatory status and other covered benefits had already been restored
under the waiver provision.29 While this change of Jackson-Vanik amendment status
in no way changes a country’s nondiscriminatory treatment or its access to other
covered benefits, it does suggest a symbolic U.S. approval of its emigration policy.
26 Jackson-Vanik waiver for Belarus, first issued in 1992 (see p. 10), but — apparently
through an oversight — not renewed in the regular way in mid-2001, was reissued on July
2, 2001.
27 See footnote 30 and accompanying text.
28 See also footnote 15 on p. 6.
29 There is, however, in the relevant documents no specific reference to any of these
countries as being NME countries; action under the Jackson-Vanik amendment is applied
to them individually by name.

CRS-13
It also has in several instances been the stepping stone to permanent restoration of the
covered benefits.
Such determinations were made for Hungary on October 26, 1989;
Czechoslovakia on October 16, 1991; Bulgaria on June 3, 1993; Russia on
September 24, 1994; Romania on May 19, 1995; Mongolia on September 4, 1996;
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine on June 3, 1997; and Albania,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan on December 5,
1997. Because of subsequent terminations of the application of the Jackson-Vanik
amendment to several countries through extensions of permanent NTR treatment (see
the second paragraph below) and the intervening (August 8, 2003) “downgrading”
of Turkmenistan’s “no-violation” status to “waiver status,”30 the “no violation”
determinations (most recently renewed on July 7, 2005) apply at present to seven
countries: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine, and
Uzbekistan.
No congressional attempts have been made in the past to disapprove by joint
resolution any initial extension or later renewal of the “no-violation” determination.
The application of Title IV of the Trade Act of 1974, including the Jackson-
Vanik amendment, has been terminated with respect to eight countries that had
already been determined not in violation at the time when permanent
nondiscriminatory status was granted to them by specific law. The countries, the
relevant legislation and the date of its entry into force are: Czechoslovakia (on
January 1, 1993, split into the Czech Republic, and Slovakia) and Hungary (Section
2, P.L. 102-182, with effect on April 14, 1992); Bulgaria (P.L. 104-162, October 1,
1996); Romania (P.L. 104-171, November 12, 1996), Mongolia (Section 2424, P.L.
106-36; July 1, 1999), Albania and Kyrgyzstan (Sections 301 and 302, P.L. 106-200;
June 29, 2000), Georgia (Section 3002, P.L. 106-476, December 29, 2000), and
Armenia (Section 2001, P.L. 108-429, January 7, 2005).
In several instances, the application of Title IV (including the Jackson-Vanik
amendment) was terminated with respect to countries that were at the time still
subject to the waiver provision. This occurred with respect to the three Baltic
republics (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania), whose waiver had been included, but was
not specifically mentioned in the Soviet Union’s waiver,31 after their individual
declarations of independence from the Soviet Union during the course of 1991, by
30 Presidential letters notifying the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the
President of the Senate (August 8, 2003; H.Doc. 108-111) of Turkmenistan’s noncompliance
with the “no-violation” standard; and Executive order 13314, August 8, 2003 (68 F.R.
48249), issuing a new Jackson-Vanik waiver for Turkmenistan.
31 The inclusion of the three Baltic countries in the Soviet waiver, however, was notified to
Congress in the President’s letter of December 29, 1990, to Congressional leaders on trade
with the Soviet Union (Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, v. 27, no. 1, January
7, 1991, p. 2). — This separate treatment of the three Baltic republics was due to the fact
that the United States had not recognized their incorporation into the Soviet Union after
World War II and had maintained their diplomatic representations in Washington.

CRS-14
legislation directly granting them permanent nondiscriminatory status, with effect on
December 19, 1991.32
In the case of China, the application of Title IV (including the Jackson-Vanik
provision) was terminated and permanent NTR treatment extended, effective January
1, 2002, by Presidential proclamation 7516 (67 F.R. 479), under the authority of
Sections 101 and 102 of P.L. 106-286 (Normal Trade Relations for the People’s
Republic of China; October 10, 2000). At the time, China’s NTR status was still
subject to annual renewals of the Jackson-Vanik waiver authority.
Application of Title IV to East Germany — including the waiver of August 15,
1990 — was rendered inoperative upon the unification of East and West Germany
as of October 3, 1990.33 The measure was put into effect by the Department of the
Treasury (Customs Bulletin and Decisions, v. 24, no. 45/46, November 14, 1990, p.
4).
On a final note: although Cambodia and Laos (or at least their communist-
controlled parts; see footnote 10) were subject to the 1951 suspension of the most-
favored-nation status and its restoration arguably could have been subject to the
Jackson-Vanik amendment, they had such status restored directly and
unconditionally
, without prior recourse to the Title IV procedure and with no
reference to it in their implementing laws — respectively, P.L. 104-203, and Section
2005, P.L.108-429 — based on the view of the congressional committees of
jurisdiction that Title IV of the Trade Act of 1974 applied to neither country.
Practical Consequences
The functional relevance of the Jackson-Vanik amendment has been greatly
reduced since its enactment in January 1975, particularly after the dissolution of the
Soviet Union in 1991 and subsequent political and economic democratization of its
earlier constituent republics. This reduction has been due in part to the end of the
Cold War (a remnant of which the provision still is); partly through substantive
improvement of emigration policies of most of the countries still remaining within
its purview, resulting in an increase in the number of those that have been found not
in violation of its freedom-of-emigration criteria; and in part due to a significant
reduction of the number of countries to which it still applies, through the granting of
permanent NTR treatment by law.
32 Title I, P.L. 102-182; December 4, 1991.
33 Shortly after the issuance of the waiver for East Germany, the President was authorized
by Section 142 of the Customs and Trade Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-382; August 20, 1990) to
lower by proclamation the duty rates on articles imported from East Germany between
September 30, 1990, and the date of unification of Germany to any rates not lower than the
MFN rates, hence, in effect, potentially extending to East Germany permanent MFN status.
German unification shortly before the effective date of the President’s authority under P.L.
101-382 and the administrative extension of permanent MFN status, made a Presidential
proclamation unnecessary.

CRS-15
The conditional NTR treatment extended under the amendment to the countries
that it covers is functionally no different from permanent NTR treatment. Despite its
statutory conditionality and temporary nature, in present objective circumstances, it
constitutes no serious obstacle to U.S. commercial relations with countries to which
it still applies. Such NTR treatment is also hardly likely to be terminated with
respect to any country, in view of the present full or substantial compliance with the
freedom-of-emigration requirements of the amendment. On the other hand, the
amendment itself is not likely to be repealed in the short term, since Congress has
thus far indicated its intent to maintain it in force for the purpose of retaining a
certain degree of control over trade with the affected countries. To some extent, this
intent has been suggested in practice by repeated — although gradually less frequent
and in the end unsuccessful — legislative attempts to disapprove the annual
Presidential renewals of Jackson-Vanik waivers for certain countries.
Possible Congressional Action
Prospective congressional activity relative to the Jackson-Vanik amendment
might take any of the possible forms of action mentioned below, some of which have
already been taken, or at least attempted, in the past:
(1) Since it can be expected that the Executive action to renew annually the
overall waiver authority and any of the existing waivers, and semiannually the “no
violation” determinations, as well as the issuance of possible initial “no violation”
determinations, will continue in the future, the Congress may have to consider the
adoption of one or more joint resolutions disapproving any such action overall or
with regard to any individual country still subject to the Jackson-Vanik amendment
(cf. pp. 7-8). The enactment and implementation of such a resolution would
ultimately result in the suspension of the NTR treatment (and other benefits covered
by the amendment) with respect to the country or countries to which the resolution
would apply.
However, in view of the present circumstances mentioned in the preceding
section and recent experience, the adoption of such a disapproval resolution — if
introduced at all — does not appear likely.
(2) With regard to the applicability of the Jackson-Vanik amendment as such,
legislation could be considered terminating the application of the amendment to
individual countries.
A caveat on this subject: Occasionally in the past, it has been suggested that
application of the Jackson-Vanik amendment to an individual NME country could
be terminated simply by declaring the country in question a market economy. This
mechanism could not serve its intended purpose because, although the amendment
applies to NME countries, the initial suspension of nondiscriminatory (MFN) status
under the 1951 law (cf. footnote 1), which has been continued in force by Section
401 of the Trade Act of 1974 (cf. footnote 3), did not apply to NME countries as a
group but rather individually to each of the affected countries and/or areas. Hence,

CRS-16
terminating the application of the amendment with respect to a country has to be
effected on a country-by-country basis.
Action focusing on the termination exclusively of the application of the
amendment to individual countries is technically possible, but has to take into
consideration the specific aspects of the interconnectedness of the amendment with
other closely related sections of Title IV of the Trade Act of 1974.
Because of the intrinsic operative connection of the Jackson-Vanik amendment
with the other provisions of Title IV (with the exception of Section 406, but
unavoidably with Sections 40134 and 409, and possibly 40335), such termination
would also have to apply to those provisions.
Such terminating action could — technically — be the subject of a free-standing
measure and apply exclusively to the amendment and related statutes (which action
would presumably automatically restore permanent NTR treatment to the country in
question36). Since, however, the implementation of the J-V amendment is not a goal
of its own but is only subsidiary to — if functionally unavoidably necessary for —
the temporary and conditional restoration of the NTR treatment, its termination has,
in past practice, consistently been an adjunct to and an integral part of broader
legislation designed to restore permanent NTR treatment to the affected countries,
and has encompassed the entire Title IV.
(3) The most radical legislative action regarding the Jackson-Vanik amendment
that Congress might undertake is the repeal of the provision itself. Such repeal has
been informally advocated in the past (including by the principal cosponsor of the
amendment, former Representative Charles A. Vanik), but no specific legislation
toward that end has as yet been introduced.
In action to repeal the Jackson-Vanik amendment altogether, the comments and
caveats mentioned in the preceding section regarding the termination of the
application of the Jackson-Vanik amendment to individual countries would need to
be taken into consideration, most likely resulting in the repeal of the entire Title IV.
34 See page 4.
35 See footnote 14 for Sections 409 and 403..
36 If not in specific terms, presumably by applying to the country permanent NTR
(nondiscriminatory) treatment provided as a key element of the trade policy matter
applicable generally to all U.S. trading partners under Section 126 of the Trade Act of 1974
(see footnote 3).

CRS-17
Table 1. Country Application of the Jackson-Vanik Amendment
For an explanation of the entries in this table, please, see footnote 21 on p. 9.
Country
Waiver
“No Violation”
Terminationa
Albania
June 3, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;
June 29, 2000;
EO 12809,
PD 98-7, FR 66253
Sec. 301, P.L. 106-
57 FR 23925
200; PP 7326,
65 FR 41547
Armenia
Apr. 6, 1992;
June 3, 1997;
Jan. 7, 2005;
EO 12798,
PD 97-27,
Sec. 2001, P.L.
57 FR 12175
62 FR 32017
108-429, PP 7860,
70 FR 2321
Azerbaijan
June 3, 1992;
June 3, 1997;
EO 12809,
PD 97-27,
57 FR 23925
62 FR 32017
Belarus (1)
Apr. 16, 1992;
b
EO 12802,
57 FR 14321
Belarus (2)
July 2, 2001;
EO 13220,
66 FR 35527
Bulgaria
Jan. 22, 1991;
June 3, 1993;
Oct. 1, 1996;
EO 12745,
PD 93-26,
Sec. 2, P.L. 104-
56 FR 2835
58 FR 33007
162, PP 6922,
61 FR 51205
China
Oct. 23, 1979;
Jan. 1, 2002;
c
EO 12167,
Sec. 101, P.L. 106-
44 FR 61167
286, PP 7516,
67 FR 479
Czechoslovakiad
Feb . 20, 1990;
Oct. 16, 1991;
Apr. 14, 1992;
EO 12702,
PD 92-3,
Sec. 2, P.L. 102-
55 FR 6132
56 FR 55203
182, PP 6419,
57 FR 12865
East Germany
Aug. 15, 1990;
e
EO 12726,
55 FR 33637
Estonia
Dec. 29, 1990;
Dec. 19, 1991;
f
EO 12740,
Sec. 103, P.L. 102-
56 FR 355
182
Georgia
June 3, 1992;
June 3, 1997;
Dec. 29, 2000;
EO 12809,
PD 97-27,
Sec. 3002,
57 FR 23925
62 FR 32017
P.L. 106-476,
PP 7389,66 FR 703
Hungary
Apr. 7, 1978;
Oct. 26, 1989;
Apr. 14, 1992;
EO 12051,
PD 90-3,
Sec. 2, P.L. 102-
43 FR 15131
54 FR 56591
182, PP 6419,
57 FR 12865

CRS-18
Country
Waiver
“No Violation”
Terminationa
Kazakhstan
June 3, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;
EO 12809,
PD 98-7,
57 FR 23925
62 FR 66253
Kyrgyzstan
Apr. 16, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;
June 29, 2000;
EO 12802,
PD 98-7,
Sec. 302, P.L. 106-
57 FR 14321
62 FR 66253
200, PP 7326,
65 FR 41547
Latvia
Dec. 29, 1990;
f
Dec. 19, 1991;
EO 12740,
Sec. 103,
56 FR 355
P.L. 102-182
Lithuania
Dec. 29, 1990;
f
Dec. 19, 1991;
EO 12740,
Sec. 103,
56 FR 355
P.L. 102-182
Moldova
June 3, 1992;
June 3, 1997;
EO 12809,
PD 97-27,
57 FR 23925
62 FR 32017
Mongolia
Jan. 23, 1991;
Sep. 4, 1996;
July 1, 1999;
EO 12746,
PD 96-51,
Sec. 2424, P.L.
56 FR 2837
61 FR 48603
106-36, PP 7207,
64 FR 36549
Romania (1)
Apr. 24, 1975;
g
EO 11854,
40 FR 18391
Romania (2)
Aug. 17, 1991;
May 19, 1995;
Nov. 12, 1996;
PD 91-43,
PD 95-22,
Sec. 2, P.L. 104-
56 FR 43861
60 FR 29463
171, PP 6951,
61 FR 58129
Russia
Apr. 16, 1992;
Sep. 21, 1994;
EO 12802,
PD 94-51,
57 FR 14321
59 FR 49783
Tajikistan
June 24, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;
EO 12811,
PD 98-7,
57 FR 28585
62 FR 66253
Turkmenistan (1)
June 24, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;
EO 12811,
PD 98-7,
57 FR 28585
62 FR 66253h
Turkmenistan (2)
Aug. 8, 2003;
EO 13314,
68 FR 48249
Ukraine
Apr. 16, 1992;
June 3, 1997;
EO 12802,
PD 97-27,
57 FR 14321
62 FR 32017
Uzbekistan
Apr. 16, 1992;
Dec. 5, 1997;

CRS-19
Country
Waiver
“No Violation”
Terminationa
EO 12802,
PD 98-7,
57 FR 14321
62 FR 66253
Vietnam
Apr. 7, 1998;
EO 13079,
63 FR 17309
Notes:
a. Termination of the application of Title IV of the Trade Act of 1974 (including the Jackson-Vanik
amendment) is specifically mentioned in the implementing legislation (which extends permanent
normal trade relations to the country in question).
b. Due to an oversight, waiver was not renewed in mid-2001 and had to be reissued (see Belarus (2)).
c. No “no violation” determination made.
d. As of January 1, 1993 (i.e., already after the extension of permanent NTR status), Czechoslovakia
separated into Czech Republic and Slovakia (cf. PP 6544, 58 FR 19548).
e. Application of Jackson-Vanik amendment waiver terminated automatically through extension of
permanent NTR status upon German reunification effective October 3, 1990 (Customs Bulletin
and Decisions,
vol. 24. Nos. 45/46, Nov. 14, 1990, p. 4). (See also footnote 30.)
f. Waiver originally issued for the Soviet Union, without specific mention of Baltic countries; the
latter application was explained by the President’s letter to congressional leaders on trade with
the Soviet Union (Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, v. 27, no. 1, Jan. 7, 1991,
p. 2).
g. Waiver renounced by Romania and allowed to expire July 3, 1988 (PP 5836, 53 FR 24921).
h. “No violation” status suspended and reverted to “waiver” status (see Turkmenistan (2)).
Abbreviations:
EO - Executive Order
FR -
Federal Register
PD - Presidential determination
PP -
Presidential proclamation
XN - Exchange of note of acceptance of the trade agreement