Chinese Tire Imports: Section 421 Safeguards 
and the World Trade Organization (WTO) 
Jeanne J. Grimmett 
Legislative Attorney 
January 31, 2011 
Congressional Research Service
7-5700 
www.crs.gov 
R40844 
CRS Report for Congress
P
  repared for Members and Committees of Congress        
Chinese Tire Imports: Section 421 Safeguards and the World Trade Organization (WTO) 
 
Summary 
On April 20, 2009, the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied 
Industrial and Service Workers International Union filed a petition with the U.S. International 
Trade Commission (ITC) requesting an investigation under Section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974, 
19 U.S.C. § 2451, a trade remedy statute addressing import surges from China, to examine 
whether Chinese passenger vehicle and light truck tires were causing market disruption to U.S. 
tire producers. Market disruption will be found to occur under Section 421 whenever imports of a 
Chinese product that is “like or directly competitive with” a domestic product “are increasing 
rapidly ... so as to be a significant cause of material injury, or threat of material injury, to the 
domestic industry.” The ITC initiated the investigation (TA-421-7) on April 24, 2009. 
As a result of its investigation, the ITC in June 2009 voted 4-2 that imports of the subject tires 
were causing domestic market disruption and recommended that the President impose an 
additional duty on these items for three years at an annually declining rate. The ITC also 
recommended expedited consideration of trade adjustment assistance applications filed by 
affected firms or workers. On September 11, 2009, President Obama proclaimed increased tariffs 
on Chinese tires for three years effective September 26, 2009, albeit at lower rates than those 
recommended by the ITC. The tariff increase is 35% ad valorem in the first year, 30% in the 
second year, and 25% in the third year. The President also directed the Secretaries of Labor and 
Commerce to expedite applications for trade adjustment assistance and to provide other available 
economic assistance to affected workers, firms, and communities. While the President was 
authorized to review the tariffs after six months and to modify, reduce, or terminate them, he did 
not take any of these actions. Six petitions had been filed under Section 421 in the past, with the 
ITC finding that market disruption existed in four out of six of its investigations; President Bush 
decided not to provide import relief, however, in these earlier cases. 
Section 421 was enacted as one element of 2000 legislation that permitted the President to grant 
most-favored-nation (MFN) tariff treatment to Chinese products upon China’s accession to the 
World Trade Organization (WTO). Section 421 authorizes the President to impose safeguards—
that is, temporary measures such as import surcharges or quotas—on Chinese goods if domestic 
market disruption is found. The statute implements a China-specific safeguard mechanism in 
China’s WTO Accession Protocol that may be utilized by WTO members through December 
2013. The provision is separate from Article XIX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 
(GATT) 1994 and the WTO Agreement on Safeguards, which allow WTO members to respond to 
injurious import surges but on a stricter basis than under the Protocol. A major difference is that 
the Protocol permits a safeguard to be applied only to Chinese products while the Safeguards 
Agreement requires that any safeguard be applied to a product regardless of its source. 
China filed a WTO complaint against the United States in September 2009; a dispute panel was 
established in January 2010 and panelists appointed in March 2010. China claimed that the 
Section 421 tariffs violate U.S. GATT obligations to accord Chinese tires MFN tariff treatment 
and not to exceed negotiated tariff rates, that the United States imposed tariffs under China’s 
Accession Protocol without first attempting to justify them under GATT and WTO safeguard 
provisions, and that Section 421 and its application in this case violate U.S. obligations under the 
Protocol. In a report issued December 13, 2010, the WTO panel rejected all of China’s claims. 
Under WTO rules, either party may appeal the report within 60 days, an action that China 
reportedly intends to take. The parties have since asked the WTO to extend the appeal period to 
May 24, 2011. 
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Chinese Tire Imports: Section 421 Safeguards and the World Trade Organization (WTO) 
 
Contents 
Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1 
GATT Article XIX and the WTO Agreement on Safeguards ........................................................ 2 
Paragraph 16 of China’s WTO Accession Protocol: China-Specific Safeguard Mechanism .......... 7 
Section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974: Implementing the China-Specific Safeguard ................... 10 
Section 421 Investigation: Chinese Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires from China 
(2009) .................................................................................................................................... 16 
China’s WTO Complaint: United States—Measures Affecting Imports of Certain 
Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tyres from China (WT/DS399)......................................... 21 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix. WTO China-Specific Safeguard ............................................................................... 25 
 
Contacts 
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 26 
 
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Chinese Tire Imports: Section 421 Safeguards and the World Trade Organization (WTO) 
 
Introduction 
On September 11, 2009, the White House announced that additional tariffs would be placed on 
imports of certain Chinese tires for three years under Section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 
U.S.C. § 2451, a trade remedy statute aimed at import surges from China. The action was based 
on earlier findings by the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) that Chinese tire imports 
into the United States were causing market disruption to domestic tire producers. The new tariffs 
took effect on September 26, 2009. Although six petitions had been filed under Section 421 in the 
past to remedy surges of other Chinese products and the ITC found that U.S. market disruption 
existed in four out of six of its Section 421 investigations, this was the first time that a President 
chose to grant import relief under the statute. Further, while President Obama was authorized to 
review the tariffs after six months and to modify, reduce, or terminate them, he allowed the tariffs 
to remain in place as originally imposed.  
Section 421, which was enacted as one element of 2000 legislation addressing various issues 
involving the accession of China to the World Trade Organization (WTO), authorizes the 
imposition of safeguards—that is, temporary measures such as import surcharges or quotas—on 
Chinese products in the event that the ITC finds that these imports have resulted in market 
disruption in the United States. Market disruption occurs under Section 421 if an import surge of 
a Chinese product is a significant cause of material injury or threat of material injury to the 
domestic industry producing the like or directly competitive product. China’s WTO Accession 
Protocol permits WTO members to impose safeguards to remedy domestic market disruption 
caused by imports of Chinese goods until December 2013. This provision is separate from XIX of 
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994) and the WTO Agreement on 
Safeguards, which allow WTO members to respond to injurious import surges generally but on a 
stricter basis than provided for under China’s Accession Protocol. 
China requested consultations with the United States under the WTO Understanding on Rules and 
Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes on September 14, 2009, and requested a panel 
on December 21, 2009, claiming that the additional tariffs are inconsistent with U.S. GATT 
obligations to accord Chinese tires MFN tariff treatment and not to exceed negotiated tariff rates, 
that the United States imposed tariffs under China’s Accession Protocol without first attempting 
to justify them under general GATT and WTO safeguard provisions, and that Section 421 and its 
application in this case are inconsistent with U.S. obligations under the Protocol. A dispute panel 
was established on January 19, 2010; panelists were appointed March 12, 2010. 
In a report issued December 13, 2010, the WTO panel rejected all of China’s claims. This was the 
first WTO dispute panel to consider the obligations of an importing WTO member under the 
China-specific safeguard. According to reports, China intends to appeal the panel report. 
This report discusses WTO safeguards provisions contained in Article XIX of the GATT and the 
Agreement on Safeguards; the WTO China-specific safeguard and how it differs from pre-
existing WTO provisions; authorities and procedures set out in Section 421 of the Trade Act of 
1974; the ITC determination and the President’s decision to provide relief in the 2009 China tires 
case; and China’s WTO panel request involving the U.S. tire safeguard.1  
                                                
1 For an overview of trade issues involving the United States and China, see CRS Report RL33536, China-U.S. Trade 
Issues, by Wayne M. Morrison.  
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GATT Article XIX and the WTO Agreement 
on Safeguards 
Article XIX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994) and the WTO 
Agreement on Safeguards permit WTO members to apply safeguards—that is, to suspend 
temporarily GATT tariff concessions or other GATT obligations owed other WTO members—in 
order to remedy serious injury to domestic industries caused by surges of imported products from 
other WTO member countries.2 The China-specific safeguard contained in China’s WTO 
Accession Protocol, discussed below, raises the possibility that a WTO member may impose 
safeguards under the stricter provisions of the GATT and the Safeguards Agreement instead of 
under the China-specific provision. Safeguard measures are generally authorized under U.S. law 
in Title II of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 U.S.C. §§ 2251-2254.3 
Article XIX of the GATT 1994, captioned “Emergency Action on Imports of Particular Products” 
and referred to as the GATT “escape clause,” was intended to provide GATT parties with a means 
of addressing temporary emergencies that might arise as a result of their GATT commitments to 
reduce tariffs and adopt other trade liberalizing laws and policies.4 Article XIX:1(a), which sets 
out the WTO legal foundation for safeguards, provides as follows: 
If, as a result of unforeseen developments and of the effect of the obligations incurred by a 
contracting party [i.e., WTO member] under this Agreement, including tariff concessions, 
any product is being imported into the territory of that contracting party in such increased 
quantities and under such conditions as to cause or threaten serious injury to domestic 
producers in that territory of like or directly competitive products, the contracting party shall 
be free, in respect of such product, and to the extent and for such time as may be necessary to 
prevent or remedy such injury, to suspend the obligation in whole or in part. 
A safeguard may take the form of a tariff surcharge, which involves the suspension of a 
negotiated tariff concession under Article II of the GATT, or an import quota, which involve the 
suspension of the obligation in GATT Article XI:1 not to impose quantitative restrictions on 
imports from other WTO members. Another option is a tariff-rate quota (TRQ), under which a 
specified volume of goods may be entered under a lower tariff rate, with out-of-quota items 
subject to higher rates. 
Article XIX safeguards are to be considered exceptional measures. As explained by the WTO 
Appellate Body: 
As part of the context of paragraph 1(a) of Article XIX, we note that the title of Article XIX 
is: “Emergency Action on Imports of Particular Products”. The words “emergency action” 
also appear in Article 11.1(a) of the Agreement on Safeguards. We note once again, that 
Article XIX:(1)(a) requires that a product be imported “in such increased quantities and 
under such conditions as to cause to threaten serious injury to domestic producers”. 
                                                
2 For a recent legal and economic analysis of safeguards, see World Trade Organization, World Trade Report 2009; 
Trade Policy Commitments and Contingency Measures 47-65 (2009), at http://www.wto.org/english/res_e/booksp_e/
anrep_e/world_trade_report09_e.pdf. 
3 For additional information on Title II of the Trade Act of 1974, see CRS Report RL32371, Trade Remedies: A 
Primer, by Vivian C. Jones. 
4 John H. Jackson, WORLD TRADE AND THE LAW OF GATT 553-55 (1969). 
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(emphasis added). Clearly, this is not the language of ordinary events in routine commerce. 
In our view, the text of Article XIX:1(a) of the GATT 1994, read in its ordinary meaning and 
in its context, demonstrates that safeguard measures were intended by the drafters of the 
GATT to be matters out of the ordinary, to be matters of urgency, to be, in short, “emergency 
actions.” And, such “emergency actions” are to be invoked only in situations when, as a 
result of obligations incurred under the GATT 1994, a Member finds itself confronted with 
developments it had not “foreseen” or “expected” when it incurred that obligation. The 
remedy that Article XIX:1(a) allows in this situation is temporarily to “suspend the 
obligation in whole or in part or to withdraw or modify the concession”. Thus, Article XIX is 
clearly, and in every way, an extraordinary remedy.5 
The Agreement on Safeguards expands on Article XIX, providing that safeguards may only be 
imposed if the importing member has conducted an investigation to determine if the conditions 
for imposing a safeguard have been met6 and stating that a WTO member may not “take or seek 
any emergency action on particular products as set forth in Article XIX of the GATT 1994 unless 
such action conforms with the provisions of this Article as applied in accordance with this 
Agreement.”7 It adds that the increased quantities of imports that are a prerequisite of a finding of 
serious injury may be “absolute or relative to domestic production.”8 The Agreement also sets out 
requirements for domestic safeguards investigations and for determinations of serious injury 
made in the course of such investigations. In addition, a WTO member imposing a safeguard is 
subject to detailed obligations to notify the WTO Committee on Safeguards and the WTO 
Council on Trade in Goods and to consult with other affected WTO members.9 
Although the Agreement on Safeguards does not contain language requiring the existence of 
“unforeseen developments,” the WTO Appellate Body has determined that the requirement 
continues to apply. In a 1999 report (which also contains the paragraph quoted above), the 
Appellate Body found that a safeguard measure must comply with both Article XIX and the 
Safeguards Agreement, that Uruguay Round negotiators intended that the provisions of the GATT 
and the provisions of the Safeguards Agreements “would apply cumulatively except to the extent 
of a conflict between specific provisions,” and that, there being no such conflict in this situation, 
“unforeseen developments” must exist in order to impose a safeguard measure.10  
The “serious injury” standard contained in Article XIX and carried forward in the Safeguards 
Agreement is defined in the Agreement as meaning “a significant overall impairment in the 
position of a domestic industry.”11 The WTO Appellate Body has found that this standard is “on 
its face, very high” or “exacting,” particularly when contrasted with the “material injury” 
standard contained in the WTO Antidumping Agreement, the Agreement on Subsidies and 
Countervailing Measures, and Article VI of the GATT.12 According to the Appellate Body, this 
                                                
5 Appellate Body Report, Argentina—Safeguard Measures on Imports of Footwear, para. 93 WT/DS121/AB/R 
(December 14, 1999) [hereinafter Argentina Footwear AB Report]. 
6 Agreement on Safeguards art. 2.1, at http://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/25-safeg.pdf.  
7 Id. art. 11.1. 
8 Id. art. 2.1. 
9 Id. art. 12. 
10 Argentina Footwear AB Report, supra note 5, at paras. 76-90.  
11 Agreement on Safeguards art. 4.1(a). 
12 Appellate Body Report, United States—Safeguard Measures on Imports of Fresh, Chilled or Frozen Lamb Meat 
from New Zealand and Australia, para. 124, WT/DS177/AB/R, WT/DS178/AB/R (May 1, 2001) [hereinafter U.S. 
Lamb AB Report]. The term “material injury,” as used in the Article VI of the GATT 1994, the WTO Agreement on 
(continued...) 
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“much higher standard of injury” is consistent with the object and purpose of the Safeguards 
Agreement since the application of a safeguard is predicated on the existence of increased import 
volume and not on “‘unfair’ trade actions [i.e., dumping or subsidization], as is the case with anti-
dumping or countervailing measures.”13 
The Safeguards Agreement makes clear that an Article XIX safeguard must be applied on a 
nondiscriminatory basis, that is, it must be applied to the product at issue regardless of its 
source.14 The Agreement also places a time limit on a safeguard measure, providing that it may 
not be initially applied for more than four years.15 The safeguard may be extended, however, so 
long as the full period of application does not exceed eight years.16 While WTO members may 
apply quantitative restrictions or quotas under the Safeguards Agreement,17 they may not “seek, 
take or maintain any voluntary export restraints, orderly marketing agreements or other similar 
measures on the export or the import side,” whether such actions are taken by a single member or 
as actions under “agreements arrangements and understandings entered into by two or more 
members.”18 
 Article XIX requires that the WTO member intending to impose the safeguard notify the WTO 
“as far in advance as may be practicable” before doing so and afford the WTO and WTO 
members having a substantial export interest in the subject product an opportunity to consult on 
the proposed action. These consultation requirements are expanded upon in the WTO Safeguards 
Agreement, which requires the member to notify the Committee on Safeguards immediately upon 
initiating an investigation relating to serious injury or threat as well as at other stages of the 
process.19 A member may apply a provisional safeguard in the event of “critical circumstances,” 
that is, “where delay would cause damage which it would be difficult to repair,” so long as the 
member has preliminarily determined that “there is clear evidence that increased imports have 
caused or are threatening to cause serious injury” and that it has notified the Safeguards 
Committee.20 
Article 8 of the Safeguards Agreement requires that the member proposing to apply a safeguard 
measure “endeavour to maintain a substantially equivalent level of concessions and other 
obligations to that existing under GATT 1994 between it and the exporting members which would 
be affected by such a measure.”21 To achieve this objective, the members may agree on “any 
                                                             
(...continued) 
Antidumping, and the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, is not defined in any of these 
agreements. 
13 Id., quoting Argentina Footwear AB Report, supra note 5, para. 94. 
14 Agreement on Safeguards art 2.2. 
15 Id. art. 7.1. 
16 Id. arts. 7.1-7.3. 
17 See id. art. 5.1.  
18 Id. art 11.1(b). For purposes of this prohibition, “similar” measures include “export moderation, export-price or 
import-price monitoring systems, export or import surveillance, compulsory import cartels and discretionary export or 
import licensing schemes, any of which afford protection.” Members may, however, mutually agree that an import 
quota will be administered by the exporting Member. Id. note 3. 
19 Id. art. 12.1. 
20 Id. arts. 6, 12.4. 
21 Id. art 8.1. 
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adequate means of trade compensation for the adverse effects of the measures on their trade.”22 
GATT Article XIX:3(a) provides that if the importing member and the affected exporting 
Members cannot reach an agreement regarding the safeguard, the importing Member is “free to” 
impose or continue to impose the measure. If the member applies the safeguard, the affected 
exporting Members have a conditional right to suspend “substantially equivalent concessions or 
other obligations” under the GATT owed that Member.23  
The Safeguards Agreement, at Article 8.2, provides that the right to suspend concessions owed 
the importing member, sometimes referred to as a “rebalancing” of concessions, may be invoked 
if no agreement is reached within 30 days of WTO consultations between or among the members 
concerned.24 If an affected exporting member invokes this right, it must first inform the WTO 
Council on Trade in Goods of its proposed measure. The member may then suspend concessions 
no later than 90 days after the safeguard is applied, provided 30 days have lapsed since the 
Council received the notification of the suspension and the Council has not disapproved (i.e., 
blocked) the proposed action. 
Notwithstanding the 90-day limitation described above, Article 8.3 of the Agreement prohibits 
members from exercising their “right of suspension” for the first three years that a safeguard 
measure is in effect, provided that the safeguard (1) is taken as a result of an absolute increase in 
imports and (2) is consistent with the Safeguards Agreement. Absent a mechanism in the 
Safeguards Agreement for establishing whether a safeguard conforms to the Agreement at this 
stage, affected WTO members have claimed that the three-year limitation did not apply based on 
unilateral determinations of WTO-consistency, but, more often, have waited or sought to wait 
until adverse panel and Appellate Body reports involving another member’s safeguard were 
adopted by the WTO Dispute Settlement Body.25 
                                                
22 Id. 
23 GATT 1994 art. XIX:3(a); Agreement on Safeguards art. 8.2. 
24 Id. art 8.2. 
25 The issue of the immediate suspension of concessions under Article 8.2 of the Safeguards Agreement arose in 
response to the imposition by the United States of safeguard tariffs on steel products under Title II of the Trade Act of 
1974, originally effective March 20, 2002, through March 20, 2005. Proclamation No. 7529, 67 Fed. Reg. (March 7, 
2002). Affected exporting countries took three different approaches to the exercise of suspension rights under Article 8 
of the Safeguards Agreement. The European Communities (EC), Japan, Norway, China, and Switzerland notified the 
WTO that they intended to suspend concessions, that is, impose tariff surcharges on U.S. goods, under Article 8.2. 
China, Norway, and Switzerland stated that they were reserving the right to suspend concessions, as listed in their 
notifications, until March 20, 2005—three years after the safeguard was imposed—or, if earlier, five days after a WTO 
decision that the U.S. measures were inconsistent with WTO agreements. The EC and Japan each maintained two lists 
of U.S. products on which they intended to suspend tariff concessions, stating that they reserved the right to suspend 
concessions regarding the first list not earlier than June 18, 2002, and regarding the second list, not earlier than March 
20, 2005, or five days after an adverse WTO decision involving the U.S. steel safeguard. Neither the EC nor Japan 
suspended concessions during the earlier period. In addition, Australia, Brazil, Korea, and New Zealand notified the 
WTO with the United States in May 2002 that they had agreed that the 90-day period set out on Article 8.2 would be 
considered to expire March 20, 2005 or, for Korea, March 19, 2005. Taiwan and the United States made such a joint 
notification in June 2002. In addition, the EC, Japan, Brazil, China, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, and Switzerland 
challenged the U.S. steel tariffs in WTO dispute settlement proceedings (WT/DS248 et al.). See generally CRS Report 
RL31474, Steel and the WTO: Summary and Timelines of Pending Proceedings Involving the United States, by Jeanne 
J. Grimmett and Stephen Cooney (out of print but available from Jeanne J. Grimmett, American Law Division). 
The President terminated the steel safeguard on December 4, 2003, Proclamation No. 7741, 68 Fed. Reg. 68483 
(December 4, 2003), approximately 15 months before it was set to expire and one week before the WTO Dispute 
Settlement Body adopted adverse panel and Appellate Body reports issued in the WTO dispute settlement proceedings. 
See infra notes 25 and 26 and accompanying text. Withdrawal of the safeguard tariffs removed the basis for the 
(continued...) 
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Four U.S. safeguards have been successfully challenged in the WTO.26 Among other findings, the 
WTO Appellate Body determined that the United States had acted inconsistently with Article XIX 
of the GATT or the Safeguards Agreement, as the case may be, due to inadequate or improper 
analysis of one or more of the following: the existence of unforeseen developments, increased 
imports, serious injury or threat, and causation—that is, whether increased imports had caused or 
were causing serious injury—including issues related to non-attribution of injury to factors other 
than increased imports.27 
                                                             
(...continued) 
suspension of concessions by WTO Members under Article 8.3 and thus no Member suspended concessions under the 
Article. As the dispute settlement proceeding progressed to its final stage, legal questions arose over relationship of the 
right of WTO Members to suspend concessions under Articles 8.3 of the Safeguards Agreement to Members’ rights 
and obligations involving WTO dispute settlement. See generally Matthew R. Nicely & David T. Hardin, Article 8 of 
the WTO Safeguards Agreement: Reforming the Right to Rebalance, 23 ST. JOHN’S J. LEGAL COMMENT. 699 
(2008)[hereinafter Nicely & Hardin]; Trade Experts Clash Over Validity of EU Steel Section 201 Retaliation Threat, 
INSIDE U.S. TRADE, October 3, 2003, at http://www.insidetrade.com. Note that under Article 23.2(a) of the WTO 
Dispute Settlement Understanding, if a WTO Member initiates a WTO dispute settlement proceeding in which a WTO 
violation is alleged, the complaining Member may not make a determination to the effect that a violation has occurred 
except in accordance with the Dispute Settlement Understanding and must make any such determination consistent 
with the ultimate WTO decision in the case. 
In response to an earlier U.S. safeguard action, the EC in January 2001 took action under Article 8 after the WTO had 
adopted adverse Appellate Body and modified panel reports finding that the United States acted inconsistently with the 
Safeguards Agreement in imposing a safeguard quota on EC wheat gluten in 1998 (WT/DS166). See infra notes 25-26 
and accompanying text. The EC had challenged the U.S. safeguard in the WTO and imposed a tariff-rate quota (TRQ) 
on U.S. corn gluten feed under Article 8.3 shortly after the panel and Appellate Body reports were adopted. The United 
States requested consultations on the EC measure, arguing that the EC had not followed notification and consultation 
requirements in the Safeguards Agreement and that the measure was thus inconsistent with the GATT Articles I, II, and 
XIX and Article 8 of the Agreement. Request for Consultations by the United States, European Communities—Tariff-
Rate Quota on Corn Gluten Feed from the United States, WT/DS223 (January 30, 2001). The dispute was later 
resolved when United States removed its quota on EC wheat gluten and the EC permitted its TRQ to expire, each 
action occurring on June 1, 2001. U.S. Drops Restrictions on Imports of Wheat Gluten, Offers Support for Industry, 18 
Int’l Trade Rep. (BNA) 890-91 (2001).  
26 See Appellate Body Report, United States—Definitive Safeguard Measures on Wheat Gluten from the European 
Communities, WT/DS166/AB/R (December 22, 2000) [hereinafter U.S. Wheat Gluten AB Report]; U.S. Lamb AB 
Report, supra note 12; Appellate Body Report, United States—Definitive Safeguard Measures on Imports of Circular 
Welded Carbon Quality Line Pipe from Korea, WT/DS202/AB/R (February 22, 2002); Appellate Body Report, United 
States—Definitive Safeguard Measures on Import of Certain Steel Products, WT/DS248 et al./AB/R (November 10, 
2003). 
27 Article 4.2(b) of the Safeguards Agreement states that “[w]hen factors other than increased imports are causing 
injury to the domestic industry at the same time, such injury shall not be attributed to increased imports.” To comply 
with this requirement, the WTO Appellate Body has made clear that domestic investigative agencies must: (1) 
distinguish injurious effects caused by increased imports from injurious effects caused by other factors and (2) 
“attribute to increased imports, on the one hand, and, by implication, to other relevant factors, on the other hand, injury 
caused by all of these different factors, including increased imports.” U.S. Wheat Gluten AB Report, supra note 26, 
para. 69. According to the Appellate Body, it is through this two-step process that investigative authorities comply with 
Article 4.2(b) “by ensuring that any injury to the domestic industry that was actually caused by factors other than 
increased imports is not ‘attributed’ to increased imports and is, therefore, not treated as if it were injury caused by 
increased imports, when it is not.” Id. 
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Paragraph 16 of China’s WTO Accession Protocol: 
China-Specific Safeguard Mechanism 
When a country seeks to accede to the World Trade Organization (WTO), it negotiates its terms of 
accession both multilaterally with the WTO members as a whole, as well as bilaterally with 
individual WTO members.28 Bilateral negotiations involve market access concessions and 
commitments in goods as well as specific commitments in services.29 The terms of all bilateral 
agreements eventually become a part of the country’s overall accession agreement with the 
WTO.30 
In their bilateral negotiations, the United States and China agreed to a temporary China-specific 
safeguard that could be imposed in the event that import surges of Chinese products occurring 
after China became a WTO member resulted in material injury to domestic producers.31 The 
provision was later included as paragraph 16 of Part I of China’s Protocol on Accession to the 
WTO (Accession Protocol) under the caption “Transitional Product-Specific Safeguard 
Mechanism.”32 On November 10, 2001, WTO Members agreed that China could accede to the 
WTO on the terms and conditions set out in its Accession Protocol. China became a WTO 
member 30 days later, on December 11, 2001. The China-specific safeguard provision will 
terminate 12 years after the date of China’s accession, or December 10, 2013.33 
The China-specific safeguard contains both substantive and procedural requirements.34 It may be 
invoked by a WTO member “in cases where products of Chinese origin are being imported into 
the territory of … [the] member in such increased quantities or under such condition as to cause 
or threaten to cause market disruption to the domestic producers of like or directly competitive 
products.”35  
                                                
28 Peter John Williams, A HANDBOOK ON ACCESSION TO THE WTO 38-39 (2008) [hereinafter Williams]. 
29 World Trade Organization, Note by the Secretariat, Revision: Technical Note on the Accession Process 12, 
WT/ACC/10/Rev.3 (November 28, 2005).  
30 Williams, supra note 28, at 309.  
31 See Summary of the U.S.-China Bilateral WTO Agreement, Prepared by the White House National Economic 
Council, November 15, 1999, 16 Int’l Trade Rep. (BNA) 1888, 1890 (1999) [hereinafter NEC Summary]. 
32 World Trade Organization, Accession of the People’s Republic of China; Decision of 10 November 2001, para. 16, 
WT/L/432 (November 23, 2001) [hereinafter PRC Accession Protocol]. Note also paragraphs 245-50 of World Trade 
Organization, Report of the Working Party on the Accession of China, WT/ACC/CHN/49 (October 1, 2001) 
[hereinafter Working Party Report]. These paragraphs address the actions of WTO Members under the China-specific 
provision. Unlike certain other paragraphs of the Working Party Report, which contain commitments by China, these 
are not incorporated into China’s Accession Protocol. See PRC Accession Protocol, Part I, para. 1.2; Working Party 
Report, supra, para. 342.  
33 PRC Accession Protocol, para. 16.9. 
34 See the Appendix to this report for the full text of Part I, paragraph 16.  
35 PRC Accession Protocol, para. 16.1. 
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The Accession Protocol provision defines “market disruption” as occurring: 
whenever imports of an article, like or directly competitive with an article produced by the 
domestic industry, are increasing rapidly, either absolutely or relatively, so as to be a 
significant cause of material injury, or threat of material injury to the domestic industry.36 
In determining whether market disruption exists, the importing member must look at “objective 
factors,” including import volume, the effect of imports on prices for like or directly competitive 
articles, and the effect of the imports on the domestic industry producing such articles.37 As 
explained earlier, a “material injury” standard is considered less onerous than the “serious injury” 
standard contained in the Article XIX of the GATT and the Agreement on Safeguards. 
Under paragraph 16.1 of the Accession Protocol, a WTO member that finds that the described 
market disruption exists may request consultations with China aimed at resolving the situation, 
including whether the member should instead pursue applying a measure under the Agreement on 
Safeguards. Any such request must be immediately notified to the WTO Committee on 
Safeguards. 
Further, if in the course of the consultations, “it is agreed” that Chinese imports are causing or 
threatening to cause market disruption and that remedial action is “necessary,” China must take 
“such action as to prevent or remedy the market disruption.”38 If consultations do not lead to such 
an agreement within 60 days after China receives the request for consultation, the importing 
member “shall be free, in respect of such products, to withdraw concessions or otherwise to limit 
imports only to the extent necessary to prevent or remedy such market disruption.”39 
The safeguard may be applied only to goods of Chinese origin, a significant difference from the 
WTO Safeguards Agreement, which requires that a safeguard be imposed on the subject product 
regardless of its source. In addition, the China-specific safeguard does not contain the prohibition 
contained in Article 11.1(b) of the Safeguards Agreement against utilizing “voluntary export 
restraints, orderly marketing agreements or other similar measures on the export or the import 
side” as forms of safeguard measures, nor does it otherwise expressly limit the type of safeguard 
measure that may be applied. 
Although paragraph 16.6 of the Accession Protocol allows a safeguard to be imposed “only for 
such period of time as may be necessary to prevent or remedy the market disruption,”40 the 
Accession Protocol differs from the Safeguards Agreement in that it does not limit the duration of 
the measure. Paragraph 16.6 does state, however, that China “has the right” to suspend the 
application of “substantially equivalent” GATT concessions or obligations to the trade of the 
WTO member imposing the safeguard if the safeguard is still in effect after two years where the 
                                                
36 Id. para. 16.4. An absolute increase in imports would occur if imports increased in one year from, for example, 
50,000 to 100,000 units. A relative increase would occur when the import share of the domestic market increases 
notwithstanding a decrease in the total volume of imports. For example, if imports decline in one year from 20,000 to 
10,000 units, and domestic production declines from 100,000 to 30,000 units over the same period, the import share 
would increase from 20% of the domestic market to 33% of the market. See John H. Jackson, William J. Davey & 
Allan O. Sykes, Jr., LEGAL PROBLEMS OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS 612 (3d ed. 1995).  
37 PRC Accession Protocol, para. 16.4. 
38 Id. para. 16.2. 
39 Id. para. 16.3. 
40 Id. para. 16.6. 
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safeguard was taken as a result of a relative increase in imports, or after three years where the 
increase was absolute.41 
Similar to Article XIX of the GATT and the Safeguards Agreement, paragraph 16.7 of the China-
specific safeguard permits the importing WTO member to apply a provisional safeguard measure, 
after it makes a preliminary determination that market disruption exists, where there are “critical 
circumstances,” that is, where “delay would cause damage which it would be difficult to repair.”42 
A member may impose a provisional safeguard for no more than 200 days and, once it takes the 
action, it must immediately notify the Committee on Safeguards and request bilateral 
consultations with China. In addition, paragraph 16.8 provides a remedy for WTO members who 
have suffered significant trade diversion from China, that is, increased imports of Chinese 
product into their own territory, due to another member’s transitional safeguard measure.43 
At the time the U.S.-China bilateral WTO agreement was concluded, a White House summary 
addressed differences between the China-specific safeguard and the Agreement on Safeguards, 
stating that the former was “in addition to” the latter and that it “differs from traditional 
safeguards in that it permits China to address imports that are a significant cause of material 
injury through measures such as voluntary export restraints.”44 The statement said that the United 
States would in addition “be able to apply restraints unilaterally based on standards that are lower 
than those in the WTO Safeguards Agreement.”45 This nature of the standard and other features of 
the safeguard were described in congressional testimony of U.S. Trade Representative 
Barshefsky, who stated that the China-specific safeguard “applies to all industries, permits us to 
act based on lower showing of injury, and act specifically against imports from China.”46 
                                                
41 Id. While paragraph 16.6 of the Protocol incorporates the three-year delay for the suspension of concessions by 
exporting countries in the event of absolute increases of imports contained in Article 8.3 of the Safeguards Agreement, 
it does not include an additional condition analogous to that contained in Article 8.3, namely, that the safeguard in 
question be consistent with the Agreement. More so than the requirement that the safeguard result from an absolute 
increase in imports, the WTO-consistency requirement speaks to the overall action of the importing country imposing 
the safeguard and thus seemingly operates as a discipline on that action, arguably justifying the delay. See Nicely & 
Hardin, supra note 25, at 719-20, 738. Unlike Article 8 of the Safeguards Agreement, paragraph 16 of the Protocol 
does not place an express obligation on the WTO Member imposing a China-specific safeguard to maintain a 
substantially equivalent level of concessions, does not provide for bilateral negotiations on compensation, and perforce 
does not permit China to suspend concessions in the event that negotiations fail, provisions that would seemingly 
provide a basis for an earlier suspension of concessions on China’s part. For further discussion of Article 8.3 of the 
Safeguards Agreement, see supra note 25 and accompanying text. 
42 Id. para. 16.7. 
43 Id. para. 16.8. 
44 NEC Summary, supra note 31, at 1890. 
45 Id. 
46 Accession of China to the WTO; Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Ways and Means, 106th Cong. 49 
(2000)(Statement of Hon. Charlene Barshefsky, United States Trade Representative). 
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Section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974: 
Implementing the China-Specific Safeguard  
Section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 U.S.C. § 2451, which implements the China-specific 
safeguard in U.S. law, was enacted in P.L. 106-286 as one of a package of provisions addressing 
various issues arising from the accession of China to the World Trade Organization. The statute 
was enacted in October 2000, a little more than a year before China became a WTO member. 
Section 421 is described in legislative history as “a temporary, extraordinary trade remedy 
specifically designed to address concerns about potential increased import competition from 
China in the future.”47 Section 421, related provisions on trade diversion and regulatory action, as 
well as any regulations issued under these provisions, will expire 12 years after the date that 
China’s WTO Accession Protocol enters into force, or December 10, 2013.48 
Section 421 is modeled on section 406 of the Trade Act, 19 U.S.C. § 2436, which authorizes 
import relief for U.S. market disruption caused by products of “Communist countries.”49 Section 
406 in turn was adapted from section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 U.S.C. § 2251, the general 
U.S. safeguard statute, which authorizes the President to impose import restrictions or take other 
action if the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) finds that a surge in imports of a product 
regardless of origin is a “substantial cause of serious injury, or threat” to a domestic industry 
producing a like or directly competitive product.50 Among the differences between the two was an 
intent that the market disruption test in section 406, under which an import surge of a product 
must be “a significant cause of material injury or threat” to a domestic industry (a definition that 
is replicated in Section 421), would be met more “more easily” than the serious injury test 
contained in section 201.51  
                                                
47 H.Rept. 106-632 at 19. 
48 Trade Act of 1974 (TA), § 423(c), 19 U.S.C. § 2451b(c). 
49 As was the case with most countries covered by section 406 of the Trade Act of 1974, trade with China had been 
subject to the requirements of Title IV of the act, which prohibited the extension of most-favored-nation tariff treatment 
to Chinese goods unless China met certain freedom-of-emigration requirements or the requirements were annually 
waived by the President, and China had entered into a bilateral trade agreement with the United States. Along with 
enacting the China-specific safeguard, P.L. 106-286 authorized the President to remove China from the Title IV regime 
and thus enabled the United States to extend to China the most-favored-nation (MFN) tariff treatment that WTO 
Members must extend “immediately and unconditionally” to products of other Members under Article I:1 of the GATT 
1994. MFN treatment, under which a country accords any tariff or other trade benefit that it grants to the products of 
one country to the products of all other countries, is referred to in U.S. law as “normal trade relations” (NTR). See 19 
U.S.C. § 2432(a). 
50 See generally S.Rept. 93-1298, at 210-13. 
51 As stated in the Senate report on the Trade Act of 1974: “While section 201(b) would require that increased imports 
of the article be a ‘substantial cause’ of the requisite injury, or the threat thereof, to a domestic industry, section 406 
would require that the article is being, or is likely to be, imported in such increased quantities as to be a ‘significant 
cause’ of material injury, or the threat thereof. The term ‘significant cause’ is intended to be an easier standard to 
satisfy than that of ‘substantial cause’. On the other hand, ‘significant cause’ is meant to require a more direct causal 
relationship than between increased imports and injury than the standard used in the case of worker, firm and 
community adjustment assistance [also authorized in the bill], i.e., ‘contribute importantly.’ In addition, the term 
‘material injury’ in section 406 is intended to represent a lesser degree of injury than the term ‘serious injury’ standard 
employed in section 201.” Id. at 212. 
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Section 421 provides domestic legal authority for the President to respond to injurious import 
surges as follows: 
If a product of the People’s Republic of China is being imported into the United States in 
such increased quantities or under such conditions as to cause or threaten to cause market 
disruption to the domestic producers of a like or directly competitive product, the President 
shall, in accordance with the provisions of this section, proclaim increased duties or other 
import restrictions with respect to such product, to the extent and for such period as the 
President considers necessary to prevent or remedy the market disruption.52 
The statute incorporates the definition of “market disruption” contained in paragraph 16 of 
China’s WTO Accession Protocol, but adds that the term “significant cause,” a term that is not 
defined in paragraph 16, means a cause “which contributes significantly to the material injury of 
the domestic injury, but need not be equal to or greater than any other cause.”53 
The Section 421 process involves (1) initiation of the process by private petition or governmental 
action; (2) an investigation by the ITC of the import concerned; (3) an ITC vote on its market 
disruption determination and, if affirmative, recommendations to the President on a remedy; (4) 
submission of a report by the ITC to the President and to the United States Trade Representative 
(USTR); (5) if the determination is affirmative, negotiations between the USTR and China 
seeking agreement by China to take action to prevent or remedy the market disruption; (5) a 
public hearing on remedies and a USTR recommendation to the President regarding what 
responsive action, if any, should be taken; (6) assuming a bilateral agreement has not been 
reached, a presidential determination as to whether to take action and, if so, what the action will 
be; and (7) if a remedy will be applied, a presidential proclamation increasing tariffs or imposing 
the chosen import restriction.54 The entire process from petition or other invocation of the section 
to any proclamation of relief should be completed within 150 days.55 
Initiating the Section 421 Process 
 Section 421 investigation may be instituted in one of four ways: (1) by petition; (2) upon the 
President’s request; (3) upon resolution of either the House Ways and Means or Senate Finance 
Committee; or (4) on the ITC’s own motion.56 A petition may be filed by “an entity, including a 
trade association, firm, certified or recognized union, or group of workers, which is representative 
of an industry.”57 Unlike antidumping and countervailing duty investigations, there is no industry 
support requirement for investigations initiated by petition. 
                                                
52 TA, § 421(a), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(a).  
53 TA, § 421(c), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(c).  
54 Special procedures and deadlines exist for petitions alleging “critical circumstances,” see generally TA, § 421(i), 19 
U.S.C. § 2451(i), and for petitions alleging that a China-specific safeguard imposed by another WTO Member has 
caused a significant diversion of trade into the United States. TA, § 422, 19 U.S.C. § 2451a. These provisions are not 
discussed in this report. 
55 See H.Rept. 106-432, at 18. 
56 TA, § 421(b)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(a). 
57 TA, § 421(b)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(a); TA, § 201(a)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2251(a)(1). 
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U.S. International Trade Commission: Investigation, Determination, 
Recommendations 
Once an investigation is requested or otherwise initiated, the ITC must “promptly make an 
investigation” to determine whether the Chinese products at issue are causing the requisite market 
disruption.58 To determine whether “market disruption” exists, the ITC must look at “objective 
factors, including—(1) the volume of imports of the products which is the subject of the 
investigation; (2) the effect of imports of such products on prices in the United States for like or 
directly competitive article; and (3) the effect of imports of such product on the domestic industry 
producing like or directly competitive articles.”59 The presence or absence of any of these factors 
“is not necessarily dispositive of whether market disruption exists.”60  
 The ITC must make its determination and transmit it to the President generally no later than 60 
days after the date the petition is filed, the request or resolution is received, or the ITC motion is 
adopted.61 If the commissioners are evenly divided on their determination, then the determination 
agreed upon by either group may be considered by the President and the USTR as the ITC 
determination.62 
In the event of an affirmative determination, the ITC must propose “the amount of increase in, or 
imposition of, any duty or other import restrictions necessary to prevent or remedy the market 
disruption.”63 Only those commissions that agreed to the affirmative determination may vote on 
the proposed action to prevent or remedy market disruption.64 members who did not agree to an 
affirmative determination may, however, submit separate reviews regarding what action, if any, 
should be taken to prevent or remedy the market disruption that was found.65  
Within 20 days after its determination, the ITC must submit a report on the investigation to the 
President and the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR).66 The report must include (1) the 
commission’s determination and an explanation of its basis; (2) in the event of an affirmative 
determination, ITC recommendations for proposed remedies and the reasons for them; (3) any 
separate and dissenting views; (4) a description of the short-term and long-term effects that 
implementation of the recommended action is likely to have on the petitioning domestic industry, 
on other domestic industries, and on consumers; and (5) a description of the short-term and long-
term effects of not taking the recommended action on the petitioning domestic industry, its 
workers, and the communities where production facilities of the industry are located, and on other 
domestic industries.67 
                                                
58 TA, § 421(b)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(a). 
59 TA, § 421(d), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(d). 
60 Id.  
61 TA, § 421(e), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(e). 
62 Id. 
63 TA, § 421(f ), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(f). 
64 Id. 
65 Id. 
66 TA, § 421(g)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(g)(1). 
67 TA, § 421(g)(2), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(g)(2). 
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Role of the United States Trade Representative  
Within 20 days after receiving the ITC report, the USTR must publish a notice in the Federal 
Register of any safeguard measure that the USTR proposes should be taken under the Section 
421(a) and of an opportunity for the submission of public views and evidence on “the 
appropriateness of the proposed measure and whether it would be in the public interest.”68 Within 
55 days after receiving the ITC report, the USTR, taking into account the views and evidence 
submitted, must make a recommendation to the President “concerning what action, if any to take 
to prevent or remedy market disruption.”69 The statute does not require that the USTR’s 
recommendation or a summary of the recommendation be made public. 
In addition, the USTR is authorized “to enter into agreements for the People’s Republic of China 
to take such action as necessary to prevent or remedy market disruption” and “should seek to 
conclude” such agreements before the end of the 60-day consultation period provided for in 
paragraph 16 of China’s WTO Accession Protocol.70 Any such negotiations are to begin no later 
than five days after the USTR receives an affirmative ITC determination. In order to carry out any 
agreement that is concluded, the President is authorized to prescribe regulations governing the 
entry or withdrawal from warehouse of goods covered by the agreement.71  
If no agreement is reached with China, or if the President determines that a concluded agreement 
“is not preventing or remedying the market disruption at issue,” the President is to provide import 
relief “in accordance with” Section 421(a).72  
Presidential Decision Regarding Import Relief  
Within 15 days after receiving a recommendation by the USTR regarding what action, if any, the 
President should take, the President is to provide import relief for the industry concerned “unless 
the President determines that the provision of such relief is not in the national economic interest 
of the United States or, in extraordinary cases, that the taking of action ... would cause serious 
harm to the national security of the United States.”73 The President may make a negative 
economic interest determination “only if the President finds that the taking of such action would 
have an adverse impact on the United States economy clearly greater than the benefits of such 
action.”74 As noted earlier, Section 421(a) authorizes the President “to proclaim increased duties 
or other import restrictions” on the product concerned. The President’s decision, including his 
reasons for his decision and the scope and duration of any action taken, must be published in the 
                                                
68 TA, § 421(h)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(h)(1). 
69 TA, § 421(h)(2), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(h)(2). 
70 TA, § 421(j)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(j)(1). 
71 TA, § 423(b), 19 U.S.C. § 2451b(b). 
72 TA, § 421(j)(2), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(j)(2). 
73 TA, § 421(k), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(k). Legislative history states that Section 421 “establishes clear standards for the 
application of Presidential discretion in providing relief to injured industries and workers” and that “[i]f the ITC makes 
an affirmative determination on market disruption, there would be a presumption in favor of providing relief.” H.Rept. 
106-632, at 18. 
74 Id. 
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Federal Register.75 Import relief must take effect no later than 15 days after the President’s 
determination to provide such relief.76 
If import relief is provided, the President must, by regulation, provide for “the efficient and fair 
administration” of any restriction that he proclaims under the statute and for “effective 
monitoring of imports under [421(a)].”77 
Once a safeguard is in effect for six months, the President may request that the ITC provide a 
report on the probable effect on the relevant industry were the safeguard to be modified, reduced, 
or terminated.78 The ITC must transmit the report to the President within 60 days after the report 
is requested. The President may then “take such action to modify, reduce, or terminate relief that 
the President determines is necessary to continue to prevent or remedy the market disruption at 
issue.”79 
The statute also authorizes the President to extend the safeguard if certain conditions are met. 
Upon a presidential request or a “petition of the industry concerned” filed with the ITC between 
six to nine months before the safeguard is set to expire, the ITC must investigate whether a 
safeguard continues to be necessary to prevent or remedy the market disruption involved.80 The 
ITC must provide for a public hearing and transmit a report on its investigation and its 
determination within 60 days before the safeguard expires.81 If the ITC’s determination is 
affirmative, the President may extend the safeguard if he also determines that the action 
“continues to be necessary to prevent or remedy the market disruption.”82 
Prior Section 421 Investigations  
Six ITC investigations were conducted under Section 421 prior to the 2009 investigation of 
Chinese tire imports. These covered the following products: pedestal actuators; wire hangers; 
brake drums and rotors; ductile water works fittings; uncovered innerspring mattress units, and 
circular welded non-alloy steel pipe.83 The ITC made affirmative market disruption 
determinations with regard to imports of pedestal actuators, wire hangers, ductile water works 
fittings, and circular welded non-alloy steel pipe. Negative determinations were made with regard 
to imports of brake drums and rotors and innerspring mattress units. President George W. Bush 
declined to provide relief in each of the cases in which an affirmative determination was rendered 
on the ground that providing import relief was not in the U.S. economic interest.84 
                                                
75 TA, § 421(l)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(l)(1). 
76 TA, § 421(m), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(m). 
77 TA, § 423(a), 19 U.S.C. § 2451b(a). 
78 TA, § 421(n)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(n)(1). 
79 TA, § 421(n)(2), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(n)(2). 
80 TA, § 421(o)(1), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(o)(1). 
81 TA, § 421(o)(2)-(3), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(o)(2)-(3). 
82 TA, § 421(o)(4), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(o)(4). 
83 The ITC report on pedestal actuators (Pub. 3557) may be accessed at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/safeguards/
PUB3557.pdf. ITC reports issued in the other referenced investigations may be accessed at http://www.usitc.gov/
trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/investigations/completed/index.htm. 
84 Presidential Determination on Circular Welded Non-Alloy Steel Pipe from the People’s Republic of China, 71 Fed. 
Reg. 871 (January 5, 2006); Presidential Determination on Certain Ductile Iron Waterworks Fittings from the People’s 
Republic of China, 69 Fed. Reg. 10597 (March 8, 2004); Presidential Determination on Wire Hanger Imports from the 
(continued...) 
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Judicial Responses 
The President’s decision not to provide relief under Section 421 has been held to be a 
discretionary act and thus not reviewable by a court. In Motion Systems Corp. v. Bush, an en banc 
decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) affirming a decision of the 
U.S. Court of International Trade,85 the industry plaintiff argued that the President had acted 
outside the scope of his statutory authority following a recommendation by the ITC that import 
quotas were required to remedy the market disruption that had been found to adversely affect the 
domestic pedestal actuator industry, the first industry to have filed a petition under Section 421. 
The plaintiff also argued that the United States Trade Representative, inter alia, committed 
procedural violations involving the public hearing that must be held following the ITC’s 
determination and recommendation, which was focused on the ITC’s recommendations regarding 
import relief.86 
Noting that there exists “no explicit statutory cause of relief granting a petitioner who is denied 
import relief under Section 421 the right to sue the President and the Trade Representative in the 
Court of International Trade,” the CAFC stated that there were only two options left to the 
plaintiff to seek relief: (1) judicial review provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 
5 U.S.C. § 701-706, or (2) “some form of nonstatutory review.”87 The plaintiff had conceded that 
it could not proceed under the APA given the Supreme Court’s 2002 decision in Franklin v. 
Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788 (1992), that the President is not an “agency” for purposes of APA 
provisions providing a right of judicial review for those adversely affected by “agency action.”88 
The court described the plaintiff’s remaining source of relief (i.e., nonstatutory review) as 
reducing itself to a question whether plaintiff could “challenge the President’s discretionary 
actions under 19 U.S.C. § 2451 as outside the scope of authority of delegated to him by 
Congress.”89 
The court relied on the Supreme Court’s decision in Dalton v. Specter, 511 U.S. 462 (1994), 
which it viewed as acknowledging that a suit against the President could proceed where the 
presidential action alleged to exceed the scope of delegated statutory authority was claimed to 
constitute a constitutional violation (e.g., a violation of the separation-of-powers doctrine), but 
holding that, where there is no constitutional issue and assuming that a statutory basis for suit 
exists, judicial review of presidential action is not available where a statute commits a decision to 
the President’s discretion.90 The court concluded that Section 421, in giving the President “broad 
discretion” to determine that providing relief is “not in the national economic interest” and that 
taking action would cause “serious harm” to U.S. national security, “accords the President the 
same discretion found to remove Presidential action from judicial review” in Dalton as well as in 
other Supreme Court cases.91 The court further held that the acts of the USTR under Section 421 
                                                             
(...continued) 
People’s Republic of China, 68 Fed. Reg. 23019 (April 29, 2003); Presidential Determination on Pedestal Actuator 
Imports from the People’s Republic of China, 68 Fed. Reg. 3157 (January 22, 2003).  
85 Motion Systems Corp. v. Bush, 437 F.3d 1356 (2006), cert. denied, 127 S.Ct. 69 (2006). 
86 See Motion Systems Corp. v. Bush, 342 F.Supp.2d 1247, 1263-66 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2004). 
87 Motion Systems, 437 F.3d at 1359. 
88 Id. 
89 Id. 
90 Id. at 1359-60. 
91 Id. at 1360-62. 
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were not final actions for purposes of the APA, but only recommendations to the President, and 
thus not subject to judicial review.92 
Section 421 Investigation: Chinese Passenger Vehicle 
and Light Truck Tires from China (2009) 
On April 20, 2009, the United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied 
Industrial and Service Workers International Union filed a petition with the U.S. International 
Trade Commission requesting that it institute a Section 421 investigation involving certain 
passenger vehicle and light truck tires from China.93 As Section 421 permits an investigation to be 
requested by a union or group of workers, the absence of an industry petitioner does not foreclose 
the initiation of an investigation under the statute. The ITC instituted the investigation (TA-421-7) 
on April 24, 2009. 
As a result of its investigation, the ITC in June 2009 voted 4-2 that imports of the subject tires 
were causing market disruption to domestic producers and recommended that the President 
impose an addition duty on the imported tires for three years, beginning with an additional 55% 
ad valorem duty in the first year, 45% ad valorem in the second year, and 35% ad valorem in the 
third year. The ITC also recommended expedited consideration of trade adjustment assistance if 
applications for such assistance were filed by affected firms or workers. The agency submitted its 
report to the President and the U.S. Trade Representative on July 9, 2009.94 
The President subsequently decided to provide import relief regarding the subject tires and on 
September 11, 2009, proclaimed increased tariffs for three years, albeit at lower rates than those 
recommended by the ITC, effective September 26, 2009.95 The President also directed the 
Secretaries of Labor and Commerce to expedite applications for trade adjustment assistance and 
to provide other available economic assistance to affected workers, firms, and communities. 
Products Covered  
The products subject to the ITC investigation and the domestic like product were determined to 
be rubber tires used on passenger vehicles (with the exception of racing cars) and on-the-highway 
light trucks, vans, and sport utility vehicles.96 The ITC also found that various sizes and types of 
domestic passenger vehicle and light truck tires, including tires produced for the replacement and 
original equipment manufacturer [OEM] markets are “part of a continuum of products, with no 
clear dividing line between them.”97 
                                                
92 Id. at 1362. 
93 Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires from China, 74 Fed. Reg. 19593 (April 29, 2009). 
94 U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires 13 (July 2009)(Pub. 4085) [hereinafter 
ITC China Tires Report], at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/safeguards/pub4085.pdf. 
95 Proclamation No. 8414, 74 Fed. Reg. 47861 (September 17, 2009). 
96 ITC China Tires Report, supra note 94, at I-3, 9 (footnote omitted). 
97 Id. at 7, 9. 
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Rapidly Increasing Imports 
The ITC determined that the period of investigation for the Section 421 proceeding was 2004-
2008. It found that the imports of the subject tires were increasing rapidly in both relative and 
absolute terms during this period, summarizing its conclusions as follows: 
In absolute terms, imports of the subject tires from China increased throughout the period of 
investigation and were the highest, in terms of both quantity and value, in 2008, at the end of 
the period. The quantity of subject imports rose by 215.5 percent between 2004 and 2008, by 
53.7 percent between 2006 and 2007, and by 10.8 percent between 2007 and 2008. The value 
of subject imports rose even more rapidly, increasing by 294.5 percent between 2004 and 
2008, by 60.2 percent between 2006 and 2007, and by 19.8 percent between 2007 and 2008. 
Both the ratio of subject imports to U.S. production and the ration of subject imports to U.S. 
apparent consumption rose throughout the period examined, and both ratios were at their 
highest levels of the period in 2008. The ratio of subject imports to U.S. production increased 
by 22.0 percentage points between 2004 and 2008, with the two largest year-to-year 
increases occurring at the end of the period in 2007 and 2008. The ratio of subject imports to 
U.S. apparent consumption increased by 12.0 percentage points during the period examined, 
with the two largest year-to-year increases also occurring at the end of the period in 2007 and 
2008. 
We do not agree with respondents that the increases in subject imports from China during the 
period examined were “gradual” or “small,” or that the subject imports had “abated” by the 
end of the period. Rather, we find that the subject imports increased, both absolutely and 
relatively, throughout the period by significant amounts in each year and, as stated above, 
were at their highest levels at the end of the period in 2008. Whether viewed in absolute or 
relative terms, and whether viewed in terms of the increase from 2007 to 2008 alone or the 
increase in the last two full years (or even the last three years), the increase were large, rapid, 
and continuing at the end of the period—and from an increasingly large base.98 
Material Injury to a Domestic Industry  
The domestic injury producing passenger vehicle and light truck tires was found by the ITC to 
consist of ten U.S. producers “ranging from large multinational companies with global production 
and sales and varying levels of vertical integration to smaller producers with only domestic 
operations.”99 It found that in 2008, “U.S. producers manufactured such tires in 28 plants, with 
most of these plants producing the tires with dedicated equipment, machinery, and workers.”100 It 
further found that during the same period “approximately 82 percent of the domestic shipment of 
U.S. producers went to the replacement market, and the remaining shipments went to original 
equipment (new cars and like truck) manufacturers (OEMs).”101 These domestic producers were 
found to “collectively manufacture a full range of styles and sizes of passenger vehicle and light 
truck tires, which are sold in various price ranges.”102 
                                                
98 Id. at 11-12 (footnotes omitted). 
99 Id. at 15. 
100 Id. (footnote omitted). 
101 Id. (footnote omitted). 
102 Id.  
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The ITC determined that the domestic industry was materially injured, having found that 
“[v]irtually all industry indicators declined during the period examined”: 
U.S. producers’ capacity, production, shipments, number of U.S. PRWs [production and 
related workers] and hours worked, productivity, and financial performance were all at their 
lowest levels of the period in 2008. U.S. producers’ capacity utilization, which was at its 
lowers in 2006, nearly equaled that level in 2008. Four plants were closed during the period 
examined, and in light of the current conditions, U.S. producers have announced plans to 
close three more plants in 2009. Only two indicators, R&D expenses and capital 
expenditures, appear to have increased toward the end of the period. Virtually all the industry 
indicators declined during the period.103 
Significant Cause of Material Injury or Threat 
In determining whether the rapidly increasing tire imports were a significant cause of material 
injury, the ITC looked to the three statutory factors relating to a causation analysis: (1) the 
volume of subject imports, (2) the effect of the subject imports on prices, and (3) the effect of 
subject imports on the domestic industry. The ITC referenced its earlier finding of a large and 
rapid increase in tire imports, an increase that it found “is also reflected in those imports’ large 
and growing share of the U.S. market.”104 Regarding the effect of the imports on prices of U.S. 
tires, the ITC stated that the “close substitutability of the domestic product and the subject 
imports combined with pervasive underselling by significant and growing margins enhanced the 
ability of subject imports to displace domestically produced tires in the U.S. market.”105 
The ITC then found that “there is a direct and significant connection between the rapidly 
increasing imports of subject tires from China and the domestic tire industry’s deteriorating 
financial performance and declining capacity, production, shipments, and employment,” with the 
“large and rapidly increasing volumes of subject tires from China having greatly displaced U.S. 
producers” in the lower-priced end of the U.S. market, the area in which Chinese producers were 
found to primarily compete.106 The ITC also found that “significant and continuous” underselling 
by “large and rapidly increasing volume” of Chinese tires during the period of investigation 
“eroded the domestic industry’s market share, leading to a substantial reduction since 2004 in 
domestic, capacity, production, shipments, and employment during the period examined.”107 The 
ITC further found that “[a]s imports of low-priced Chinese tires increased, U.S. producers were 
forced to reduce capacity so as to focus on the parts of their business in which they could expect 
to remain profitable despite the impact of subject imports from China.”108 As a result, the ITC 
found that the “substantial reduction in domestic capacity and the closures of U.S. plants during 
the period examined were largely in reaction to the significant and increasing volume of subject 
imports from China, and were not, as respondents argue, part of a strategy by domestic tire 
producers to voluntarily abandon the low-priced ‘value’ segment of the U.S. market.”109 
                                                
103 Id. at 18. 
104 Id. at 22. 
105 Id. at 23. 
106 Id. at 24. 
107 Id. 
108 Id. 
109 Id. While the ITC had considered other possible causes of material injury cited by the respondents in the 
investigation (e.g., the current recession, the contraction in the OEM tire market), it noted that Section 421 did not 
(continued...) 
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Chinese Tire Imports: Section 421 Safeguards and the World Trade Organization (WTO) 
 
Proposed Remedy 
Petitioners had recommended that the ITC propose a three-year quota on Chinese tires in the 
amount of 21 million in the first year, with increases of 5% in each subsequent year due to its 
concern that “Chinese government policies might undermine the effect of a duty.”110 Respondents 
argued that no remedy was appropriate for several reasons including that “any restriction would 
contravene the domestic industry’s strategy of moving away from the economy segment of the 
market” and that “a remedy would only result in the U.S. market being supplied by third 
countries.”111 
Instead, the ITC proposed a three-year duty increase, declining from 55% ad valorem in the first 
year, to 45% ad valorem in the second year, and 35% ad valorem in the final year. The ITC 
explained its recommendation as follows: 
This increase in the tariff would significantly improve the competitive position of the 
domestic industry, increasing domestic production, shipments, and employment and 
restoring the domestic industry to at least a modest level of profitability. The increase should 
accomplish this by reducing the quantity of subject imports and raising their price in the U.S. 
market. In proposing this remedy, we are mindful of record evidence that domestic producers 
have already significantly reduced their capacity to produce for the lower-priced end market 
of the market in which imports from China compete most extensively. Nevertheless, there is 
substantial competition between U.S.-produced tires and imports from China in all segments 
of the market, and the imposition of higher duties will increase prices and permit U.S. 
producers to utilize their available capacity to increase production, sales, and employment. 
Additional revenue from increased process and sales will improve the profitability. 
We have recommended that the increased duties be phased down in annual 10 
percentage-point increments over the three-year remedy period. This recommendation 
recognizes that the remedy is only temporary in nature and is designed to give the domestic 
industry and its workers breathing space in which to adjust to import competition, which will 
be encouraged by the phasing down of the duties. In addition, reducing the size of the duty 
each year is likely to limit the extent to which non-subject suppliers may increase their 
exports to the United States in response to the relief on imports from China. We also expect 
the level of tariff protection that is necessary to offset market disruption to decrease as new 
investments and other adjustments are implemented. The action we are recommending is not 
intended to address the effects of the current recession or to restore the domestic industry to a 
level of shipments and profitability that might prevail in a healthier national economy, but 
only to address the market disruption caused by the subject tires. We expect this remedy to 
have little or no effect on the U.S. automobile and light truck industry because tires account 
for a very small part of the cost of manufacturing a car or light truck. 
We recommend that the remedy remain in place for a three-year period because we 
believe that a remedy of such duration is needed to give firms and workers in the industry the 
time to identify and implement needed adjustments in their questionnaire responses. Other 
information in the record indicates that domestic producers have put plantand equipment 
upgrades on hold pending more favorable market opportunities. Moreover, we anticipate that 
                                                             
(...continued) 
require it to weigh causes but only to find that rapidly increasing subject imports “in and of themselves” constitute a 
significant cause of serious injury or threat to the domestic industry. Id. at 29. 
110 Id. at 34. 
111 Id. at 35 (footnote omitted). 
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the relief may encourage certain domestic producers to reconsidered planned plant 
closures.112 
The two dissenting commissioners suggested that a “trade-restricting remedy” would not provide 
relief to the domestic industry, stating that “[i]n an industry where domestic producers have 
already taken positive steps to adjust to global competition, we find that not only will trade 
restrictions not provide effective relief to the tire industry workers but will risk disrupting the 
U.S. market by creating an adverse impact on U.S. producers.”113 Noting the worker displacement 
that occurred during the period of investigation and the adverse effect on workers of announced 
plant closings, the commissioners “respectfully urge[d] the President to focus on providing 
economic adjustment assistance to displaced tire workers through continued use of Trade 
Adjustment Assistance or other programs that might be available to suppliers of the battered U.S. 
automobile industry.”114 If a trade measure were to be chosen, they suggested that it be a tariff-
rate quota with a quota of 41.5 million tires and an over quota rate of 55% in the first year, 45% 
in the second year, and 35% in the third year. The commissioners stated that this approach 
“avoids a large increase in the base cost of the tires purchased by the poorest customers, and 
provides greater stability in pricing in the U.S. market.”115 
President’s Decision  
As noted earlier, the President decided to utilize the overall remedy proposed by the ITC, that is, 
increased tariffs for three years to decline annually, but decided to apply lower annual tariff rates 
than those recommended by the agency. The President proclaimed the increased tariffs on 
September 9, 2009, directing that they enter into effect on September 26, 2009.116 Under the 
President’s proclamation, Chinese passenger and light truck tires are subject to additional tariffs 
of 35% ad valorem above the current most-favored-nation (MFN) rate for the first year, 30% ad 
valorem above this rate for the second year, and 25% ad valorem above this rate for the third 
year.117 The President also followed recommendations made by commissioners for the provision 
of economic assistance by directing the Secretary of Commerce and the Secretary of Labor to 
expedite the consideration of any applications for trade adjustment assistance “from domestic 
passenger vehicle and light truck producers, their workers, or communities and to provide such 
other requested assistance or relief as they deem appropriate, consistent with their statutory 
mandates.”118 After the tariffs were in effect for six months (i.e., after March 25, 2010), the 
President was authorized to request the ITC to report on “the probable effect” of modifying, 
reducing, or terminating them,119 and, after receiving the report, to take any of these three 
actions.120 The President did not exercise these authorities. 
                                                
112 Id. at 35-36 (footnotes omitted).  
113 Id. at 46. 
114 Id.  
115 Id. 
116 Proclamation No. 8414, 74 Fed. Reg. 47861 (September 17, 2009). 
117 Id. para. 5. The imported tires covered by the safeguard are classified in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the 
United States (HTSUS) under subheadings 4011.10.10, 4011.10.50, 4011.20.10, and 4011.20.50. Id. para. 4. 
118 Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires from the People’s Republic of China, Presidential 
Determination No. 2009-28, Memorandum for the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of Labor, the United States 
Trade Representative, 74 Fed. Reg. 47433 (September 16, 2009).  
119 TA, § 421(n), 19 U.S.C. § 2451(n). 
120 Id. 
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China’s WTO Complaint: United States—Measures 
Affecting Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and 
Light Truck Tyres from China (WT/DS399) 
On September 14, 2009, China requested consultations with the United States under the WTO 
Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (Dispute 
Settlement Understanding) over the additional tariffs imposed on Chinese tire imports by the 
President under Section 421 “and any other measures the US may announce to implement” the 
President’s decision.121 
Consultations not having resolved the issue, China requested a dispute settlement panel on 
December 21, 2009.122 Although the United States blocked this initial request, China made a 
second request at the WTO Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) meeting of January 19, 2010, and, as 
provided in WTO dispute settlement rules, the DSB established a panel that day.123  
Absent an agreement on panelists by the disputing parties within 20 days of the panel’s 
establishment, China requested the WTO Director-General to appoint the panelists in the case. 
Panelists were appointed on March 12, 2010.124 
China’s Complaint 
China claimed in its panel request that the higher tariffs, “not having been justified as emergency 
action under relevant WTO rules, are inconsistent with Article I:1 of the GATT 1994 because the 
US does not accord the same treatment it grants to passenger and light truck tires originating in 
other countries to the like products originating in China, and Article II of the GATT 1994, since 
these higher tariffs consist of unjustified modifications of US concessions thereunder.”125 Article 
                                                
 121 Request for Consultations by China, United States—Measures Affecting Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and 
Light Truck Tyres from China, at 1, WT/DS399/1 (September 16, 2009). The United States Trade Representative filed a 
Federal Register notice on October 2, 2009, soliciting public comment on China’s complaint. Comments were due by 
October 30, 2009. WTO Dispute Settlement Proceeding Regarding United States—Certain Measures Affecting Imports 
of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires from China, 74 Fed. Reg. 50997 (October 2, 2009). 
After the U.S. safeguard was announced, China also reportedly instituted antidumping and anti-subsidy investigations 
involving U.S. poultry imports and an antidumping investigation involving U.S. auto products. China Responds to 
Tires Safeguard with New AD Investigations, INSIDE U.S. TRADE, September 18, 2009, at 19; MOFCOM Seen 
Fostering Trade Cases as Reaction to Obama Tire Safeguards, INSIDE U.S. TRADE, September 25, 2009, at 22; China 
Launches Antidumping, Anti-Subsidy Investigation into Imports of U.S. Poultry, 16 Int’l Trade Rep. (BNA) 1323 
(October 1, 2009).  
122 WTO News Item, DSB establishes panel to examine China’s export restrictions on raw materials (December 21, 
2009), at http://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news09_e/dsb_21dec09_e.htm. 
123 WTO News Item, DSB sets up panel on US—tyres (China) and Philippines—taxes on spirits, adopts reports on 
China—publications and AV products (January 19, 2010), at http://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news10_e/
dsb_19jan10_e.htm. 
124 Note by the Secretariat, Constitution of the Panel Established at the Request of China, United States—Measures 
Affecting Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tyres from China, WT/DS399/3 (March 16, 2010); 
WTO Chief Appoints Three Panelists to Rule on China Complaint Against U.S. Tire Duties, Daily Rep. for Executives 
(BNA), March 18, 2010, at A-2. 
 125 Request for the Establishment of a Panel by China, United States—Measures Affecting Imports of Certain 
Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tyres from China, at 2, WT/DS399/2 (December 11, 2009)[hereinafter China Tires 
(continued...) 
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I:1, the general most-favored-nation obligation of the GATT, provides, in pertinent part, that, 
where customs duties are concerned, any advantage that a WTO member grants to any product 
originating in one country must be accorded “immediately and unconditionally” to the like 
product originating in all other WTO members. As discussed above, the China-specific safeguard 
permits a safeguard to be applied only to Chinese products. Article II of the GATT 1994 prohibits 
WTO members from imposing tariffs on products imported from other WTO members in excess 
of negotiated rates. 
China further maintained that the United States “has not even attempted to justify these 
restrictions as a safeguard action pursuant to GATT Article XIX and the Agreement on 
Safeguards,” justifying them only under the China-specific safeguard contained in paragraph 16 
of China’s Accession Protocol.126 In such case, China challenges both the statutory basis of the 
safeguard as well as its specific application in the case of Chinese tires as inconsistent with the 
Protocol provision. 
First, China argued that the statutory basis of the safeguard is inconsistent “on its face” with the 
Protocol in that the Section 421 “impermissibly weakens the standard of ‘significant cause’ by 
imposing a definition of the term that contradicts Article 16.4 of the Protocol of Accession.”127 
Second, China claimed that imposition of the tire tariffs is inconsistent with the following 
elements of the China-specific safeguard: (1) “Articles 16.1 and 16.4, because imports from 
China in this case were not occurring ‘in such increased quantities’ and were not ‘increasing 
rapidly,’ and instead had begun to decline in response to changing US demand conditions”; (2) 
“Articles 16.1 and 16.4, because imports from China were not a ‘significant cause’ of material 
injury or threat of material injury, and are being improperly blamed by the US for the condition of 
the industry that, in fact, reflected other factors in the market”; (3) “Articles 16.3, because the 
restrictions are not necessary, and are being imposed beyond the ‘extent necessary to prevent or 
remedy’ any alleged market disruption, and should not have been set at the high tariff levels being 
imposed”; and (4) “Article 16.6, because the restrictions in this case are being imposed for a 
period of time longer than ‘necessary to prevent or remedy’ any alleged market disruption, and 
need not have been imposed for three years.”128 
By beginning its legal argument with a reference to Article I:1 of the GATT, China highlighted an 
element of the China-specific safeguard provision that distinguishes it from safeguards permitted 
under GATT Article XIX and the WTO Safeguards Agreement, namely, the absence of a 
requirement that the safeguard be applied to all imports of the product involved regardless of their 
                                                             
(...continued) 
Panel Request]. 
126 Id. (italics in original). 
127 Id. A facial or “as such” challenge in a WTO dispute proceeding seeks to prevent the defending Member from 
acting under the cited law or regulation in the future. The WTO Appellate Body has described “as such” claims as 
follows: “By definition, an ‘as such’ claim challenges laws, regulations, or other instruments of a Member that have 
general and prospective application, asserting that a Member’s conduct—not only in a particular instance that has 
occurred, but in future situation as well—will necessarily be inconsistent with that Member’s WTO obligations. In 
essence, complaining parties bringing ‘as such’ challenges seek to prevent Members ex ante from engaging in certain 
conduct. The implications of such challenges are obviously more far-reaching than ‘as applied’ claims.” Appellate 
Body Report, United States—Sunset Review of Anti-Dumping Measures on Oil Country Tubular Goods from 
Argentina, para. 172, WT/DS268/AB/R (November 29, 2004). 
128 China Tires Panel Request, supra note 125, at 2. 
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source. The China-specific provision was agreed to, however, by China and all other WTO 
members and thus the fact that it does not require global application does not in itself appear to 
provide a legal basis for complaint. The reference to GATT Article II emphasized the fundamental 
nature of any exception or permitted deviation from GATT and WTO obligations, in this case, 
that GATT and WTO safeguards provisions permit WTO members temporarily to “escape” their 
Article II obligation not to apply additional tariffs or tariffs surcharges to an item subject to a 
negotiated tariff rate (a so-called “bound” item), provided the requirements for imposing a 
safeguard on the item are met.129 While China’s panel request may have implicated issues 
involving the relationship of the China-specific safeguard to GATT Article XIX and the 
Safeguards Agreement, the major focus of the request appeared to be the consistency of the U.S. 
definition of “significant cause” with paragraph 16 of China’s Accession Protocol and the extent 
to which the United States followed paragraph 16 requirements in applying the safeguard to the 
tires that were the subject of the ITC investigation. 
WTO Panel Report 
In a report issued December 13, 2010, the WTO panel rejected all of China’s claims.130 Although 
other WTO members also invoked the China-specific safeguard,131 China had not challenged 
action taken by a WTO member under this provision before initiating its dispute with the United 
States and thus this was the first panel to review such a special safeguard action against Chinese 
goods. 132 The WTO Dispute Settlement Understanding gives the disputing parties 60 days to 
                                                
129 GATT Article II claims have been made in other trade remedy contexts. For example, in a compliance panel 
proceeding, Japan argued and the WTO panel and Appellate Body agreed that, in maintaining certain antidumping 
duties on imported products in violation of the Antidumping Agreement after the established compliance period ended, 
the United States was collecting duties in excess of bound duty rates in violation of GATT Article II:1(a) and Article 
II:1(b). GATT Article II:1(b) provides a “safe harbor” with respect to the Article II:1 obligation not to exceed bound 
rates for antidumping duties applied consistently with GATT Article VI, the GATT antidumping article, as 
implemented by the Antidumping Agreement. See Request for the Establishment of a Panel by Japan, United States—
Measures Relating to Zeroing in Sunset Reviews; Recourse to Article 21.5 of the DSU by Japan, at 4, WT/DS322/27 
(April 8, 2008); Panel Report, United States—Measures Relating to Zeroing in Sunset Reviews; Recourse to Article 
21.5 of the DSU by Japan, paras. 7.191-7.208, WT/DS322/RW (April 24, 2009); Appellate Body Report, United 
States—Measures Relating to Zeroing in Sunset Reviews; Recourse to Article 21.5 of the DSU by Japan, paras. 198-212 
WT/DS322/AB/RW (August 18, 2009).  
130 Panel Report, United States—Measures Affecting Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tyres from 
China, WT/DS399/R (December 13, 2010). U.S. submissions to the WTO panel are available at http://www.ustr.gov/
trade-topics/enforcement/dispute-settlement-proceedings/wto-dispute-settlement/pending-wto-disputes.  
131 See, e.g., WTO documents G/SG/N/16/IND/4/Suppl. 3 (July 8, 2009)(notification by India of two-year definitive 
safeguard measures on aluminum flat rolled products and aluminum foil effective June 19, 2009); 
G/SG/N/16/PER/1/Supp.1/Rev.1 (May 2, 2005)(notification by Peru that it would not impose definitive safeguard 
measure on imports of textiles and clothing following expiration of provisional safeguard measure on these products). 
 The U.S. notification of its consultation request involving the definitive safeguard on Chinese tires is contained in 
WTO document G/SG/N/16/USA/5 (June 26, 2009), as corrected, G/SG/N/16/USA/5/Corr.1. Note also that India 
notified the WTO in early June 2009 under paragraph 16 that it had initiated a safeguard investigation on passenger car 
tires on May 18, 2009; the investigation was later terminated, however, at the request of the applicants. Notification of 
Application of Transitional Product-Specific Safeguard Measure Pursuant to Section 16.7 of Part I of the Protocol on 
the Accession of the People’s Republic of China, G/SG/N/16/IND/7 (June 4, 2009), and Supplement, 
G/SG/N/16/IND/7/Suppl.1 (December 7, 2009).  
Paragraph 16 notifications may be accessed at WTO Documents Online, at http://docsonline.wto.org/gen_search.asp?
searchmode=simple, by entering the prefix “G/SG/N/16” into the box for “Document symbol.”  
132 China has also challenged various U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty investigations and orders involving 
Chinese products as inconsistent with Part I, paragraph 15 of its Accession Protocol, as well as provisions of the 
GATT, the WTO Agreement on Antidumping, and the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM). 
(continued...) 
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appeal the report on legal issues, an action that China reportedly intends to take.133 The parties 
have since asked the WTO Dispute Settlement Body to extend the appeal period to May 24, 
2011.134 
In the event a panel report is appealed, the WTO Appellate Body takes from 60 to 90 days to 
issue its report, which must be unconditionally accepted by the parties to the dispute. The 
Appellate Body report and the panel report, subject to any modifications in the appellate report, 
will then be scheduled for adoption by the WTO Dispute Settlement Body. As the reverse 
consensus rule will apply, the reports will be adopted unless all WTO members present at the 
DSB meeting vote not to do so.135 
                                                             
(...continued) 
Request for the Establishment of a Panel by China, United States—Definitive Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties 
on Certain Products from China, WT/DS379/2 (December 12, 2008). Paragraph 15 of the Protocol addresses 
determinations of price comparability by WTO Members in antidumping and countervailing duty investigations 
involving imports of Chinese goods. China alleged that the United States acted inconsistently with paragraph 15 with 
regard to aspects of its use of a benchmark outside of China for the purpose of determining the existence and amount of 
a subsidy benefit to Chinese firms in its countervailing duty investigations. Id. at 5. China also alleged, among other 
things, that the United States violated obligations under the SCM Agreement in determining that certain Chinese state-
owned enterprises were “public bodies” and thus capable of conferring subsidies for purposes of the Agreement, id. at 
4, and that the United States violated the SCM Agreement, the Antidumping Agreement, and the GATT most-favored-
nation article in simultaneously imposing antidumping and countervailing duties on the same Chinese goods, or, in 
other words, that it improperly availed itself of a “double remedy.” Id. at 5-6. In a report issued on October 22, 2010, 
the panel rejected the bulk of China’s arguments. Panel Report, United States—Definitive Anti-Dumping and 
Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China, WT/DS379/2 (October 22, 2010). China appealed the panel 
report in early December 2010. Notice of an Appeal by China, United States—Definitive Anti-Dumping and 
Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China, WT/DS379/6 (December 6, 2010). 
133 U.S. Welcomes Win Over China in Dispute on Tire Safeguards at WTO; China to Appeal, 27 Int’l Trade Rep. 
(BNA) 1927 (December 16, 2010). 
134 Joint Request by China and the United States for a Decision by the DSB, United States—Measures Affecting 
Imports of Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tyres from China, WT/DS399/5 (January 28, 2011). The parties 
stated in their request that such a decision “would provide greater flexibility in scheduling any possible appeal.” Given 
this language, the request may have been made to accommodate the current and probable future workload of the WTO 
Appellate Body. See U.S. China Agree to Suspend Appeals Proceedings in WTO Tire Safeguard Dispute, Int’l Trade 
Daily (BNA), January 31, 2011. 
135 For further discussion of the WTO dispute settlement process, see CRS Report RS20088, Dispute Settlement in the 
World Trade Organization (WTO): An Overview, by Jeanne J. Grimmett, and the WTO website at http://www.wto.org/
english/thewto_e/whatis_e/tif_e/disp1_e.htm. 
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Appendix.  WTO China-Specific Safeguard 
Protocol on the Accession of the People’s Republic of China 
(Part I, General Provisions) 
16.  Transitional Product-Specific Safeguard Mechanism 
1.  In cases where products of Chinese origin are being imported into the territory of 
any WTO member in such increased quantities or under such conditions as to 
cause or threaten to cause market disruption to the domestic producers of like or 
directly competitive products, the WTO member so affected may request 
consultations with China with a view to seeking a mutually satisfactory solution, 
including whether the affected WTO member should pursue application of a 
measure under the Agreement on Safeguards. Any such request shall be notified 
immediately to the Committee on Safeguards. 
2.  If, in the course of these bilateral consultations, it is agreed that imports of 
Chinese origin are such a cause and that action is necessary, China shall take 
such action as to prevent or remedy the market disruption. Any such action shall 
be notified immediately to the Committee on Safeguards. 
3.  If consultations do not lead to an agreement between China and the WTO 
Member concerned within 60 days of the receipt of a request for consultations, 
the WTO member affected shall be free, in respect of such products, to withdraw 
concessions or otherwise to limit imports only to the extent necessary to prevent 
or remedy such market disruption. Any such action shall be notified immediately 
to the Committee on Safeguards. 
4.  Market disruption shall exist whenever imports of an article, like or directly 
competitive with an article produced by the domestic industry, are increasing 
rapidly, either absolutely or relatively, so as to be a significant cause of material 
injury, or threat of material injury to the domestic industry. In determining if 
market disruption exists, the affected WTO member shall consider objective 
factors, including the volume of imports, the effect of imports on prices for like 
or directly competitive articles, and the effect of such imports on the domestic 
industry producing like or directly competitive products. 
5.  Prior to application of a measure pursuant to paragraph 3, the WTO member 
taking such action shall provide reasonable public notice to all interested parties 
and provide adequate opportunity for importers, exporters and other interested 
parties to submit their views and evidence on the appropriateness of the proposed 
measure and whether it would be in the public interest. The WTO member shall 
provide written notice of the decision to apply a measure, including the reasons 
for such measure and its scope and duration. 
6.  A WTO member shall apply a measure pursuant to this Section only for such 
period of time as may be necessary to prevent or remedy the market disruption. If 
a measure is taken as a result of a relative increase in the level of imports, China 
has the right to suspend the application of substantially equivalent concessions or 
obligations under the GATT 1994 to the trade of the WTO member applying the 
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measure, if such measure remains in effect more than two years. However, if a 
measure is taken as a result of an absolute increase in imports, China has a right 
to suspend the application of substantially equivalent concessions or obligations 
under the GATT 1994 to the trade of the WTO member applying the measure, if 
such measure remains in effect more than three years. Any such action by China 
shall be notified immediately to the Committee on Safeguards. 
7.  In critical circumstances, where delay would cause damage which it would be 
difficult to repair, the WTO member so affected may take a provisional safeguard 
measure pursuant to a preliminary determination that imports have caused or 
threatened to cause market disruption. In this case, notification of the measures 
taken to the Committee on Safeguards and a request for bilateral consultations 
shall be effected immediately thereafter. The duration of the provisional measure 
shall not exceed 200 days during which the pertinent requirements of paragraphs 
1, 2 and 5 shall be met. The duration of any provisional measure shall be counted 
toward the period provided for under paragraph 6. 
8.  If a WTO member considers that an action taken under paragraphs 2, 3 or 7 
causes or threatens to cause significant diversions of trade into its market, it may 
request consultations with China and/or the WTO member concerned. Such 
consultations shall be held within 30 days after the request is notified to the 
Committee on Safeguards. If such consultations fail to lead to an agreement 
between China and the WTO member or members concerned within 60 days 
after the notification, the requesting WTO member shall be free, in respect of 
such product, to withdraw concessions accorded to or otherwise limit imports 
from China, to the extent necessary to prevent or remedy such diversions. Such 
action shall be notified immediately to the Committee on Safeguards. 
9.  Application of this Section shall be terminated 12 years after the date of 
accession. 
 
Author Contact Information 
 
Jeanne J. Grimmett 
   
Legislative Attorney 
jgrimmett@crs.loc.gov, 7-5046 
 
 
Congressional Research Service 
26