2011年9月7日星期三

House Passes New Trade Program


The House of Representatives voted on Wednesday to renew a long-standing program that allows about 130 developing countries to export thousands of goods to the United States without paying duties.
House Speaker John Boehner said he hoped President Barack Obama would build on the success of passing the trade bill by submitting three long-delayed free trade agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea to Congress for a vote.
Renewal of the Generalized System of Preferences, which also requires Senate action, would help support about 82,000 American jobs tied to products imported under the program, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp said.
About three-quarters of all GSP-eligible imports are raw materials, components, parts or machineryand equipment used to manufacture goods in the United States, the Michigan
U.S. companies have since been required to pay import taxes on some 4,800 goods that previously came in duty-free.
The chamber and other U.S. business groups also hope the House vote will help set the stage for Obama to formally submit trade deals with South Korea, Colombia and Panama to Congress.
The decades-old GSP program has been caught up in a protracted debate on the three trade deals and the separate Trade Adjustment Assistance program to help retrain workers who have lost their jobs because of foreign competition.
The House GSP now goes to the Senate, where it is expected to be combined with a bill to renew the TAA program.
It is then expected to return to the House for another vote held "in tandem" with the three trade deals.
Source: reuters

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