HR-1548-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by Beth Van Duyne (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would make several changes to U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty (AD/CVD) laws, which are tools used to protect domestic industries from foreign imports sold below fair market value or subsidized by foreign governments. It would create a process for "successive" investigations — allowing new probes to run alongside or shortly after existing ones for the same product. It would also give the Department of Commerce new authority to investigate currency undervaluation as a countervailable subsidy, apply countervailing duty law to subsidies given to companies operating in third countries, require importers to certify their goods are not subject to existing duty orders, and set statutory deadlines for circumvention inquiries.
Who benefits
U.S. manufacturers in industries vulnerable to foreign competition (steel, aluminum, solar panels, chemicals, agriculture). U.S. workers in those industries who may face job losses from underpriced imports. Domestic companies that have already won AD/CVD orders and want stronger enforcement against circumvention. Trade lawyers and consultants who handle AD/CVD proceedings. The Department of Commerce, which gains clearer statutory authority for several enforcement actions. Communities economically dependent on manufacturing sectors targeted by foreign dumping.
Who is hurt
U.S. importers and retailers who source goods from abroad and would face new certification requirements and potential duty liability. Downstream U.S. manufacturers that rely on lower-cost imported inputs (e.g., auto parts makers using imported steel). American consumers who may pay higher prices if import costs rise. Foreign exporters — particularly from countries with state-directed economies — whose products could face new or expanded duties. Importers operating in good faith who may face compliance burdens from the new certification mandate. Smaller importers with fewer resources to navigate expanded AD/CVD procedures.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing AD/CVD laws contain gaps that allow foreign producers and governments to evade duties through circumvention schemes, third-country subsidies, and currency manipulation — costing American workers jobs and undermining domestic industries. They contend that currency undervaluation, which the IMF has documented in several major trading partners, functions as a hidden export subsidy that current law cannot adequately address. Codifying circumvention inquiry deadlines and successive investigation procedures, they argue, would close loopholes that foreign exporters have exploited for years while giving Commerce clearer legal footing to act.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding AD/CVD authority — particularly to cover third-country subsidies and currency undervaluation — risks triggering retaliatory tariffs from trading partners, raising costs for U.S. businesses that depend on imported inputs, and inviting legal challenges at the World Trade Organization. They contend that treating currency policy as a countervailable subsidy is a significant and legally contested step, as currency valuation involves complex macroeconomic factors beyond any single government's direct control, and that such a broad expansion could disrupt supply chains and raise prices for downstream industries and consumers without proportionate benefit.