U.S. Congress Removes Byrd Amendment

Feb. 2, 2006
Beginning Oct. 1, 2007, steel and other U.S. manufacturers will no longer receive anti-dumping and countervailing duties levied on imported goods. Congress has repealed the Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act of 2000, popularly known as the Byrd ...

Beginning Oct. 1, 2007, steel and other U.S. manufacturers will no longer receive anti-dumping and countervailing duties levied on imported goods.

Congress has repealed the Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset Act of 2000, popularly known as the Byrd amendment, after its chief Senate sponsor, Robert Byrd (D, W.Va.).

Under the legislation, duties were distributed to producers who successfully petitioned the U.S. government for relief from foreign countries illegally subsidizing goods exported to the U.S. or selling them at less than fair value.

Eleven members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) challenged the legality of the amendment under WTO rules, and, in January 2003, the WTO allowed eight members to retaliate against the U.S. Of the eight, four -- Canada, the EU, Japan and Mexico -- have done so, according to the U.S. Trade Representatives office.

With repeal of the amendment, anti-dumping and countervailing duties will go to the U.S. Treasury Department, as they had before the Byrd Amendment was enacted.

About the Author

John McClenahen | Former Senior Editor, IndustryWeek

 John S. McClenahen, is an occasional essayist on the Web site of IndustryWeek, the executive management publication from which he retired in 2006. He began his journalism career as a broadcast journalist at Westinghouse Broadcasting’s KYW in Cleveland, Ohio. In May 1967, he joined Penton Media Inc. in Cleveland and in September 1967 was transferred to Washington, DC, the base from which for nearly 40 years he wrote primarily about national and international economics and politics, and corporate social responsibility.
      
      McClenahen, a native of Ohio now residing in Maryland, is an award-winning writer and photographer. He is the author of three books of poetry, most recently An Unexpected Poet (2013), and several books of photographs, including Black, White, and Shades of Grey (2014). He also is the author of a children’s book, Henry at His Beach (2014).
      
      His photograph “Provincetown: Fog Rising 2004” was selected for the Smithsonian Institution’s 2011 juried exhibition Artists at Work and displayed in the S. Dillon Ripley Center at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., from June until October 2011. Five of his photographs are in the collection of St. Lawrence University and displayed on campus in Canton, New York.
      
      John McClenahen’s essay “Incorporating America: Whitman in Context” was designated one of the five best works published in The Journal of Graduate Liberal Studies during the twelve-year editorship of R. Barry Leavis of Rollins College. John McClenahen’s several journalism prizes include the coveted Jesse H. Neal Award. He also is the author of the commemorative poem “Upon 50 Years,” celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Wolfson College Cambridge, and appearing in “The Wolfson Review.”
      
      John McClenahen received a B.A. (English with a minor in government) from St. Lawrence University, an M.A., (English) from Western Reserve University, and a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from Georgetown University, where he also pursued doctoral studies. At St. Lawrence University, he was elected to academic honor societies in English and government and to Omicron Delta Kappa, the University’s highest undergraduate honor. John McClenahen was a participant in the 32nd Annual Wharton Seminars for Journalists at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. During the Easter Term of the 1986 academic year, John McClenahen was the first American to hold a prestigious Press Fellowship at Wolfson College, Cambridge, in the United Kingdom.
      
      John McClenahen has served on the Editorial Board of Confluence: The Journal of Graduate Liberal Studies and was co-founder and first editor of Liberal Studies at Georgetown. He has been a volunteer researcher on the William Steinway Diary Project at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., and has been an assistant professorial lecturer at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
      

 

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