U.S. presidents have considerable authority from Congress to protect domestic industry from foreign competition. But that authority

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U.S. presidents have considerable authority from Congress to protect domestic industry from foreign competition. But that authority has its limits. Are you able to list and describe the range of options under U.S. law that are available to a president who favors the protection of domestic industry and who believes in the strong enforcement of trade laws? Draw your answer from the topics you have studied in this and earlier chapters: Limits on presidential powers (Chapter 8); Authorization for trade enforcement sanctions, such as Section 301 or the "dormant" Section 338 (Chapter 10); WTO dispute settlement mechanisms (Chapter 9); Trade enforcement actions under "Section 301" against countries that violate trade agreements (Chapter 10); Safeguards and unfair trade law remedies (Chapter 11); Section 232 actions to protect materials and industries vital to national security. Describe each option in the president's "arsenal," tell what administrative protections are built into the system against arbitrary and capricious action, and what the lawful limits are on each?
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International Business Law And Its Environment

ISBN: 9781305972599

10th Edition

Authors: Richard Schaffer, Filiberto Agusti, Lucien J. Dhooge

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