| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Energy and Natural Resources - 1991 - 136 páginas
...(e), permit the President to prohibit or restrict the export of petroleum products where necessary to protect the domestic economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the serious inflationary impact of foreign demand. The responsibility for exercising these authorities... | |
| United States, United States. Congress. House. Committee on International Relations - 1993 - 1538 páginas
...fulfill its declared international obligations; and (C) to restrict the export of goods where necessary to protect the domestic economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the serious inflationary impact of foreign demand. (3) It is the policy of the United States (A) to apply... | |
| Robert I. Rotberg, Thomas G. Weiss - 2002 - 222 páginas
...Authorization for Fiscal Year 1993-94, Pub. L. No. 103-10, 107 Stat. 40 (1993), authorizes export controls "(I) [t]o protect the domestic economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the serious inflationary impact of foreign demand; (2) [t]o further significantly the foreign policy of... | |
| United States, United States. Congress. House. Committee on Ways and Means - 1997 - 1102 páginas
...international obligations (foreign policy controls under section 6) and to protect the domestic economy from an excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the inflationary impact of foreign demand (short supply controls under section 7). The Act dso continues the 1977 anti-boycott... | |
| Eugene Schroder, Micki Nellis - 2000 - 254 páginas
...foreign policy of the United States and to aid in fulfilling its international responsibilities; and (c) to protect the domestic economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and reduce the serious inflationary impact of abnormal foreign demand, it is hereby ordered: Section 1.... | |
| CCH Tax Law Editors - 2008 - 1872 páginas
...the Export Administration Act of 1979). Such policy is to use export controls to the extent necessary "to protect the domestic economy from the excessive drain of scarce materials and to reduce the serious inflationary impact of foreign demand." (2) Products considered export controlled products.... | |
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