US Proposes Fresh Tariffs on 60 Countries
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General Studies Paper II: Effect of Policies & Politics of Countries on India’s Interests, Bilateral Groupings & Agreements |
Why in News?
Recently, the United States proposed fresh 10 to 12.5% tariffs on imports from 60 economies, including India, under Section 301 investigations.

Points to Know About US Fresh Tariffs Proposal on 60 Countries
- Proposal: On 2 June 2026, the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) proposed fresh trade action against 60 economies, including India.
- The proposal emerged after a U.S. investigation into global trade practices related to forced-labour-linked goods.
- The action is based on Section 301 of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974.
- Investigation: The USTR formally launched 60 separate Section 301 investigations on 12 March 2026.
- The list of investigated economies includes India, China, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Mexico, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Thailand and several Gulf countries.
- These investigations examined whether trading partners adequately prohibited and enforced restrictions on imports produced through forced labour.
- The primary objective is to prevent products linked to forced labour from gaining a cost advantage in international markets.
- Washington argues that such goods distort competition and disadvantage American workers and businesses.
- Countries Covered: The proposal covers 60 economies.
- According to USTR findings, 54 economies including India, China, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom and Vietnam allegedly failed to impose and enforce effective import prohibitions on forced-labour goods.
- The USTR report claims India has not sufficiently enforced restrictions on goods linked to forced labour and identified concerns regarding certain global cotton supply chains.
- Six economies Canada, Ecuador, the European Union, Indonesia, Mexico and Pakistan were found deficient mainly in enforcement.
- Tariff Structure: The USTR proposed 10% additional tariffs for economies that have adopted full or partial forced-labour controls and 12.5% tariffs for economies considered to have weaker compliance frameworks.
- Exemptions: Certain sectors, including energy products, pharmaceuticals, and aircraft parts, are proposed for exemption.
- A special textile-access mechanism has also been suggested for limited imports at lower tariff rates.
- Consultation Process: The proposal is not yet final.
- Written comments may be submitted until 6 July 2026, while public hearings are scheduled for 7 July 2026 before any final determination.
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What is Section 301?
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IMPACT: Global and India
- Global:
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- Slower Global Trade Growth: The proposed U.S. tariffs add to rising trade protectionism and could weaken global merchandise trade growth. The WTO has already noted that higher tariffs reduce import demand and disrupt trade flows, particularly in export-dependent economies.
- Strain on Multilateral Trade System: The proposal has revived debates over unilateral trade measures and their compatibility with the World Trade Organization (WTO) framework. Repeated tariff actions may weaken confidence in rules-based global trade governance.
- Supply Chain Reconfiguration: Multinational firms may increasingly restructure supply chains to avoid tariff exposure. This creates higher compliance, logistics and certification costs, accelerating the trend toward friend-shoring, regionalization and supply-chain diversification.
- Increased Trade Uncertainty: The proposal affects 60 economies, including major U.S. trading partners. Such uncertainty can discourage investment decisions, delay contracts and reduce business confidence in international markets.
- Pressure on Developing Economies: Many developing countries depend heavily on labour-intensive exports. Studies indicate that U.S. tariff actions can reduce export earnings and negatively affect countries whose exports constitute a significant share of GDP.
- India:
- Reduced Export Competitiveness: A proposed 12.5% additional tariff could make several Indian products costlier in the U.S. market, potentially reducing competitiveness against suppliers from countries facing lower duties or exemptions.
- Pressure on Labour-Intensive Sectors: Sectors such as textiles, garments, cotton products and selected manufacturing exports face increased scrutiny because compliance concerns are linked to supply-chain verification requirements.
- Opportunity for Reforms: The proposal could accelerate reforms in labour governance, ethical sourcing, and export compliance. Improved standards may strengthen India’s long-term position in global value chains.
- Higher Compliance Costs: Indian exporters may need stronger traceability systems, labour audits and supply-chain documentation. These requirements increase operational costs, particularly for MSMEs.
- India–US Trade Negotiations: The tariff proposal emerges while both countries are pursuing a broader trade arrangement. It introduces an additional negotiating challenge and could complicate discussions on market access and tariff concessions.
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India’s Anti-Forced Labour Initiatives
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Also Read: India‑US Trade Deal Regarding GM Crops |