On March 11, 2026, the Office of the US Trade Representative launched sweeping investigations against 16 of Washington's largest trading partners. The mechanism is Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. The deadline is July 24, 2026.

Why now? The Supreme Court recently ruled that some of Trump's IEEPA tariffs exceeded executive authority. The administration needs a legally durable alternative. Section 301 requires no congressional approval and is significantly harder to challenge in court.

The official justification is "structural overcapacity" in key sectors. The target list reads like an industrial census: steel, aluminum, automobiles, batteries, semiconductors, solar panels, robotics, shipbuilding, chemicals, plastics, glass, paper, and processed foods. Critics note this covers virtually the entire non-American industrial world.

The full list of 16 economies under investigation includes China, Vietnam, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, Bangladesh, Singapore, the European Union (27 countries as one block), Norway, Switzerland, and Mexico. Notably absent: the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada.

For the EU, this is particularly painful. The EU is the largest US trading partner by volume. The European Commission has already preemptively suspended its own steel and aluminum countermeasures pending negotiations. The Brussels Economic Institute estimates new tariffs could reduce EU GDP by 0.3-0.6 percent in 2026-2027. Germany, Ireland, and the Netherlands are most vulnerable.

China technically remains in the list but with a complicating factor: a November 2025 agreement extended reduced tariffs until November 2026. Beijing is simultaneously diversifying markets into Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East while building production capacity in third countries—Vietnam, Malaysia, Cambodia—precisely the countries now also under investigation.

Ukraine is not in the list. That is good news. But indirect effects are real: steel competition within the EU will intensify, green technology costs will rise, agricultural market access may shift, and reconstruction materials will become more expensive.

Three scenarios by July: negotiated settlements with most countries (45% probability), large-scale new tariffs triggering retaliation (35%), or judicial blocking extending uncertainty (20%).

If no agreements are reached by July 24, the world could face the most extensive restructuring of trade relations since World War II.

https://newsgroup.site/trump-section-301-trade-investigations-16-economies-2026/

#TradeWar #Section301 #USTR #Tariffs #China #EU #GlobalTrade #Trump #Economics

U.S. Trade Representative identifies South Korea's lack of forced labor import ban in 2026 trade barriers report, citing concerns over labor rights protection and ongoing Section 301 investigation that could lead to new tariffs on 60 trading partners including South Korea, China, and Japan.
#YonhapInfomax #USTR #ForcedLabor #Section301Investigation #TradeBarriers #SouthKorea #Economics #FinancialMarkets #Banking #Securities #Bonds #StockMarket
https://en.infomaxai.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=113288

Meta signs AI deal with News Corp, academic publishers call for AI transparency, and USTR releases Notorious Markets report.

https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2026/03/05/3-count-meta-deal/

#Copyright #Meta #AI #USTR

3 Count: Meta Deal

Meta signs AI deal with News Corp, academic publishers call for AI transparency, and USTR releases Notorious Markets report.

Plagiarism Today
U.S. Lists Notorious Piracy Threats, With Focus on Sports Streaming * TorrentFreak

The U.S. Trade Representative has published its annual list of problematic piracy websites and other "notorious markets."

US Trade Office Signals Broader Scrutiny of Global Trade Practices

The US Trade Office is starting new checks on China's trade deals and industries like chips in 2024 and 2025. This could change prices for businesses.

#USTR, #ChinaTrade, #Section301, #Semiconductors, #TradeTariffs

https://newsletter.tf/us-trade-office-starts-new-china-trade-probes-in-2024-and-2025/

The US Trade Office has started 3 new investigations into China's trade practices in late 2024 and 2025, focusing on key industries like semiconductors.

#USTR, #ChinaTrade, #Section301, #Semiconductors, #TradeTariffs

https://newsletter.tf/us-trade-office-starts-new-china-trade-probes-in-2024-and-2025/

US Trade Office Starts New China Trade Probes in 2024 and 2025

The US Trade Office is starting new checks on China's trade deals and industries like chips in 2024 and 2025. This could change prices for businesses.

Ukraine Paves the Way for Pirate Site Blocking, Despite Ongoing War * TorrentFreak

Despite fighting an existential war against Russia, Ukraine continues to book progress in the fight against online piracy.

South Korea's trade minister met with a senior US trade official in Seoul to discuss progress on digital non-tariff barrier agreements and future FTA implementation plans.
#YonhapInfomax #MinistryOfTrade #USTR #DigitalTrade #NonTariffBarriers #KoreaUSFTA #Economics #FinancialMarkets #Banking #Securities #Bonds #StockMarket
https://en.infomaxai.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=105009
Ministry of Trade Focuses Talks with US USTR on Digital Non-Tariff Issues

South Korea's trade minister met with a senior US trade official in Seoul to discuss progress on digital non-tariff barrier agreements and future FTA implementation plans.

Yonhap Infomax