The post U.S. inflation faces tariff risk on Section 301 pivot appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. USTR launches Section 301 investigations across 16 economiesThe post U.S. inflation faces tariff risk on Section 301 pivot appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. USTR launches Section 301 investigations across 16 economies

U.S. inflation faces tariff risk on Section 301 pivot

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USTR launches Section 301 investigations across 16 economies

The administration has launched Section 301 investigations against 16 economies in a single action, signaling a renewed push on tariff policy. The move reopens a formal pathway for potential trade remedies while the underlying evidence is compiled.

These are investigations, not immediate duties. Any remedies would follow findings and separate determinations, which means timelines, scope, and rates remain uncertain at this stage.

Businesses and trading partners now face a procedural period in which scopes, product coverage, and potential remedies are defined, with commercial planning complicated by policy and timing risks.

What Section 301 is, process and shift from IEEPA

Section 301 of the Trade Act authorizes the U.S. to investigate alleged unfair trade practices and consider remedies, after initiating a public process that includes evidence-gathering. The shift toward Section 301 follows a Supreme Court ruling that constrained the use of emergency tariff powers under IEEPA, as reported by Bloomberg Law.

Outcomes can range from no action to targeted or broad tariffs; investigations are distinct from finalized measures. according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, the initiative is a lawful, measured response to “excess manufacturing capacity,” unfair subsidies, and wage suppression, and existing trade agreements remain in force.

In the near term, investigations alone do not change prices, but headline risk can influence sourcing and inventory decisions. If remedies are imposed, partial pass-through of import costs would likely lift inflation and consumer prices, concentrated in goods-heavy categories.

Supply chains could reroute toward alternative suppliers, raising lead times and compliance costs. Smaller import‑reliant manufacturers and retailers could see tighter margins and higher working‑capital needs as landed costs rise.

Tariff formula disputes and global reactions, explained

Debate now centers on how the administration translates trade concerns into a tariff formula and whether the resulting rates are justified. That technical dispute overlaps with geopolitical pushback and macro risk warnings from markets.

Administration’s tariff formula and rate justification

Economists are challenging the elasticity assumptions embedded in the tariff formula. Experts at the American Enterprise Institute argue those assumptions overstate how foreign suppliers adjust, inflating the tariff rates that the formula would justify.

A separate critique from a University of Chicago economist and former U.S. Treasury official contends the formula implies rates roughly four times too high. “The resulting tariffs are far higher than the administration’s own formula would justify,” said Brent Neiman, University of Chicago, and former Treasury official.

MOFCOM pushback and Goldman Sachs risk warnings

China’s Ministry of Commerce has condemned the action as unilateral protectionism and warned of higher costs for U.S. industries and damage to trade relations. “Abusing Section 301 as unilateral protectionism,” said China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM).

Goldman Sachs has cautioned that, despite a court setback on emergency powers, tools like Section 301 and Section 122 could still yield broad tariffs, with risks spanning higher inflation and slower growth.

FAQ about Section 301 investigations

Which 16 economies are being targeted and what products or sectors are most at risk of new tariffs?

Investigations cover 16 economies; sectors most exposed are those flagged for excess capacity or subsidies, especially intermediate inputs, consumer durables, electronics, machinery, and other traded manufacturing.

How will the proposed tariffs affect U.S. consumer prices and inflation over the next 6–12 months?

Investigations alone do not raise prices; if tariffs follow, partial pass‑through could lift inflation and consumer prices, with impacts varying by product reliance and supply‑chain flexibility.

Source: https://coincu.com/news/u-s-inflation-faces-tariff-risk-on-section-301-pivot/

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