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The administration has now made clear what comes after the courts curtailed the use of emergency economic powers for broad tariff programs: Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 (Section 301). The new investigations are designed to recreate (through traditional trade law) the same kind of wide‑ranging, flexible tariff architecture that had previously rested on emergency authorities such as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
In announcing the global “structural overcapacity” investigation, USTR expressly framed the effort as part of a “shift back to traditional trade authorities” and away from emergency economic powers. Following the recent Supreme Court decision limiting the executive branch’s reliance on those emergency authorities for tariff actions, the administration has increasingly leaned on legacy trade statutes, including Section 122 of the Trade Act (Section 122), which was recently used to impose a temporary global import surcharge. Because Section 122 is time‑limited, these new Section 301 investigations are best understood as an effort to build a more durable, litigation‑resistant legal foundation for long‑term trade measures. As commentators have already observed, the policy goal is not subtle: to replicate the old IEEPA‑based structure under Section 301.
Against that backdrop, USTR has now launched two unprecedented Section 301 initiatives that reach deep into global supply chains: one focused on “structural excess capacity” across key manufacturing sectors, and another aimed at trading partners that allegedly fail to ban imports made with forced labor.
New Section 301 Investigations
Structural Overcapacity: 16 Economies, Core Industrial Sectors
On March 11, USTR announced a sweeping Section 301 investigation into whether the policies of 16 major trading partners create “structural excess capacity” that burdens or restricts U.S. commerce. The investigation covers a broad set of economies — including close allies and key manufacturing hubs in Europe and Asia — and focuses on government‑supported overcapacity in:
The theory is that sustained, policy‑driven overbuilding — backed by subsidies, state‑linked financing, and preferential regulation — depresses global prices, undercuts U.S. producers, and deters private investment, thereby “burdening or restricting” U.S. commerce within the meaning of Section 301.
If USTR finds such practices “unreasonable or discriminatory,” it can recommend measures including additional duties, product‑specific tariff hikes, quantitative import restrictions, or other trade restrictions tailored to the sectors and partners at issue.
Forced Labor: Sixty Partners’ Import Regimes Under Scrutiny
On March 12, USTR separately initiated 60 Section 301 investigations into whether certain trading partners have failed to adopt and effectively enforce prohibitions on the importation of goods made with forced labor. Here, USTR is leveraging a statutory provision that identifies a “persistent pattern of conduct that permits any form of forced or compulsory labor” as an “unreasonable” practice under Section 301.
The investigations span a wide spectrum of economies — from major markets such as China to close U.S. allies and key emerging markets in Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East. Although the formal targets are foreign governments and their regimes for blocking forced‑labor imports, the practical impact will fall on:
As with the overcapacity investigation, USTR is positioning itself to impose tariff surcharges, product‑specific restrictions, or outright bans on goods associated with jurisdictions that are deemed to fall short.
Why This Matters: A De Facto New Tariff Architecture
These parallel investigations are not isolated enforcement actions. Taken together, they constitute an attempt to construct a new, durable tariff framework under Section 301 that can:
In effect, Section 301 is being repurposed from a tool traditionally deployed against discrete foreign measures (e.g., a particular tariff or technology‑transfer requirement) into a platform for:
For businesses, the consequence is a structurally more volatile trade environment in which long‑term planning must account for the possibility of overlapping 301‑based tariffs and restrictions, even in markets that have historically been stable U.S. partners.
International Pushback: A Preview of the Coming Friction
Early reaction abroad signals that these investigations will be contentious:
In short, the political and diplomatic pushback has already begun, and the process is likely to grow messy as multiple allies and partners contest both the legal theory and the empirical basis for USTR’s actions.
Key Procedural Milestones
While details differ by investigation, the Section 301 processes share common features: electronic dockets, relatively compressed timelines, and opportunities for business input. For the structural overcapacity investigation covering 16 economies, the docket opened on March 17, 2026, with written comments and hearing requests due by April 15, 2026. Public hearings are currently scheduled for May 5–8, 2026, and rebuttal comments are due seven days after the final hearing date. For the 60 forced labor investigations, written comments and hearing requests are likewise due by April 15, 2026, with public hearings scheduled to begin on April 28, 2026, and continue through May 1, 2026; rebuttal comments are again due seven days after the final hearing date. USTR is expected to move quickly once the records are developed, especially as the administration seeks to transition from short‑term Section 122 surcharges to longer‑lived Section 301 measures.
Practical Takeaways for Companies
Companies with global manufacturing, sourcing, or export footprints should treat these investigations as the opening move in a more expansive Section 301 strategy — not as isolated, one‑off cases.
Map Exposure to Covered Economies and Sectors
Integrate Trade and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)/Forced Labor Compliance
Consider Proactive Engagement with USTR
Build Scenario Planning into Commercial Decisions
Monitor for Overlapping Measures
These new Section 301 investigations represent a strategic “Plan B” for rebuilding a robust, flexible tariff regime in the wake of IEEPA’s judicial constraints. They reach deeply into core industrial and supply‑chain sectors and already are generating significant international pushback. Companies that quickly assess their exposure and engage thoughtfully with the process will be better positioned to manage the legal, commercial, and reputational risks that follow.
Webinars
Defending Data Brokers
May 13, 2026 | 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM ET
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