US Supreme Court limits tariff imposition under IEEPA

The US Supreme Court has ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. This decision eliminates the reciprocal tariffs imposed so far, but it is not a reversal of US trade policy. For India, the importance of recent trade deals has increased.

The US Supreme Court ruling has narrowed one pathway for executive tariff action but has not eliminated tariff authority. Tariffs imposed under Section 232 on steel and aluminium and under Section 301 for unfair trade practices remain unaffected. The ruling also leaves open a Pandora’s box of non-tariff tools—embargoes, licensing requirements, and transaction bans—that can be used to curtail trade.

Within hours of the judgment, Donald Trump announced a uniform 10 per cent global tariff and then raised it to 15 per cent under Section 122. Paradoxically, the three primary targets—Brazil, China, and India—have seen the largest reductions in their tariffs, while some that had struck deals appear to face higher barriers. Trump has referred to other “methods, practices, and statutes” that could be used to impose tariffs “higher than before”. Executive orders signed that night directed the Office of the US Trade Representative to initiate investigations into “unreasonable” and “discriminatory” trade practices under Section 301.

The Section 122 tariff can be imposed for 150 days and extended further only with congressional approval, creating a rolling cliff edge. The ruling has unambiguously deepened uncertainty, as other authorities will be invoked in sequence, challenged in court, and either upheld or struck down. Trade policy risk has become episodic, legalistic, and harder to price.

How should India interpret this? Its recent trade deals have become more valuable. A bilateral agreement with the US, anchored in treaty law, cannot be undone by a single ruling or executive order. The agreement with the EU is consequential for market size and stability. In recent deals, India has reduced tariffs across a wide range of products, recognizing that imports are necessary for exports and growth. In a world of persistent uncertainty, India’s strategy should be openness and predictability to leverage opportunities.

관련 기사

Dramatic illustration of US Supreme Court invalidating Trump's emergency tariffs, as he announces a new global 10% tariff.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

미 대법원, 트럼프 긴급 관세 무효 판결

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미국 대법원은 트럼프 대통령의 1977년 국제긴급경제권한법(IEEPA)을 이용한 광범위한 관세 부과를 무효로 판결했다. 이는 그의 무역 정책에 큰 타격을 주었으며, 한국 등과의 무역 협정에 영향을 미칠 전망이다. 트럼프는 즉시 새로운 10% 글로벌 관세를 도입했다.

Following the US Supreme Court's ruling against President Trump's IEEPA tariffs, his subsequent 15% global tariffs under alternative authority provide India new leverage in US trade talks, potentially aligning with its India-EU FTA ambitions.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The US Supreme Court issued a 6-3 decision on Friday ruling that President Donald Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act were unconstitutional. Trump responded by announcing new 10 percent global tariffs under a different statute, later raising them to 15 percent. The European Union has paused a recent trade deal with the US amid the resulting uncertainty.

The US Supreme Court has ruled six to three that President Donald Trump exceeded his authority by imposing special tariffs on imports from dozens of countries. The tariffs, based on a 1977 emergency provision, are invalid. Trump now announces a new general ten percent tariff.

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Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto expressed readiness to mitigate risks from US President Donald Trump's hike of global import tariffs to 15%, announced February 21, 2026, one day after a Supreme Court ruling invalidated prior tariffs. Officials affirmed that bilateral trade negotiations continue, highlighting zero-tariff deals for key Indonesian exports.

India and the US unveiled a framework for an interim trade agreement on February 7, 2026, under which the US will reduce tariffs on Indian goods to 18% and India will lower duties on US industrial and agricultural products. The deal safeguards sensitive agricultural and dairy sectors while advancing bilateral trade ties. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal described it as opening a $30 trillion market for Indian exporters.

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The Trump administration has initiated Section 301 investigations into South Korea, China, Japan, the European Union, and 13 other economies over unfair practices tied to structural excess capacity in manufacturing. The probes follow a Supreme Court ruling invalidating prior tariffs and aim to establish permanent measures to protect U.S. jobs. South Korea vows active consultations to safeguard its interests.

 

 

 

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