
US court ruling puts Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs in disarray
A United States court has blocked the so-called 'Liberation Day' tariffs that US President Donald Trump imposed on imported goods from around 90 nations. This puts implementation of Trump's current trade policy in disarray.
The Court of International Trade ruled that the emergency authority Trump used to impose the tariffs could not override Congress's right to regulate commerce with other countries.
Tariffs imposed through other legislative processes – such as those related to cars, steel, and aluminum – remain in effect. But the broad-based 'reciprocal' tariffs will need to be removed within ten days of the court's ruling. Trump administration officials have already filed plans to appeal.
The ruling calls into question trade negotiations underway with more than 18 different nations, which are trying to lower these tariffs. Do these countries continue to negotiate or do they wait for the judicial process to play out?
The Trump administration still has other mechanisms through which it can impose tariffs, but these have limits on the amount that can be imposed or entail processes that can take months or years. This undermines Trump's preferred method of negotiation: throwing out large threats and backing down once a concession is reached.
The lawsuits were filed by US importers of foreign products and some US states, challenging Trump's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977.
The lawsuits argued the national emergencies cited in imposing the tariffs – the trade deficit and the fentanyl crisis – were not an emergency and not directly addressed by the tariff remedy. The court agreed, and said by imposing tariffs Trump had overstepped his authority.
The ruling said the executive orders used were 'declared to be invalid as contrary to law.'
The act states the president is entitled to take economic action in the face of 'an unusual and extraordinary threat'. It's mainly been used to impose sanctions on terrorist groups or freeze assets from Russia. There's nothing in the act that refers to tariffs.
The decision means all the reciprocal tariffs – including the 10% tariffs on most countries, the 50% tariffs Trump was talking about putting on the EU, and some of the Chinese tariffs – are ruled by the court to be illegal. They must be removed within 10 days.
The ruling was based on two separate lawsuits. One was brought by a group of small businesses that argued tariffs materially hurt their business. The other was brought by 12 individual states, arguing the tariffs would materially impact their ability to provide public goods.
The ruling does not apply to tariffs applied under Section 201, known as safeguard tariffs. They are intended to protect industries from imports allegedly being sold in the US market at unfair prices or through unfair means. Tariffs on solar panels and washing machines were brought under this regulation.
Also excluded are Section 232 tariffs, which are applied for national security reasons. Those are the steel and aluminium tariffs, the automobile and auto parts tariffs. Trump has declared all those as national security issues, so those tariffs will remain.
Most of the tariffs against China are also excluded under Section 301. Those are put in place for unfair trade practices, such as intellectual property theft or forced technology transfer. They are meant to pressure countries to change their policies.
In addition, there are current investigations related to copper and the pharmaceuticals sector, which will continue. These investigations are part of a more traditional trade process and may lead to future tariffs, including on Australia. The Trump administration is still weighing possible sector-specific tariffs on pharmaceuticals. Planar/Shutterstock
The Trump administration has already filed its intention to appeal to the federal appeals court. This process will take some time. In the meantime, there are at least five other legal challenges to tariffs pending in the courts.
If the appeals court provides a ruling the Trump administration or opponents don't like, they can appeal to the Supreme Court.
Alternatively, the White House could direct customs officials to ignore the court and continue to collect tariffs.
The Trump administration has ignored court orders in the past, particularly on immigration rulings. So it remains to be seen if customs officials will release goods without the tariffs being paid in ten days' time.
The administration is unlikely to lie down on this. In addition to its appeal process, officials complained about 'unelected judges' and 'judicial overreach' and may contest the whole process. The only thing that continues to be a certainty is that uncertainty will drive global markets for the foreseeable future.
Susan Stone is Credit Union SA chair of economics, University of South Australia
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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