Why is the U.S. investigating India?


U.S. Investigations Against India — UPSC Study Note

(Topic: Section 301 Investigations, Trade Act 1974, IEEPA, Excess Capacity, Forced Labour)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Date Event
Aug 2025 IEEPA reciprocal tariffs on India set at 50%
Feb 6, 2026 Trump reduces India tariff to 25%
Feb 20, 2026 U.S. Supreme Court strikes down IEEPA tariffs
Feb 20, 2026 Trump invokes Section 122 — 10% global tariff
Mar 11, 2026 USTR launches Investigation 1 (excess capacity, 16 economies)
Mar 12, 2026 USTR launches Investigation 2 (forced labour, 60 economies)
Jun 2, 2026 USTR proposes 12.5% additional tariff on India (forced labour finding)

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 is the legal basis for the U.S. investigations against India (March 2026). [S1]
  2. The USTR initiated two separate Section 301 investigations — one on excess capacity (16 economies) and one on forced labour (60 economies). [S1][S2]
  3. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down IEEPA-based tariffs on February 20, 2026 — the proximate cause for the shift to Section 301. [S3]
  4. Under Section 122, Trade Act of 1974, Trump imposed a 10% global tariff for a maximum period of 150 days after the IEEPA ruling. [S5]
  5. India faced 50% reciprocal tariffs under IEEPA from August 2025, reduced to 25% from February 6, 2026. [S5]
  6. India is among 16 economies targeted in the excess-capacity investigation and among 60 economies in the forced-labour investigation. [S1][S2]
  7. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) — not the Department of Commerce — is the initiating agency for Section 301 investigations.
  8. Proposed additional tariff on India from the forced labour investigation (as of June 2026): 12.5%. [S2]
  9. The excess-capacity investigation is primarily targeting government subsidies/industrial policies creating overcapacity in manufacturing sectors. [S1]
  10. India's bilateral trade negotiation with the U.S. resulted in a reported tariff level of 18% — separate from Section 301 outcomes. [S3]
  11. Section 301 investigations are quasi-judicial proceedings with public comment periods, unlike the unilateral IEEPA tariffs.
  12. The USTR found in June 2026 that 60 economies' practices were "unreasonable or discriminatory and burden or restrict U.S. commerce" — the statutory threshold for Section 301 action. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

Specific syllabus headings: - India and its neighbourhood — relations with developed and developing countries. - Important international institutions — WTO, objectives and functioning. - Indian economy — industrial policy, trade policy.

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The U.S. Section 301 investigations against India (2026) reflect a broader shift in American trade strategy post-IEEPA. Critically examine the implications for India-U.S. bilateral relations and Indian export competitiveness." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Analyse the legal and strategic significance of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling against IEEPA tariffs. How does India's engagement with Section 301 proceedings reflect its evolving trade diplomacy?" (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "Excess manufacturing capacity and forced labour have emerged as new fault lines in global trade governance. Examine with reference to recent U.S. investigations against India." (GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism India could challenge Section 301 findings at the WTO; DSM has ruled against unilateral U.S. trade actions before.
India-US Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) The Section 301 probe runs parallel to ongoing BTA negotiations; outcomes interact.
Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Schemes PLI subsidies in steel, pharma, solar could be characterised as policies enabling "excess capacity."
Special 301 Report (USTR) Annual USTR report on IPR — India regularly features on the "Priority Watch List"; companion trade pressure tool.
IEEPA and U.S. Executive Trade Powers Constitutional limits on presidential tariff authority; comparative analysis with Sections 232 and 301.
China-US Trade War (2018 onwards) Historical template for Section 301 actions; India should study sequencing from investigation to final tariff.
Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) India lost GSP benefits in 2019 — understanding how U.S. trade preference tools are used as leverage.
Forced Labour and Supply Chain Compliance Growing global norm (UFLPA in U.S., EU Supply Chain Due Diligence Directive) — India's labour-intensive sectors at risk.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Section 301 with Section 232: Section 232 (Trade Expansion Act, 1962) covers national security-based tariffs (e.g., steel/aluminium). Section 301 (Trade Act, 1974) covers unfair trade practices. Both are active simultaneously — do not conflate.
  2. IEEPA ≠ permanently dead: The Supreme Court ruled IEEPA cannot impose tariffs; it remains valid for other emergency economic actions (sanctions, asset freezes). Aspirants often overstate the ruling.
  3. Section 122 cap confusion: Section 122 tariffs max out at 15%, for 150 days — not permanent and not unlimited. Trump imposed 10%, threatened 15%, but did not raise them.
  4. "60 economies" vs "16 economies": The excess-capacity probe covers 16 economies (including India); the forced-labour probe covers 60 economies (including India). These are two separate investigations launched a day apart.
  5. USTR ≠ Department of Commerce: Section 301 proceedings are run by the USTR (U.S. Trade Representative); anti-dumping and countervailing duty investigations are run by the Department of Commerce. Wrong agency attribution is a classic MCQ trap.

11. Sources