India Tariff News and Tracker
Welcome to India Tariff News and Tracker, where listeners get a fast, factual look at how US tariff policy and Donald Trump’s latest moves are shaping India’s trade outlook. According to Cherry Bekaert’s June 2026 tax policy review, the United States continues to operate under President Trump’s broad 10 percent Section 122 tariffs on most imports, a baseline that affects many Indian goods landing in American ports. These across-the-board duties sit on top of any existing product‑specific tariffs, keeping pressure on Indian exporters in sectors like textiles, chemicals, and light engineering. The American Action Forum reports that on June 2, the US Trade Representative proposed a new Section 301 tariff regime targeting 86 countries over forced-labor concerns, with rates of 10 to 12.5 percent and a start schedule that ramps from zero in 2026 to 10 percent in 2027 and 15 percent in 2028 on covered imports. While the analysis highlights Brazil as facing an additional 25 percent levy in some categories, it underscores a broader shift: Washington is increasingly willing to weaponize tariffs over labor and supply-chain issues. For India, which is pushing its manufacturing exports to the US, the clear signal is that supply-chain compliance and traceability are directly tied to future tariff risk. At the geopolitical level, India’s tariff story is playing out in real time at the G7 summit in Évian, France. The Times of India reports that Prime Minister Narendra Modi used the G7 outreach session, with President Trump seated beside him, to warn that the world suffers not from a shortage of resources but from a “shortage of trust” in international partnerships. That comment lands squarely in the middle of the ongoing tariff battles and signals India’s concern that unpredictable US trade measures—like sudden tariff hikes or product‑specific threats—undermine business confidence. Business Today TV notes that one of the key agenda items for Modi and Trump at this G7 is tariffs and the broader US‑India economic relationship, with discussions expected to cover market access, industrial goods, and a possible roadmap toward a more stable tariff framework. Any progress here matters for Indian exporters who must price long‑term contracts into a landscape where a 10 percent across‑the‑board tariff can be joined, at any time, by new Section 301 measures. For Indian companies shipping to the US, this moment demands close tracking of product codes, country‑of‑origin rules, and labor‑compliance documentation. Tariffs are no longer just about price; they are about politics, supply chains, and values. Thanks for tuning in to India Tariff News and Tracker, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
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