The US Court of International Trade (CIT) has marked
its position on keeping sanctions against China in place with recommended
amendments for the United States Trade Representative (USTR).
The court passed a
judgement on 17 March regarding this matter, stating that List 3 and List
4A sanctions will remain in place. However, it has asked the US Trade
Representative to comply with the APA requirement for “reasoned response to
comments submitted during the rulemaking proceedings.”
The plaintiffs argued that:
·
USTR exceeded
its statutory authority and violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
when it shared List 3 and List 4A
·
The substantive
adequacy of USTR’s response to certain comments
·
The extent that
USTR’s Remand Results constitute impermissible post hoc reasoning
Based on the several rounds of
discussions and general air regarding the matter, the US apparel industry has had
mixed views on the China 301 Tariffs for US imports and its handling to date.
In October 2022, when USTR announced the next steps of its four-year review on
the Section 301 tariffs against China, following requests for continuation from the US’ domestic
industries, the US apparel industry was oscillating between opposing views on
the public comment part of the process.
Following this, the US apparel, footwear and retail sectors were at loggerheads
with the textile industry over the impact of Section 301 tariffs which
experts suggested were unlikely to be lifted by the Biden Administration as
China and the US continued their power struggle.