The Tariff Floor Is Moving. Here’s What Matters.
The tariff conversation in construction has mostly been reactive. A rate goes up, costs move, owners ask questions after the fact. What is unfolding right now is different. The administration is not oscillating on tariffs. Instead, it is rebuilding the legal architecture to make tariffs more durable. For construction budgets, that distinction matters more than any single rate announcement. What happened after the Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA tariffs in February? The administration moved fast. Within three weeks of the February ruling, USTR initiated 60 parallel Section 301 investigations into trading partners' failure to prohibit imports of goods produced with forced labor. A temporary 10% global tariff under Section 122 went into effect as a stopgap. Section 122 has a hard 150-day cap, expires around July 24, and was never intended to be permanent. Section 301 currently appears to be the administration's primary replacement mechanism. Congress delegated that autho...