In our last blog post, ‘Buy European vs Open Europe: What Current EU Trade Debates Mean for BSOs Outside of the EU‘, we examined the strategic tension within Europe between industrial protection, strategic autonomy, and outward-facing trade openness. That debate now enters a new phase. Proposed tariff escalation from Donald Trump is emerging as a structural stress test for Europe’s trade model and, by extension, for Business Service Organisations (BSOs) operating outside the EU that depend on relatively stable transatlantic frameworks.
In early 2026, global trade policy has once again been jolted by renewed tariff activism from the United States. Policy proposals and political signalling around higher and more flexible tariffs, including broad-based import levies and the use of alternative trade authorities, have reintroduced a level of uncertainty not seen since the height of the 2018–2020 trade tensions.
For BSOs operating outside the EU, particularly in the UK, Asia, and emerging markets, this moment is not merely geopolitical theatre. It has direct implications for market access, supply chains, investment flows, and the evolving strategic logic behind ‘Buy European’ versus ‘Open Europe’ approaches discussed in recent EU policy debates.
This post considers what recent tariff developments mean, not only for Brussels and Washington, but for external partners navigating an increasingly fragmented and legally contested trade system.
The return of tariff volatility as a structural risk
Recent developments highlight several overlapping shocks to the global trade environment:
A February 2026 U.S. Supreme Court ruling limiting the use of emergency economic powers (IEEPA) to impose tariffs, alongside growing legal and congressional scrutiny of executive tariff authority, clarified that emergency economic powers legislation does not provide a blanket legal basis for imposing tariffs. This ruling constrains one of the most flexible legal pathways for rapid tariff escalation and introduces a new layer of legal contestation into trade policymaking. This legal development underscores that tariff policy in 2026 is being shaped not only by executive strategy but also by judicial and legislative constraints.
Paradoxically, this does not necessarily reduce tariff risk. Instead, it increases policy volatility. When one legal mechanism is limited, policymakers may pivot toward alternative statutory tools, investigations, or temporary tariff measures. For businesses engaged in transatlantic trade, this creates a regulatory environment characterised by iteration rather than stability.
Implication for BSOs:
Tariff unpredictability is no longer a cyclical disruption, it is becoming a baseline operating condition in transatlantic trade governance.
The EU’s strategic dilemma: retaliate, negotiate, or re-regionalise?
The European Union is seeking clarity from Washington while signalling that unilateral tariff increases could strain existing trade understandings and cooperation mechanisms. At the same time:
This matters for BSOs because EU responses to external tariff pressure tend to reinforce one of two strategic pathways:
1. Strategic Autonomy (‘Buy European’ Logic)
Higher external tariff risk strengthens the internal case for:
2. Strategic Openness (‘Open Europe’ Logic)
Alternatively, tariff uncertainty can incentivise diversification of trade partnerships, including deeper engagement with the UK, India, ASEAN economies, and other third-country partners. In practice, the EU is increasingly pursuing diversification as a hedging strategy against geopolitical trade risk.
A Fragmenting Trade Map: The US–EU relationship is no longer the sole anchor
Tariff tensions and broader geopolitical shifts are already contributing to evolving trade patterns. For example, Germany’s trade with China has at times rivalled or exceeded its trade with the United States, primarily due to deep industrial integration and structural trade ties, with tariff uncertainty acting as a secondary diversification factor rather than a sole driver.
Similarly, European exports to the U.S. market have remained resilient overall, but with rising uncertainty surrounding future tariff regimes and regulatory conditions.
The emerging structural trend is not market exit, but risk diversification:
For BSOs outside the EU, this diversification creates new demand in areas such as:
What this means specifically for BSOs outside the EU
Increased Demand for Trade Navigation Services
As tariff regimes become more fluid and legally contested, companies operating across the EU and U.S. require:
BSOs positioned as policy interpreters, rather than purely operational intermediaries, gain strategic relevance in this environment.
Supply chain reconfiguration will accelerate
The renewed focus on tariffs as an industrial policy tool reinforces a broader trend toward geopolitical supply chain rebalancing. Likely developments include:
The UK and other ‘third countries’ as strategic intermediaries
Tariff differentiation and bilateral arrangements mean ‘third countries’ may not be uniformly affected by U.S. tariff measures. This creates a potential strategic niche for non-EU BSOs to:
In a more fragmented trade landscape, institutional neutrality can become a competitive advantage.
The Legal Dimension: Trade policy is now politically and judicially contested
The 2026 Supreme Court ruling limiting the use of emergency economic powers for tariffs introduces a critical new variable: legal instability within trade policymaking itself. Combined with ongoing congressional debates over tariff authority, businesses now face:
For BSOs, this reinforces the need to monitor not only trade policy announcements but also the legal frameworks underpinning them.
Strategic Outlook: From globalisation to managed trade blocs
The broader takeaway is not simply higher tariffs, but the acceleration of a more managed and bloc-oriented trade environment:
With EU–US trade representing one of the largest bilateral economic relationships globally, even incremental tariff shifts can generate disproportionate ripple effects across supply chains, investment planning, and regulatory strategy.
Final Thoughts: From tariff shock to structural realignment
The renewed focus on tariffs in U.S. trade policy is less a temporary disruption than a signal of a more fragmented and strategically managed trade environment defined by:
For BSOs outside the EU, the strategic implication is clear:
Please note: At the time of writing, several tariff measures and proposals remain in the signalling or policy development phase rather than fully implemented frameworks.
If you would like to discuss how MSI can support you in navigating these changes, please do not hesitate to contact us
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