The United States has imposed punitive tariffs on goods from China and other nations over alleged forced labour, a move that underscores the widening gap between American trade aggression and Britain’s more principled, pragmatic approach. For workers in the UK’s ailing manufacturing heartlands, this development raises urgent questions: whose rules will protect their livelihoods?
Washington’s decision, announced late last night, targets imports linked to state-sanctioned labour abuses. The tariffs, which could affect billions of pounds in trade, are the latest salvo in a global struggle to define ethical supply chains. But while the US wields a big stick, Britain has championed a different path: one rooted in its own post-industrial legacy of union rights and moral leadership.
From the mill towns of Lancashire to the steel yards of Sheffield, the concept of forced labour feels distant. Yet real wages have stagnated for years, and insecure work has crept into every corner of the economy. British trade policy now walks a tightrope between defending domestic jobs and upholding the high standards that give our exports their premium.
The government’s Global Human Rights Sanctions regime, introduced in 2020, has targeted individuals rather than entire industries. It is a surgical approach, but critics say it lacks teeth. Meanwhile, the US action threatens to upend supply chains that many UK firms depend on for raw materials and components.
“Tariffs are a blunt instrument,” said Margaret O’Connor, a union organiser in Manchester’s garment district. “We need to be smart. If we just cut off cheap imports without building up our own capacity, workers here pay the price in higher bills.” Her point cuts to the core of a dilemma: ethical trade must not become a luxury only the wealthy can afford.
The British model, with its emphasis on voluntary corporate due diligence and multi-stakeholder initiatives, has earned respect. But it has not stopped the flow of goods from Xinjiang, where allegations of mass forced labour persist. Campaigners argue that without mandatory import bans, the UK is complicit.
“We cannot claim moral leadership while our shops sell clothes made in conditions we would never tolerate at home,” said Jasmin Tayyab of Anti-Slavery International. “The US move is a wake-up call. It forces the UK to decide whether to follow suit or risk being seen as weak.”
The government insists its approach is more effective, pointing to the Modern Slavery Act’s transparency requirements. Yet enforcement is patchy, and many firms bury compliance in obscure reports. Critics say the time for voluntary action has passed.
For ordinary Britons, the cost of inaction is hidden in the aisles of discount retailers. But so too is the cost of action: higher prices that pinch hardest on low-income families. This is the real economy: a world where principle and price collide at the kitchen table.
As the US tariffs take effect, the pressure on Britain to match its ambition with legislation will grow. The question is whether our leaders have the spine to protect workers at home and abroad, or whether they will let ethical trade become another slogan, hollowed out by compromise.








