ANY retaliatory tariff by India in response to the planned withdrawal of some trade privileges will not be "appropriate" under WTO rules, US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross warned on Tuesday (7).
The comments, made to broadcaster CNBC-TV18 during a trip to India's capital, come as trade ties between the US and China worsen. The US is India's second-biggest trade partner after China.
Indian officials have raised the prospect of higher import duties on more than 20 US goods if president Donald Trump presses ahead with a plan announced in March to end the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) for India.
India is the biggest beneficiary of the GSP, which allows preferential duty-free imports of up to $5.6 billion from the South Asian nation.
"Any time a government makes a decision adverse to another one, you will have to anticipate there could be consequences," Ross said.
"We don't believe under the WTO rules that retaliation by India would be appropriate."
He added that India's new rules on e-commerce, which bar companies from selling products via firms in which they have an equity interest, and data localisation have been discriminatory for the US firms such as Walmart Inc and Mastercard Inc.
"So the American companies are showing very good will and a very cooperative attitude towards 'Make in India' and the other programmes," he said, referring to a manufacturing push by Indian prime minister Narendra Modi.
"But there's a limit to how far the discriminatory behaviour can go. And our job is to try to get a level, more level playing field."
Earlier, Ross told a business conference that localisation rules and price caps on medical devices imported from the US were barriers to trade but that New Delhi was committed to tackling them after general elections.
"We applaud India's commitment to addressing some of these barriers once the government is re-formed, probably starting in the month of June," Ross said.
"Our role is to eliminate barriers to US companies operating here, including data localisation restrictions that actually weaken data security and increase the cost of doing business."
India's 39-day general election ends on May 19, and votes will be counted four days later.
Ross met his Indian counterpart Suresh Prabhu on Monday (6), after which New Delhi said the two countries would engage regularly to resolve outstanding trade issues.
Last year, global payments companies such as Mastercard, Visa and American Express unsuccessfully lobbied India to relax central bank rules requiring all payment data on domestic transactions to be stored locally.
"As president Trump has said, trade relationships should be based, and must be based, on fairness and reciprocity," Ross added. "But currently, US businesses face significant market access barriers in India."
TikTok is to lay off hundreds of employees from its London office, with the bulk of the cuts affecting content moderation and security teams, according to reports estimating over 400 job losses by the Communication Workers Union. Online safety campaigners, along with TUC and CWU leaders, have urged Chair Chi Onwurah MP to investigate the impact of TikTok’s actions on UK online safety and workers’ rights.
The strategic shift is part of a broader reorganisation of TikTok's global trust and safety operations, aiming to streamline processes and concentrate operations in fewer locations worldwide. The move has prompted significant criticism from safety advocates and politicians, raising concerns about the platform's commitment to child protection and online safety.
Safety roles cut
People working in the trust and safety team are most likely to lose their jobs as part of a global restructuring that prioritises AI- assisted moderation over human oversight. TikTok is moving UK content moderation roles to Europe as it rely on AI, putting hundreds of jobs at risk despite rising regulatory pressure under the Online Safety Act.
The timing is particularly controversial given recent revelations about platform safety failures. Report from Global Witness, a not-for-profit organisation have accused TikTok of "sacrificing online safety" through these AI-driven cuts, with investigations revealing that the algorithm has directed minors toward explicit content a serious breach of child protection standards.
The Communication Workers Union and online safety professionals have urged UK MPs to investigate the restructuring, warning that job losses could expose children to harmful material. The cuts represent a fundamental shift in TikTok's operational philosophy, prioritizing cost efficiency over comprehensive content review.
TikTok's restructuring putting several hundred jobs at risk marks a significant move as it shifts to AI-assisted content moderation. While the platform claims the changes will improve efficiency, the decision has sparked debate about whether algorithmic moderation adequately protects vulnerable users. As regulators scrutinise social media platforms increasingly, TikTok's focus on automation rather than human expertise may face mounting political and regulatory challenges in the UK and beyond.
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