Trump
Adds Tariff Exemptions for Smartphones, Computers and Other Electronics
A long list
of electronic products got a reprieve for now from at least some of the levies
on China, which had been expected to take a toll on tech giants like Apple.
Tripp Mickle Ana Swanson
By Tripp
Mickle and Ana Swanson
Tripp Mickle
reported from San Francisco and Ana Swanson from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/12/technology/trump-electronics-tariffs.html
April 12,
2025
After more
than a week of ratcheting up tariffs on products imported from China, the Trump
administration issued a rule late Friday that spared smartphones, computers,
semiconductors and other electronics from some of the fees, in a significant
break for tech companies like Apple and Dell and the prices of iPhones and
other consumer electronics.
A message
posted late Friday by U.S. Customs and Border Protection included a long list
of products that would not face the reciprocal tariffs President Trump imposed
in recent days on Chinese goods as part of a worsening trade war. The
exclusions would also apply to modems, routers, flash drives and other
technology goods, which are largely not made in the United States.
The
exemptions are not a full reprieve. Other tariffs will still apply to
electronics and smartphones. The Trump administration had applied a tariff of
20 percent on Chinese goods earlier this year for what the administration said
was the country’s role in the fentanyl trade. And the administration could
still end up increasing tariffs for semiconductors, a vital component of
smartphones and other electronics.
The moves
were the first major exemptions for Chinese goods, which would have
wide-ranging implications for the U.S. economy if they persist. Tech giants
such as Apple and Nvidia would largely sidestep punitive taxes that could slash
their profits. Consumers — some of whom rushed to buy iPhones this past week —
would avoid major potential price increases on smartphones, computers and other
gadgets. And the exemptions could dampen additional inflation and calm the
turmoil that many economists feared might lead to a recession.
The tariff
relief was also the latest flip-flop in Mr. Trump’s effort to rewrite global
trade in a bid to boost U.S. manufacturing. The factories that churn out
iPhones, laptops and other electronics are deeply entrenched in Asia —
especially in China — and are unlikely to move without a galvanizing force like
the steep taxes that the Trump administration had proposed.
“It’s
difficult to know if there’s a realization within the administration that
reworking the American economy is a gargantuan effort,” said Matthew Slaughter,
the dean of the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth.
The
electronics exemptions apply to all countries, not just China.
Still, any
relief for the electronics industry may be short-lived, since the Trump
administration is preparing another national security-related trade
investigation into semiconductors. That will also apply to some downstream
products like electronics, since many semiconductors come into the United
States inside other devices, a person familiar with the matter said. These
investigations have previously resulted in additional tariffs.
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House spokeswoman, said in a statement on Saturday that Mr.
Trump was still committed to seeing more of these products and components made
domestically. “President Trump has made it clear America cannot rely on China
to manufacture critical technologies” and that at his direction, tech companies
“are hustling to onshore their manufacturing in the United States as soon as
possible,” she said.
A senior
administration official, speaking on background because they were not
authorized to speak publicly, said that Friday’s exemptions were aimed at
maintaining America’s supply of semiconductors, a foundational technology used
in smartphones, cars, toasters and dozens of other products. Many cutting-edge
semiconductors are manufactured overseas, such as in Taiwan.
Paul
Ashworth, the chief North America economist for Capital Economics, said the
move “represents a partial de-escalation of President Trump’s trade war with
China.”
He said the
20 product types that were exempted on Friday account for nearly a quarter of
U.S. imports from China. Other countries in Asia would be even bigger winners,
he said. Should the tariffs on those countries kick in again, the exemption
would cover 64 percent of U.S. imports from Taiwan, 44 percent of imports from
Malaysia and nearly a third of imports from both Vietnam and Thailand, he said.
The changes
punctuated a wild week in which Mr. Trump backtracked from many tariffs he
introduced on April 2, which he had called “liberation day.” His so-called
reciprocal tariffs had introduced taxes that would reach up to 40 percent on
products imported from some nations. After the stock and bond markets plunged,
Mr. Trump reversed course and said he would pause levies for 90 days.
China was
the one exception to Mr. Trump's relief because Beijing chose to retaliate
against U.S. tariffs with levies of its own. Instead of pausing tariffs on
Chinese imports, Mr. Trump increased them to 145 percent and showed no
willingness to spare any companies from those fees. In return, China on Friday
said it was raising its tariffs on American goods to 125 percent.
That sent
shares of many technology companies into free fall. Over four days of trading,
the valuation of Apple, which makes about 80 percent of its iPhones in China,
fell by $773 billion.
For now, Mr.
Trump’s moderation is a major relief for a tech industry that has spent months
cozying up to the president. Meta, Amazon and several tech leaders donated
millions to President Trump’s inauguration, stood behind him as he was sworn
into office in January and promised to invest billions of dollars in the United
States to support him.
Tim Cook,
Apple’s chief executive, has been at the forefront of the industry’s courtship
of Mr. Trump. He donated $1 million to Mr. Trump’s inauguration and later
visited the White House to pledge that Apple would spend $500 billion in the
United States over the next four years.
The strategy
repeated Mr. Cook’s tactics during Mr. Trump’s first term. To head off requests
that Apple begin manufacturing its products in the United States rather than
China, Mr. Cook cultivated a personal relationship with the president that
helped Apple win exemptions on tariffs for its iPhones, smartwatches and
laptops.
It had been
unclear if Mr. Cook could obtain a similar break this time, and the tariffs Mr.
Trump proposed were more severe. As the Trump administration increased its
taxes on Chinese goods, Wall Street analysts said Apple might have to increase
the price of its iPhones from $1,000 to more than $1,600.
The threat
of higher iPhone prices caused some Americans to rush to Apple stores to buy
new phones. Others raced to buy computers and tablets that were made in China.
Apple did
not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Apple’s
iPhone quickly became a symbol of the tit-for-tat over tariffs with China. On
Sunday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick appeared on CBS’s “Face the Nation”
and said the tariffs would result in an “army of millions and millions of
people screwing in little, little screws to make iPhones” in the United States.
Ms. Leavitt said later in the week that Mr. Trump believed that the United
States had the resources to make iPhones for Apple.
“Apple has
invested $500 billion here in the United States,” she said. “So if Apple didn’t
think the United States could do it, they probably wouldn’t have put up that
big chunk of change.”
Apple has
faced questions about moving some iPhone manufacturing to the United States for
more than a decade. In 2011, President Obama asked Steve Jobs, Apple’s
co-founder, what it would take to make the company’s best-selling product in
the United States rather than China. In 2016, Mr. Trump also pressured Apple to
change its position.
Mr. Cook has
remained steadfast in his commitment to China and has said the United States
doesn’t have enough skilled manufacturing workers to compete with China.
“In the
U.S., you could have a meeting of tooling engineers, and I’m not sure we could
fill the room,” he said at a conference in late 2017. “In China, you could fill
multiple football fields.”
Additional
tariffs on semiconductors and other electronics could come in the next few
weeks or months. The administration has signaled it is considering such tariffs
under a legal statute known as Section 232, alongside other tariffs on imported
pharmaceuticals.
The
president has already used the statute to put a 25 percent tariff on imported
steel, aluminum and automobiles, and is weighing similar steps for imported
lumber and copper. All of those sectors were given exemptions from the
so-called reciprocal tariffs that the president announced on April 2.
Speaking to
reporters the next day, the president said that other tariffs on chips would be
“starting very soon,” adding that the administration was also looking at
tariffs on pharmaceuticals. “We’ll be announcing that sometime in the near
future,” he said. “It’s under review right now.”
The other
tariffs that the Trump administration has applied through Section 232
investigations have been set at 25 percent — much lower than the 145 percent
tariff currently in place for many products from China.
Maggie
Haberman contributed reporting.
Tripp Mickle
reports on Apple and Silicon Valley for The Times and is based in San
Francisco. His focus on Apple includes product launches, manufacturing issues
and political challenges. He also writes about trends across the tech industry,
including layoffs, generative A.I. and robot taxis.
Ana Swanson
covers trade and international economics for The Times and is based in
Washington. She has been a journalist for more than a decade.
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