this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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The question comes down to whether a phone with a chip in it is subject to the tariff or just raw chips being imported. No one is putting a US chip in it, because US chips don't exist. The foundries to make them don't exist.
If the assembled phone is subject to a "phone" or "general" tariff at 30% and not the 100% chip tariff then it incentivises manufacturing in china vs the US is what I think the OP is saying.
Why wouldn't the tariff apply to chips already in devices? That's the way its always been discussed.
tariffs are over the final product, not the individual components inside that product.
For example Ford was making a cargo van in turkey, but thanks to the chicken tax that they themselves lobbied for, a cargo van made in turkey would have a 25% tariff. Solution: make passenger vans in turkey, import them with 0% tariff, then pay an american to remove and send the passenger seats to the landfill and get a cargo van
That's not correct.
That's how this import tax work.
Ever wondered why converse shoes have felt on the sole? Because in this way they're "by tariff definition" slippers, and slippers have less tax than shoes.
https://www.upworthy.com/why-converse-have-felt-lining