• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
KENNETH RAPOZA: Trump’s Chip Tariffs Must Be Strong, Comprehensive, And Loophole-Free

KENNETH RAPOZA: Trump’s Chip Tariffs Must Be Strong, Comprehensive, And Loophole-Free

September 28, 2025
Trump Shook Up Energy Policy In 2025. Disaster Could Still Strike In 2026.

Trump Shook Up Energy Policy In 2025. Disaster Could Still Strike In 2026.

January 1, 2026
Top Four Times California Burned Taxpayer Dollars

Top Four Times California Burned Taxpayer Dollars

January 1, 2026
LARRY ELDER: Obamacare Was, Is And Will Always Be A Problem

LARRY ELDER: Obamacare Was, Is And Will Always Be A Problem

January 1, 2026
Leftist Nonprofit Behemoth Got $37.8 Million In Taxpayer Money In Year Before Trump’s Return

Leftist Nonprofit Behemoth Got $37.8 Million In Taxpayer Money In Year Before Trump’s Return

January 1, 2026
Epstein Prison Videos Raise More Questions Than Provide Answers

Epstein Prison Videos Raise More Questions Than Provide Answers

January 1, 2026
Breaking Down Trump’s 2025 Immigration Enforcement Numbers

Breaking Down Trump’s 2025 Immigration Enforcement Numbers

January 1, 2026
Democrats Are Looking To Flip Control Of Congress In 2026. These Nasty Primary Battles Could Get In The Way

Democrats Are Looking To Flip Control Of Congress In 2026. These Nasty Primary Battles Could Get In The Way

January 1, 2026
These GOP Ex-Lawmakers Want Voters To Send Them Back To DC In 2026

These GOP Ex-Lawmakers Want Voters To Send Them Back To DC In 2026

January 1, 2026
Trump Finds Exercise ‘Boring’, Touts ‘Good Genetics’

Trump Finds Exercise ‘Boring’, Touts ‘Good Genetics’

January 1, 2026
Trump Calls George Clooney ’an Average Guy Who Complained’

Trump Calls George Clooney ’an Average Guy Who Complained’

January 1, 2026
We Know Shockingly Little About The Company Approved To Distribute Abortion Drugs In New Year

We Know Shockingly Little About The Company Approved To Distribute Abortion Drugs In New Year

January 1, 2026
Here’s How The US Economy Really Fared Under Trump In 2025

Here’s How The US Economy Really Fared Under Trump In 2025

January 1, 2026
  • Donald Trump
  • Tariffs
  • Congress
  • Faith
  • Immigration
Thursday, January 1, 2026
  • Login
IJR
  • Politics
  • US News
  • Commentary
  • World News
  • Faith
  • Latest Polls
No Result
View All Result
IJR
No Result
View All Result
Home Commentary

KENNETH RAPOZA: Trump’s Chip Tariffs Must Be Strong, Comprehensive, And Loophole-Free

by Daily Caller News Foundation
September 28, 2025 at 1:42 pm
in Commentary, Op-Ed, Wire
243 10
0
KENNETH RAPOZA: Trump’s Chip Tariffs Must Be Strong, Comprehensive, And Loophole-Free
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Daily Caller News Foundation

President Trump has been clear that tariffs — not unchecked government spending — are the most effective way to rebuild American industry. While he has criticized spending programs like the CHIPS Act, his Commerce Department’s pending semiconductor tariffs are the necessary complement to those investments. Without tariffs, taxpayer-supported fabs risk standing idle, while multinational companies continue sourcing their chips from Asia.

The Commerce Department initiated its Section 232 investigation into semiconductor imports in April. Section 232 is a national security statute that empowers the president to impose tariffs if imports threaten U.S. security. Under President Trump, economic security is national security — and semiconductors are the most critical technology of the 21st century. Trump has floated tariffs of up to 100% on chips, with findings expected from Commerce by late December.

Tariffs are not only about protecting national security — they are about creating demand. Without demand, new U.S. fabs risk becoming white elephants. We have already seen warning signs: Samsung has delayed its $44 billion Texas fab, citing “no customers.” Intel, Micron, Texas Instruments, and even Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC) are all building in the U.S., but without tariffs, the default option for Apple, Dell, HP, and Lenovo is to keep buying chips from Taiwan and South Korea. Tariffs change the economics: buy from U.S. fabs or pay the duty. That is the essence of a chip-for-chip policy.

Some exemptions have already been floated. Apple, for example, reportedly secured a temporary break for finished products like iPhones and laptops. That kind of carve-out is dangerous. It creates a perverse situation where Apple can import a MacBook assembled in Asia duty-free but pay tariffs on inputs it might otherwise source for making laptops in Texas.

If exemptions are unavoidable, they must have strict guardrails. Commerce should limit quota concessions to companies that are actively investing in U.S. fabs, they should tie exemptions to projects on track — temporary only until U.S. fabs come online — and they should claw back benefits if companies fail to fulfill investment pledges. Empty promises of future spending cannot be a get-out-of-tariff-free card.

Most semiconductor imports don’t arrive as raw chips — they arrive embedded in finished products. In 2024, the U.S. imported $140 billion in computers but only $40 billion in chips. If we tax raw chips but allow assembled boards, line cards, and laptops to come in duty-free, U.S. companies will just buy the finished goods abroad. That accelerates offshoring instead of reshoring. The tariff design must apply both to raw chips and the chip value inside finished devices.

The CHIPS Act alone is not enough.

Without tariffs, it risks becoming a subsidy program for fabs that produce here but ship their chips back to Asia for assembly into final products. A comprehensive strategy requires three pillars: CHIPS Act incentives to build fabs, Section 232 tariffs to guarantee demand for those fabs, and tariffs on downstream products to prevent finished goods from undercutting U.S. assembly. Why import a motherboard and pay a tariff, when you can import the whole computer without a tariff?

This three-pillar strategy is how China has captured the global market: combining incentives with protection to build a complete, soup-to-nuts domestic supply chain. It’s one of the reasons why the U.S. is so dependent on China for manufactured goods.

Commerce will need to be careful with sectors like medical devices, which rely on chips but are manufactured in the U.S. today. Section 232 allows for surgical carve-outs, but these should be narrowly drawn.

The broader point is clear: chips are in everything from smartphones to MRI machines to fighter jets. Securing semiconductor supply chains is inseparable from securing U.S. national and economic security.

Tariffs are not a blunt tool — they are a targeted way to disrupt the Asia-centered model of global manufacturing. Combined with CHIPS Act incentives, they tell global tech companies: if you want to sell into the U.S. market, you must invest in America. That’s how Washington disrupts the Asia-pivot. If not, we risk the U.S. simply being the country that only innovates while Asia does all the work, until the point where they can out-innovate you and build it, too.

Commerce must make these tariffs strong, understandable, and loophole-free. A tariff strategy, coupled with CHIPS Act tax breaks, is how we maintain leadership in the most important industry of the future.

Kenneth Rapoza is a former Wall Street Journal reporter based in Brazil and a longtime chronicler of the BRIC economies for Forbes. He is now an industry analyst at the Coalition for a Prosperous America.

 The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

(Featured Image Media Credit: Screenshot/X/Daily Caller)

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

Tags: big-tent-ideasDCNFU.S. News
Share196Tweet123
Daily Caller News Foundation

Daily Caller News Foundation

Advertisements

Top Stories June 10th
Top Stories June 7th
Top Stories June 6th
Top Stories June 3rd
Top Stories May 30th
Top Stories May 29th
Top Stories May 24th
Top Stories May 23rd
Top Stories May 21st
Top Stories May 17th

Join Over 6M Subscribers

We’re organizing an online community to elevate trusted voices on all sides so that you can be fully informed.





IJR

    Copyright © 2024 IJR

Trusted Voices On All Sides

  • About Us
  • GDPR Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Editorial Standards & Corrections Policy
  • Subscribe to IJR

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Thanks for reading IJR

Create your free account or log in to continue reading

Please enter a valid email
Forgot password?

By providing your information, you are entitled to Independent Journal Review`s email news updates free of charge. You also agree to our Privacy Policy and newsletter email usage

No Result
View All Result
  • Politics
  • US News
  • Commentary
  • World News
  • Faith
  • Latest Polls

    Copyright © 2024 IJR

Top Stories June 10th Top Stories June 7th Top Stories June 6th Top Stories June 3rd Top Stories May 30th Top Stories May 29th Top Stories May 24th Top Stories May 23rd Top Stories May 21st Top Stories May 17th