A Tariff Wall for Chips: A Mad Plan or a Stroke of Genius?
Let’s be honest, when you first hear about a plan to slap a 100% tariff on anything, your first thought is probably, “That’s completely mad.” My second thought, as an investor, is usually, “Where’s the opportunity?” And Donald Trump’s proposal to effectively double the price of foreign-made semiconductors is nothing if not an opportunity for a bit of chaos. It’s a policy so blunt, so aggressive, it feels less like delicate economic statecraft and more like taking a sledgehammer to a global supply chain. But sometimes, a sledgehammer is precisely what’s needed to get things moving.
The logic, if you can call it that, is brutally simple. If a chip from Taiwan costs a company ten quid, this tariff would make it twenty. Suddenly, a domestically produced American chip costing, say, fifteen quid, looks like an absolute bargain. It’s protectionism in its most undiluted form. The aim isn’t just to nudge manufacturers, it’s to shove them towards building on American soil. For decades, the West has happily outsourced this critical industry. Now, it seems the bill for that convenience is coming due, and this tariff is one heck of a way to pay it.