What changes to the CHIPS act could mean for AI growth and consumers
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[February 17, 2025] By
SARAH PARVINI
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Even as he's vowed to push the United States ahead in
artificial intelligence research, President Donald Trump's threats to
alter federal government contracts with chipmakers and slap new tariffs
on the semiconductor industry may put new speed bumps in front of the
tech industry.
Since taking office, Trump has said he would place tariffs on foreign
production of computer chips and semiconductors in order to return chip
manufacturing to the U.S. The president and Republican lawmakers have
also threatened to end the CHIPS and Science Act, a sweeping Biden
administration-era law that also sought to boost domestic production.
But economic experts have warned that Trump's dual-pronged approach
could slow, or potentially harm, the administration's goal of ensuring
that the U.S. maintains a competitive edge in artificial intelligence
research.
Saikat Chaudhuri, an expert on corporate growth and innovation at U.C.
Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, called Trump’s derision of the CHIPS
Act surprising because one of the biggest bottlenecks for the
advancement of AI has been chip production. Most countries, Chaudhuri
said, are trying to encourage chip production and the import of chips at
favorable rates.
“We have seen what the shortage has done in everything from AI to even
cars,” he said. “In the pandemic, cars had to do with fewer or less
powerful chips in order to just deal with the supply constraints.”
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The Biden administration helped shepherd in the law following supply
disruptions that occurred after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic —
when a shortage of chips stalled factory assembly lines and fueled
inflation — threatened to plunge the U.S. economy into recession. When
pushing for the investment, lawmakers also said they were concerned
about efforts by China to control Taiwan, which accounts for more than
90% of advanced computer chip production.
As of August 2024, the CHIPS and Science Act had provided $30 billion in
support for 23 projects in 15 states that would add 115,000
manufacturing and construction jobs, according to the Commerce
Department. That funding helped to draw in private capital and would
enable the U.S. to produce 30% of the world’s most advanced computer
chips, up from 0% when the Biden-Harris administration succeeded Trump’s
first term.
The administration promised tens of billions of dollars to support the
construction of U.S. chip foundries and reduce reliance on Asian
suppliers, which Washington sees as a security weakness. In August, the
Commerce Department pledged to provide up to $6.6 billion so that Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. could expand the facilities it is
already building in Arizona and better ensure that the most advanced
microchips are produced domestically for the first time.
But Trump has said he believes that companies entering into those
contracts with the federal government, such as TSMC, “didn't need money”
in order to prioritize chipmaking in the U.S.
“They needed an incentive. And the incentive is going to be they’re not
going to want to pay at 25, 50 or even 100% tax,” Trump said.
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In this photo released by the Taiwan Presidential Office, Taiwan's
President Lai Ching-te speaks at a press conference after a security
meeting about U.S. President Trump's tariffs on trade partners and
semiconductors at the Presidential office in Taipei, Friday, Feb.
14, 2025. (Taiwan Presidential Office via AP)
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TSMC held board meetings for the first time in the U.S. last week. Trump
has signaled that if companies want to avoid tariffs they have to build
their plants in the U.S. — without help from the government. Taiwan also
dispatched two senior economic affairs officials to Washington to meet
with the Trump administration in a bid to potentially fend off a 100%
tariff Trump has threatened to impose on chips.
If the Trump administration does levy tariffs, Chaudhuri said, one
immediate concern is that prices of goods that use semiconductors and
chips will rise because the higher costs associated with tariffs are
typically passed to consumers.
“Whether it’s your smartphone, whether it’s your gaming device, whether
it’s your smart fridge — probably also your smart features of your car —
anything and everything we use nowadays has a chip in it," he said. “For
consumers, it’s going to be rather painful. Manufacturers are not going
to be able to absorb that.”
Even tech giants such as Nvidia will eventually feel the pain of
tariffs, he said, despite their margins being high enough to absorb
costs at the moment.
“They’re all going to be affected by this negatively,” he said. “I can’t
see anybody benefiting from this except for those countries who jump on
the bandwagon competitively and say, ‘You know what, we’re going to
introduce something like the CHIPS Act.’”
Broadly based tariffs would be a shot in the foot of the U.S. economy,
said Brett House, a professor of professional practice at Columbia
Business School. Tariffs would not only raise the costs for businesses
and households across the board, he said — for the U.S. AI sector, they
would massively increase the costs of one of their most important
inputs: high-powered chips from abroad.
“If you cut off, repeal or threaten the CHIPS Act at the same time as
you’re putting in broadly based tariffs on imports of AI and other
computer technology, you would be hamstringing the industry acutely,”
House said.
Such tariffs would reduce the capacity to create a domestic chip
building sector, sending a signal for future investments that the policy
outlook is uncertain, he said. That would in turn put a chilling effect
on new allocations of capital to the industry in the U.S. while making
more expensive the existing flow of imported chips.
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“American technological industrial leadership has always been supported
by maintaining openness to global markets and to immigration and labor
flows," he said. "And shutting that openness down has never been a
recipe for American success.”
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Associated Press writers Josh Boak and Didi Tang in Washington
contributed to this report.
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