The US government has granted tariff exclusions for smartphones, computers and other electronics imported largely from China, sparing them from President Donald Trump’s steep 125% reciprocal duties.In a notice to shippers, the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency published a list of tariff codes that will be excluded from the duties.The exclusions are retroactive to 12.01am EDT (0401 GMT) on April 5.The US CBP listed 20 product categories, including the very broad 8471 code for all computers, laptops, disc drives and automatic data processing.It included semiconductor devices, equipment, memory chips and flat panel displays.The notice did not provide an explanation for the Trump administration’s move, but the late-night exclusion provides welcome relief to major US technology firms, including Apple , Dell Technologies and many other importers.Trump’s action also excludes the specified electronics from his 10% “baseline” tariffs on goods from most countries other than China, easing import costs for semiconductors from Taiwan and Apple iPhones produced in India.For the Chinese imports, the exclusion only applies to Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, which climbed to 125% this week, according to a White House official.Trump’s prior 20% duties on all Chinese imports that he said were related to the US fentanyl crisis remain in place.However, the official said Trump will launch a new national security trade investigation into semiconductors soon that could lead to other new tariffs on the sector.Separately, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that Trump has made it clear that the US cannot rely on China to manufacture critical technologies such as semiconductors, chips, smartphones, and laptops.However, she said that at Trump’s direction, major tech firms, including Apple and chipmakers Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor “are hustling to onshore their manufacturing in the United States as soon as possible”.The exemptions suggest an increasing awareness within the Trump administration of the pain that his tariffs had in store for inflation-weary consumers, especially on popular products such as smartphones, laptops and other electronics.Even at a lower 54% tariff rate on Chinese imports, analysts predicted that the price of a top-end Apple iPhone could jump to $2,300 from $1,599.At 125%, economists and analysts have said that US-China trade could largely halt.Smartphones were the top US import from China in 2024, totalling $41.7bn, while Chinese-built laptop computers were second, at $33.1bn, according to US Census Bureau data.Trump ran to win back the White House last year largely on a promise to bring down prices that, fuelled by inflation from the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic and Russia’s war in Ukraine, had rocketed and tarnished the economic reputation of former president Joe Biden and his Democratic allies.However, Trump also promised as a candidate to impose the tariffs that have become a central part of his economic agenda, and the president has dismissed the turbulence in financial markets and expected price increases arising from the levies as a disturbance that was a necessary part of realigning the global economy and world trading order with his vision.His so-called “reciprocal tariffs”, however, raised fears of a US recession and drew criticism from his fellow Republicans, who do not want to lose control of the US House of Representatives and Senate in next year’s congressional elections to Democrats, who have sharply attacked Trump’s policies.Trump paused higher duty rates for 57 trading partners and the EU last week, leaving most countries with a 10% tariff as they seek to negotiate trade deals with Washington.Trump, who is spending the weekend at his residence in Florida, told reporters on Friday that he was comfortable with the high tariffs on China but had a good relationship with President Xi Jinping and believed something positive would come out of the trade conflict between them.However, financial markets were in turmoil again on Friday as China matched Trump’s latest tariff increase on US imports to 125%, raising the stakes in a trade war that threatens to upend global supply chains.US stocks ended a volatile week higher, but the safe haven of gold hit a record high during the session and benchmark US 10-year government bond yields posted their biggest weekly increase since 2001 alongside a slump in the dollar, signalling a lack of confidence in the US.Adding to the pressure on Trump, Wall Street billionaires – including a number of his own supporters – have openly criticised the whole tariff strategy as damaging and counter-productive.Daniel Ives, senior equity analyst at Wedbush Securities, called the US exemptions the “best news possible” for tech investors.The exclusions remove “a huge black cloud” that had threatened to take the US tech sector “back a decade” and significantly slow artificial intelligence (AI) development, Ives said in a note.Many of the exempted products, including hard drives and computer processors, are not generally made in the United States and Trump argues tariffs are a way to bring domestic manufacturing back.
