President Trump may have only come into office mere months ago, but it already has a buzzword—and that word is tariff. While it's unclear if all of Trump's threats to heavily tax imports from various countries into the US will materialise, his administration has already announced a trade policy that includes a 10% tariff on goods imported from China.
Given China's role in technology manufacturing, that's probably bad news for US buyers. Speaking to The Telegraph, Acer CEO Jason Chen has given a simple reaction: «We will have to adjust the end user price to reflect the tariff,» he said. «We think 10 percent probably will be the default price increase because of the import tax. It’s very straightforward.»
While Acer is a Taiwanese company that makes a variety of desktop PCs, laptops, monitors and more, much of its manufacturing is based in China—something it shares with many other hardware providers (via Ars Technica). Chen also said that Acer was starting to consider moving its manufacturing elsewhere, echoing a strategy it began to employ with some of its products during Trump's first term, when similar tariffs were put in place.
It comes as no surprise that major hardware manufacturers would initially react to Trump's tariff-heavy approach by passing on costs to the end consumers. However, while a 10% rise is substantial, it's nothing like as heavy as Trump's previous threat to tax semiconductor, automobile and pharmaceutical imports by 25% or higher, or even slap a 100% tariff on Taiwanese chips.
Those sorts of increased costs strike as harder to pass on to buyers without a significant drop in sales, although these particular tariffs have yet to materialise in cold, hard legislation. Still, the threat alone is likely keeping hardware providers up at night, as it would represent a significant problem for the tech industry as it currently stands.
How much of this is bluster intended to bring companies (and countries) to the negotiating table, or how much is planned
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