Rejoice, US consumers! The Biden administration reportedly won't include Trump-era tariffs on hardware imports such as GPUs from China, and the process has been delayed now.
Well, news surrounding the imposition of Trump-era tariffs started to gain traction during the first days of 2024 since the government encountered deadlines to decide on its policy toward Chinese hardware imports. For a quick rundown on the tariffs, it was said that hardware imports directly from China would face a 25% tariff, including GPUs, AI-based accelerators, and multiple other components, since the Trump administration at that time wanted to reduce Chinese influence over the nation. With Biden's government, the tariffs were halted, and the situation looks to continue like this.
Last week, we mentioned how the US Trade Representative (USTR) issued a notice stating they were ready to impose the new taxation policy. However, a crucial detail in the USTR notice was missed, which stated that the tariffs would be effective by 31 May 2025, almost a year from now. The USTR themselves clarified the issue, and interestingly, ASRock approached PCMag on the issue as well, explaining the government's stance.
Well, the above statement does show that while certain products will oversee the tariff imposition, the government states that "printed circuit assemblies for rendering images onto computer screens ('graphics processing modules')" will receive an exemption, hinting towards the fact that PC components such as GPUs and motherboards from China won't be subjective to the new tariff policy, which is a massive sigh of relief for domestic consumers and sellers as well. Companies like ZOTAC and MSI were expected to see massive rises
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