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this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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Pretty sure that's their point. Say a product costs $100 dollars with no tariffs. If you import the product from the EU with a 15% tariff, it's now $115 with tariffs (assuming no tariffs importing the chips into the EU). If you manufacture the product in the US, you need to pay 100% tariffs for all the chips. Obviously the impact depends on how much the chips cost relative to the entire product, but if the chips are half the cost ($50), then with a 100% tariff you're now paying $150 for the product manufactured in the US.
Surely the tariff would apply separately, so the imported cost would be $157.50 ($50 chip @ 100% tariff + $50 everything else @ 15% tariff).
If they didn't apply separately, the tariff would be trivial to dodge.
Incorrect. Once again, tariffs are only for imported products. That's how tariffs work.
I'm convinced you're a troll/bot. That is not in fact how tariffs work since the chips are not made in the US.