US officials are quietly signaling that a promised semiconductor tariff package may not be released as quickly as planned. The developing hesitation comes amid ongoing efforts to stabilize relations with China.
Stakeholders in both government and private industry were privately informed in recent days that tariff implementation may not be imminent. Insiders say key advisers are worried that steep tariffs could disrupt rare earth imports and strain diplomatic progress.
The administration has debated whether immediate tariffs would heighten volatility or risk triggering retaliatory measures. Even so, tariffs remain possible at short notice, and no final decision has been made.
White House representatives reject suggestions that their policy has changed, emphasizing a commitment to manufacturing security. However, officials have remained vague about when tariffs might actually be unveiled.
The political stakes remain high. Raising chip import taxes could increase prices on consumer electronics at a moment when inflation is still troubling households and election pressures loom.
