US, Taiwan reach trade deal focused on semiconductors, US Commerce Department says

US, Taiwan reach trade deal focused on semiconductors, US Commerce Department says

WASHINGTON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Taiwan clinched a trade deal on Thursday that cuts ​tariffs on many of the semiconductor powerhouse's ‌exports, directs new investments in the U.S. technology industry and risks ‌infuriating China.

The deal deepens the Trump administration's ties with Taipei at a critical time as China ratchets up pressure on the island and Washington has worked to avoid ⁠an all-out trade ‌war with Beijing.

Under the long-negotiated deal, Taiwanese chipmakers like TSMC that expand U.S. production ‍will get a lower tax rate for semiconductors they import into the U.S.

And a set of broad tariffs that apply ​to most other Taiwanese exports to the U.S. ‌will be lowered, from 20% to 15%. Generic pharmaceuticals, aircraft components and "unavailable natural resources" will face a 0% tariff, the Commerce Department said.

In exchange, Taiwanese technology companies, such as TSMC, are expected to make investments totaling ⁠at least $250 billion to increase ​production of semiconductors, energy and ​artificial intelligencein the United States. That includes $100 billion already committed by TSMC in 2025, with ‍more to come, ⁠according to U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

Taiwan will also guarantee another $250 billion in credit to make ⁠additional investments possible, the Trump administration said.

(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, David ‌Lawder, Stephen Nellis, Ismail Shakil and Christian ‌Martinez; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

 

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