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Explainer | Will Trump’s new industrial policy make a tough global memory chip shortage worse?
The US government warns major memory chipmakers to either pay 100 per cent duties or build their products in America
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Ann Caoin Shanghai
The shortages and associated price increase in the global memory chip sector could potentially intensify, as the US government threatened to impose hefty new tariffs on some major foreign manufacturers.
Speaking at Friday’s groundbreaking ceremony for Micron Technology’s US$100 billion factory in New York, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick warned that memory chipmakers – without naming any company – had two options: “They can pay 100 per cent tariff, or they can build in America.”
Lutnick said tariffs specified under a new trade deal with Taiwan could also apply to semiconductor firms in South Korea under the industrial policy of the administration of US President Donald Trump.
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Here is a view of today’s memory chip landscape.

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