🚨 @POTUS announces a $100 BILLION new investment by TSMC in U.S. chips manufacturing! pic.twitter.com/PtiaxxwMXK
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) March 3, 2025Contents
How Trump’s Tariff Strategy Secured a Semiconductor Deal Worth $100B
In a landmark move for American manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s leading chipmaker, announced a $100 billion investment to expand its U.S. operations, focusing on Arizona as the epicenter of this ambitious project. Unveiled today at the White House alongside President Donald Trump and TSMC CEO C.C. Wei, along with Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnik, and Crypto & AI Czar, David Sacks, this commitment to build five new advanced semiconductor fabrication plants signals a seismic shift in global tech production—and a resounding victory for Trump’s “America First” economic playbook, powered by the strategic use of tariffs.
Lutnik credited Trump’s America First agenda and tariff strategy with the win.
The announcement builds on TSMC’s existing $65 billion investment in Arizona, which began in 2020 during Trump’s first term and has already seen one factory come online. The additional $100 billion pledge, described by Trump as a “tremendous move,” will bring the company’s total U.S. investment to $165 billion. The new facilities aim to produce cutting-edge chips—crucial for everything from smartphones and artificial intelligence to military technology—right on American soil. It’s a bold step toward reducing U.S. reliance on foreign semiconductor supply chains.
Tariffs as the Trump Card
At the heart of this development lies Trump’s tariff strategy, a tool he has wielded to incentivize domestic production. Since taking office in January 2025, Trump has made no secret of his intent to impose steep tariffs—potentially 25% or higher—on semiconductor imports, with threats of even greater increases if foreign manufacturers don’t shift production to the U.S. For TSMC, which supplies giants like Apple, Nvidia, and AMD, the math is simple: building in America sidesteps the punishing costs of tariffs, secures access to the lucrative U.S. market, and aligns with a national security imperative championed by the administration.
“Taiwan pretty much has a monopoly on that market,” Trump said during the announcement, echoing his long-standing critique of foreign dominance in chip production. “We want those companies to come to our country, and that’s exactly what we’re doing.” Unlike subsidies, which Trump has dismissed as unnecessary handouts, tariffs apply pressure directly to the bottom line, compelling companies like TSMC to rethink their global footprint. The result? A $100 billion bet on America, with Arizona poised to become a semiconductor powerhouse.
Arizona: The New Silicon Desert
The choice of Arizona is no accident. TSMC’s initial foray into the state, spurred by Trump’s first-term policies and later bolstered by Biden-era subsidies, has already laid the groundwork. The first Arizona plant, producing 4-nanometer chips, is operational, with yields reportedly surpassing those of similar facilities in Taiwan. The next two factories, part of the earlier $65 billion commitment, will roll out even more advanced 3-nanometer and 2-nanometer chips by 2028. Now, with two additional plants and a packaging operation in the pipeline, TSMC’s Arizona hub is set to create tens of thousands of jobs—6,000 direct high-tech roles and over 20,000 construction and supplier positions—while cementing the U.S. as a leader in next-generation technology.
Critics of Trump’s tariff-heavy approach argue it risks raising costs for consumers and alienating trade partners. Yet supporters, including Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, see it differently. “This is the power of Donald Trump’s presidency,” Lutnick said today. “TSMC isn’t coming here because we begged them with billions—they’re coming to avoid tariffs and secure their future in America.” The administration contends that tariffs, unlike the $6.6 billion in CHIPS Act grants TSMC received under Biden, ensure long-term investment without draining taxpayer coffers.
A Broader Vision for American Dominance
Trump’s tariff strategy extends beyond TSMC. Since January, he has hosted a parade of business leaders at the White House, securing pledges like Apple’s $500 billion U.S. investment and a $500 billion AI infrastructure deal involving OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank. Each move reinforces his narrative: America can reclaim its industrial might not through subsidies, but through economic leverage. “We’re going to produce many chips to support AI progress and smartphones,” TSMC’s Wei said today, thanking customers like Apple and Nvidia while nodding to the administration’s pressure as a catalyst.
The TSMC deal also carries national security weight. With Taiwan producing over 60% of the world’s semiconductors—and 90% of its most advanced chips—U.S. leaders have long worried about exposure to disruptions, whether from natural disasters or Chinese aggression. By bringing production stateside, Trump aims to shrink that risk, a goal he framed as “economic and national security” during the announcement. If successful, the U.S. could leap from producing just 10% of global chips to a far larger share, challenging Asia’s decades-long dominance.
Challenges and Questions Ahead
Still, the road isn’t without bumps. TSMC’s new investments require approval from Taiwan’s government, which remains cautious about exporting its advanced tech. Some analysts question whether the $100 billion figure includes the prior $65 billion commitment or represents entirely new funds—a detail yet to be clarified.
For now, though, the announcement stands as a testament to Trump’s vision for what he calls the “Golden Age of America”. As TSMC’s C.C. Wei joined the president at the White House, the message was clear: America First isn’t just a slogan—it’s a policy delivering concrete results. With Arizona’s desert set to bloom with silicon, the U.S. is one step closer to reclaiming its place at the forefront of the tech world.