Overview
- People familiar with the negotiations say a proposed deal would reduce the 20% tariff on Taiwanese goods in exchange for new U.S. investments and Taiwanese personnel from firms like TSMC to expand plants and train American workers.
- The White House called the coverage speculative until President Trump announces a decision, while Taiwan’s premier said the sides are exchanging documents to firm details.
- Training commitments seek to address skilled‑labor shortages that have delayed TSMC’s Arizona project, which its CEO says is taking at least twice as long as comparable builds in Taiwan.
- Officials expect Taiwan’s overall pledge to be smaller than South Korea’s $350 billion and Japan’s $550 billion packages under similar tariff‑reduction arrangements, and semiconductors remain exempt from tariffs.
- Sources note any agreement could draw a reaction from China after Xi Jinping told Trump that Taiwan’s “return to China” is an important matter for Beijing.