The trade war has entered the silicon age. In a move citing “National Security,” President Donald Trump has signed an executive order imposing a punishing 25% tariff on high-performance AI chips, specifically targeting industry giants Nvidia and AMD.
The order, released by the White House on Wednesday, effectively taxes the engines of the modern economy. It targets chips like the Nvidia H200 and AMD MI325X—the hardware that powers everything from ChatGPT to autonomous weapons systems. The administration argues that the US is dangerously reliant on foreign supply chains (specifically Taiwan) and needs to force domestic manufacturing.
“Economic Suicide” or Masterstroke?
Silicon Valley is reeling. Shares of Nvidia and Qualcomm dipped in after-hours trading as the market digested the news. “This is a tax on innovation,” warned Yoshua Bengio, a pioneer in AI safety. “By making the tools of AI more expensive, you are slowing down research and giving an advantage to competitors who don’t face these barriers.”
The Exemptions: In a nod to the reality of the US economy’s dependence on data centers, the White House included exemptions for “strategic infrastructure.” This means Amazon, Microsoft, and Google may dodge the bullet for their cloud servers, but smaller startups and consumer electronics could face immediate price hikes.
The China Factor: This move is the other half of a pincer movement. Combined with the ban on exporting advanced chips to Beijing, Washington is trying to ring-fence the AI revolution. However, experts warn this could bifurcate the tech world into two distinct, incompatible blocs.
Impact on Africa
For Kenya’s budding tech scene, “Silicon Savannah,” this is bad news. Hardware costs are already high due to weak currency and import duties. A global price hike on GPUs will trickle down, making it harder for African startups to train local AI models or run complex data analysis. The cost of the future just went up.