Listeners, welcome back to Taiwan Tariff News and Tracker, where we break down how Washington’s trade fights are reshaping Taiwan’s place in the global economy. Let’s start with the big backdrop: the Trump administration’s 10 percent global tariff on almost all U.S. imports, imposed under Section 122, is still in force and being collected on goods from virtually every major trading partner, including Taiwan. VitalLaw reports that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recently granted the administration a stay in the main legal challenge, allowing this 10 percent tariff to remain in place while the case proceeds. Vision Times adds that, under current policy, this global tariff is scheduled to expire on July 24, but for now it is fully active and baked into the cost of importing Taiwanese products into the U.S. That 10 percent global duty sits on top of older, product‑specific tariffs and is one of the reasons U.S. tariff revenues have surged. Economic updates, such as those summarized by Lankabangla Securities, note that new and ongoing U.S. tariffs have pushed up prices across durable goods and consumer products, feeding inflation pressures. For Taiwanese exporters in electronics, machinery, and consumer tech, this means their goods face higher landed costs in the U.S. market even if there is no Taiwan‑specific tariff hike. On top of that baseline, there is a new, Taiwan‑focused threat brewing in Washington. SEKO Logistics reports that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative has launched a sweeping Section 301 “forced labor” action covering 60 economies. As part of this proposal, USTR is considering an additional 12.5 percent tariff on imports from economies that do not yet have effective forced‑labor bans—and Taiwan is explicitly listed in that 54‑economy group. According to SEKO’s client advisory, this would be a new 12.5 percent Section 301 duty that stacks on top of the existing 10 percent global tariff where applicable. If that proposal is finalized, many Taiwanese goods could suddenly face combined U.S. tariff rates in the low‑to‑mid 20 percent range when the 12.5 percent forced‑labor duty is layered on top of the 10 percent global surcharge. Trade law analysts quoted by SEKO warn that Section 301 duties are additive, not a replacement, so importers need to model “tariff stacking” scenarios now. Procedurally, these forced‑labor tariffs are not yet law, but the clock is ticking. SEKO notes that hearing requests are due June 22, public comments are due July 6, and a hearing is scheduled for July 7. That compressed timeline means Taiwanese firms and U.S. importers relying on Taiwan’s supply chains have only a narrow window to push for exemptions, to document compliance with labor standards, or to argue for narrower product coverage before USTR makes a final decision later this summer. Meanwhile, market observers are already trading on where U.S. tariff policy might land. Prediction platforms like Kalshi are tracking what the U.S. tariff rate on China will be on July 1, reflecting broader uncertainty around Trump‑era tariff strategy going forward. While those markets focus on China, the same policy instincts—using tariffs aggressively, keeping a high baseline rate, and adding targeted Section 301 actions—are being applied across the Indo‑Pacific, with Taiwan increasingly pulled into the net. For listeners in Taiwan’s technology, machinery, and consumer‑goods sectors, the message is clear. First, the current 10 percent global tariff is real, it is being collected today, and appeals have not knocked it out. Second, a proposed 12.5 percent forced‑labor tariff that explicitly includes Taiwan is moving quickly through the USTR process, and if implemented, it could sharply raise the effective U.S. tariff rate on a wide range of Taiwanese exports. Third, the policy environment in Washington remains fluid and politically charged, with tariffs used not just as economic tools, but as leverage on labor, security, and geopolitical issues. We will keep tracking every twist in these tariffs, how they hit specific Taiwanese sectors, and what strategies importers and exporters are using to adapt. Thank you for tuning in to Taiwan Tariff News and Tracker, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q