Trump Administration Pushes TSMC and Taiwan to Expand US Chip Manufacturing and Train American Workers

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
The Trump administration is negotiating with Taiwan to secure more investment in US semiconductor manufacturing and establish workforce training programs, as TSMC faces ongoing challenges with its Arizona facilities.

Taiwan Asked to Bring Chip Expertise Stateside

The Trump administration is pushing Taiwan to do more than just build factories on American soil. According to Reuters, citing sources familiar with the negotiations, the White House wants Taiwan—including chip manufacturing giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM)—to invest more heavily in US operations and help train American workers in the complex art of advanced semiconductor production.

The proposal would have Taiwanese firms send both capital and experienced personnel to expand their US footprint. It's essentially asking Taiwan to export not just its technology, but its know-how.

White House spokesman Kush Desai kept things vague when asked about the negotiations, telling Reuters that "until the president announces something, everything else is speculation."

Tariff Relief on the Table

Taiwan isn't doing this out of pure goodwill. The country's exports currently face a 20% US tariff, and Taipei is angling for reductions similar to the deals recently negotiated with Japan and South Korea.

While Taiwan's total investment commitment would be smaller than those countries, officials say the deal would include something unique: support for developing US science parks modeled after Taiwan's highly successful semiconductor clusters. These industrial parks have been instrumental in Taiwan's dominance of the global chip industry.

Speaking to reporters in Taipei on Wednesday, Taiwan Premier Cho Jung-tai said both sides are now exchanging documents to nail down specific terms.

"It is very difficult for other countries to do this kind of work, because only we have this concept, practice, and track record of service parks, which allows us to undertake this kind of initiative in the United States," he said.

That's a polite way of saying Taiwan has something nobody else can easily replicate—decades of experience building the ecosystem that supports cutting-edge chip manufacturing.

TSMC's Numbers Tell a Different Story

While TSMC may be struggling with its Arizona expansion, the company's financial performance remains robust. Earlier this month, TSMC reported strong October results that show sustained demand for advanced chips.

The company posted consolidated net revenue of approximately 367.47 billion New Taiwan dollars for October 2025, representing a 16.9% increase from the same month last year and an 11.0% jump from the previous quarter.

For the January through October period, revenue totaled 3.13 trillion New Taiwan dollars—a 33.8% increase compared with the same period in 2024.

Despite these impressive numbers, TSMC still faces real challenges adapting its finely tuned manufacturing processes to American facilities and workforce. The Trump administration's push for more training support suggests those difficulties haven't gone unnoticed in Washington.

Trump Administration Pushes TSMC and Taiwan to Expand US Chip Manufacturing and Train American Workers

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
The Trump administration is negotiating with Taiwan to secure more investment in US semiconductor manufacturing and establish workforce training programs, as TSMC faces ongoing challenges with its Arizona facilities.

Taiwan Asked to Bring Chip Expertise Stateside

The Trump administration is pushing Taiwan to do more than just build factories on American soil. According to Reuters, citing sources familiar with the negotiations, the White House wants Taiwan—including chip manufacturing giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM)—to invest more heavily in US operations and help train American workers in the complex art of advanced semiconductor production.

The proposal would have Taiwanese firms send both capital and experienced personnel to expand their US footprint. It's essentially asking Taiwan to export not just its technology, but its know-how.

White House spokesman Kush Desai kept things vague when asked about the negotiations, telling Reuters that "until the president announces something, everything else is speculation."

Tariff Relief on the Table

Taiwan isn't doing this out of pure goodwill. The country's exports currently face a 20% US tariff, and Taipei is angling for reductions similar to the deals recently negotiated with Japan and South Korea.

While Taiwan's total investment commitment would be smaller than those countries, officials say the deal would include something unique: support for developing US science parks modeled after Taiwan's highly successful semiconductor clusters. These industrial parks have been instrumental in Taiwan's dominance of the global chip industry.

Speaking to reporters in Taipei on Wednesday, Taiwan Premier Cho Jung-tai said both sides are now exchanging documents to nail down specific terms.

"It is very difficult for other countries to do this kind of work, because only we have this concept, practice, and track record of service parks, which allows us to undertake this kind of initiative in the United States," he said.

That's a polite way of saying Taiwan has something nobody else can easily replicate—decades of experience building the ecosystem that supports cutting-edge chip manufacturing.

TSMC's Numbers Tell a Different Story

While TSMC may be struggling with its Arizona expansion, the company's financial performance remains robust. Earlier this month, TSMC reported strong October results that show sustained demand for advanced chips.

The company posted consolidated net revenue of approximately 367.47 billion New Taiwan dollars for October 2025, representing a 16.9% increase from the same month last year and an 11.0% jump from the previous quarter.

For the January through October period, revenue totaled 3.13 trillion New Taiwan dollars—a 33.8% increase compared with the same period in 2024.

Despite these impressive numbers, TSMC still faces real challenges adapting its finely tuned manufacturing processes to American facilities and workforce. The Trump administration's push for more training support suggests those difficulties haven't gone unnoticed in Washington.

    Trump Administration Pushes TSMC and Taiwan to Expand US Chip Manufacturing and Train American Workers - MarketDash News