US pushes Vietnam to decouple from Chinese tech sources say
HANOI - The United States is pushing Vietnam in tariff talks to reduce the use of Chinese tech in devices that are assembled in the country before they are exported to America, three people briefed on the matter said.
Vietnam is home to large manufacturing operations of tech firms such as Apple and Samsung, which often rely on components made in China.
Meta and Google also have contractors in Vietnam that produce goods such as virtual-reality headsets and smartphones.
The South-east Asian nation has been organising meetings with local businesses to boost the supply of Vietnamese parts, with firms showing willingness to cooperate but also warning that they would need time and technology to do so, according to one person with knowledge of the discussions.
The Trump administration has threatened Vietnam with crippling tariffs of 46 per cent, which could significantly limit access for Vietnam-made goods to their main market and upend the communist-run country’s export-oriented growth model.
Vietnam has been asked “to reduce its dependency on Chinese high-tech”, said one person familiar with the discussions.
“That is part of the restructuring of supply chains and would, in turn, reduce US dependency on Chinese components,” the person added.
The ultimate objective is to speed up US decoupling from Chinese high-tech while increasing Vietnam’s industrial capacity, a second person said, citing virtual-reality devices as an example of Vietnam-assembled products that are too dependent on Chinese technology.
All sources declined to be identified as the discussions were confidential.
Reuters was not able to learn if the US has proposed numerical targets such as caps on Chinese content for “Made in Vietnam” goods, or different tariff rates based on the amount of Chinese content.
Apple, Samsung, Meta and Google did not reply to Reuters requests for comment.
As the US-imposed deadline of July
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