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US President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he plans to announce tariffs on imported pharmaceuticals which could reach 200 percent but he would give drugmakers about one year “to get their act together.”
“We’re going to give people about a year, a year and a half to come in and, after that, they’re going to be tariffed,” Trump told reporters, speaking at a meeting of his Cabinet at the White House where he also said he planned tariffs on semiconductor imports.
“If they have to bring the pharmaceuticals into the country ... they’re going to be tariffed at a very, very high rate, like 200 percent. We’ll give them a certain period of time to get their act together,” he said.
“We’re going to be announcing pharmaceuticals, chips and various couple of other things — you know, big ones,” Trump told reporters, while announcing a new tariff rate for copper. He did not offer specifics on when the other announcements would come.
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The Trump administration launched an investigation into the pharmaceutical industry in April as a bid to impose tariffs on the grounds that extensive reliance on foreign production of medicine is a national security threat.
The Commerce Department, which is conducting the investigation, has yet to issue the report.
Details on pharmaceutical tariffs “will come at the end of the month,” Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC after the Cabinet meeting.
“With pharmaceuticals and semiconductors, those studies are being completed at the end of the month, and so the president will then set his policies then, and I’m going to let him wait to decide how he’s going to do it,” Lutnick said.
Drugmakers have argued that tariffs could increase the chance of shortages and reduce access for patients. Still, Trump has pushed for the fees, arguing that the US needs more drug manufacturing so it does not have to rely on other countries for its supply of medicines.
Companies in the industry have lobbied Trump to phase in tariffs on imported pharmaceutical products in hopes of reducing the sting from the charges and to allow time to shift manufacturing.
Drugmakers have global manufacturing footprints, mainly in the US, Europe and Asia, and moving more production to the US involves a major commitment of resources and could take years, they argue.
By Andrea Shalal; Editors: Chris Reese and David Gregorio
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