The Conversation: Trump's tariffs threaten the future of innovation
Lecturer in Economics explores how President Donald Trump's new tariffs risk destabilising global innovation, and why UK tech firms could suffer collateral damage, in his first article for .
US (United States of America) president Donald Trump鈥檚 15% baseline tariffs on EU (European Union) imports may read like a throwback to old-school protectionism, designed to safeguard American jobs and manufacturing. But in today鈥檚 globalised and digitally driven economy, the risk isn鈥檛 just to steel or car factories, it鈥檚 to innovation itself.
The world鈥檚 most advanced technologies rely on complex, deeply integrated . shows that even temporary US tariff shocks disrupted relationships between firms. And these tariffs won鈥檛 just hit the EU. They will disrupt the high-value tech ecosystems of partners like the UK 鈥 especially firms contributing to artificial intelligence (AI), semiconductor design and cybersecurity.
These industries underpin national resilience, data security and the competitiveness of advanced economies. For the UK, which often positions itself as a global innovation hub post-Brexit, the fallout could be significant.
Take ARM Holdings, the Cambridge-based semiconductor giant whose chip designs power and an increasing share of AI infrastructure.
ARM doesn鈥檛 manufacture chips itself. Instead, it licenses its architecture to firms like Apple, Nvidia and Qualcomm. That makes it a prime example of the UK鈥檚 value in the global innovation chain: high intellectual property (IP), low carbon footprint, huge reach.
ARM鈥檚 position as a vital link in the supply chain underlines another point. Trade policy aimed at traditional manufacturing sectors can inadvertently destabilise tech-intensive, IP-led sectors like semiconductors and software. This is echoed examining global tariff spill overs on tech competitiveness.
If tariffs are applied to components or design work linked to traded goods that cross EU or UK borders en route to US manufacturers, it introduces a layer of risk and cost to innovative firms and their global partners.
Even if a company鈥檚 work isn鈥檛 directly taxed, the uncertainty and red tape may make US firms think twice about sourcing from outside US jurisdictions. While Trump might present that as a victory for American manufacturing, in reality it could raise costs for US producers, damage innovation and make US firms less competitive in the industries he aims to protect.
It鈥檚 not just the giants at risk. In the UK, Cambridge鈥檚 wider tech cluster, sometimes called 鈥淪ilicon Fen鈥, is home to dozens of ambitious . With operations spanning the UK, EU and US, companies like this depend on fast, flexible and trusted international partnerships to develop, deploy and refine their products. Tariff-related disruptions make collaboration harder at a time when speed is a competitive advantage.
This is not hypothetical. Tariffs reduce access to large markets 鈥 and when markets shrink, in research and innovation.
What Trump gets wrong
Trump鈥檚 broader narrative suggests tariffs can bring back jobs and restore industrial power to the US. But innovation doesn鈥檛 work like that. A semiconductor isn鈥檛 made in one place. A cybersecurity system isn鈥檛 built by a single team. These are networked, iterative processes, involving researchers, suppliers, data centres and talent pools across continents. Disrupt that flow and you slow progress.
The UK is especially exposed because of its unique post-Brexit positioning. It trades independently from the EU but is still tightly intertwined with it, particularly in tech sectors.
Many UK firms use EU distribution centres to reach the US market or collaborate with EU partners on joint projects involving data, hardware or software This reflects the fact that the UK remains tightly integrated into European supply and value chains 鈥 exporting of goods and services to the EU in 2024 alone. Tariffs targeting the EU could easily catch UK-originated components or design work as collateral damage.
that Trump鈥檚 proposed tariffs could reduce EU-US trade volumes across multiple sectors, particularly in tech, where integrated production routes are standard.
Small and medium-sized enterprises and start-ups may find themselves most vulnerable. These firms typically can鈥檛 absorb sudden cost increases or legal complexities. Nor can they easily switch suppliers or reroute through different customs zones.
If you鈥檙e an early-stage AI company relying on a specific chip from Germany and a US cloud partner to train your model, a 15% tariff adds months of delays and thousands of pounds in costs, just to maintain the status quo.
From a policy perspective, the impact goes deeper. The UK government has , and as pillars of economic growth. But these industries are only as strong as the networks that sustain them. If global fragmentation accelerates, the UK risks losing its role as a bridge between the US and the EU.
Meanwhile, countries like continue to invest heavily in consolidating their innovation supply chains, from chip manufacturing to AI research, particularly in efforts to secure domestic control over advanced technologies and semiconductors. This is something that the US and EU have only recently begun to .
In the short term, Trump鈥檚 tariff strategy may boost US customs revenue, which is up (拢38 billion) a month by some estimates.
But this is not 鈥渇ree money鈥. These revenues are largely absorbed by businesses and ultimately passed on to consumers through higher prices, or to smaller suppliers through squeezed .
More fundamentally, it represents a belief that economic strength comes from protection rather than connection. But innovation has never worked that way. It thrives on collaboration, trust and scale. Tariffs may be politically effective, but economically they are the equivalent of building firewalls between teams that are supposed to be co-writing the future.
As the UK charts its post-Brexit global role, aligning itself with open, innovation-driven economies should be a priority. That means standing up for the integrity of global tech supply chains and recognising that disruption to one part of the system can reverberate far beyond its intended target.
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