Skip to main content

Nvidia is asking the Biden administration to lower the price of GPUs

Nvidia and other computing companies are calling on the Biden administration to lower the cost of graphics cards. In several comments sent to the office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), the companies called for an exclusion from the tariffs that could increase graphics card prices by as much as 25%.

In October, the USTR opened comments on the extension of exclusions that came as part of the Trump administration’s tariffs on goods imported from China. In 2020, the Trump administration extended tariffs to semiconductors and printed circuit boards (in this case, graphics cards), fueling the flames of an ongoing trade war with China. These tariffs, at least in part, have been cited as a source of the ongoing GPU shortage.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang on stage.
Nvidia

Graphics cards were given an exclusion on the tariffs, but it expired at the end of 2020. “We support reinstating the exclusion,” a lawyer representing Nvidia said in its comment. “Efforts to create new capacity in countries that presently do not manufacture such products (such as the U.S. and Vietnam) were unsuccessful and were severely hampered by the fallout from COVID-19.”

Recommended Videos

HP joined Nvidia with a comment of its own, saying that “HP strongly supports reinstatement of the exclusion.” Graphics card maker Zotac joined in as well, citing how difficult it is to “source for a right manufacturer to produce products in the United States and/or in third countries beside China.”

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Tariffs are a tax on goods imported from another country, but the country exporting those goods isn’t responsible for paying. The importer — someone in the U.S., in this case — is on the hook for the extra cost, which is usually passed down to consumers. Tariffs are meant to deisincentivize purchasing imported products by making them more expensive than domestic products.

That’s the problem, though: The U.S. doesn’t produce any graphics cards. As Nvidia, Zotac, and HP all point out, the supply chain for graphics cards is almost entirely focused in China and Taiwan. In the case of graphics cards, the tariff doesn’t punish China or Chinese manufacturing. It just makes graphics cards more expensive without a domestic alternative.

It will be several years before the U.S. sees a domestically produced graphics card, if at all. Intel, the current champion of domestic semiconductor manufacturing, is still outsourcing its upcoming Arc Alchemist graphics cards to Taiwan-based chipmaker TSMC. AMD and Nvidia also partner with TSMC for manufacturing, as does Apple.

There’s a good chance that the USTR will extend an exclusion to graphics cards, which should drive down prices. The USTR says that exclusions will be doled out to products based on availability in the U.S., domestic capacity for production, and changes in the supply chain since September 2018. Graphics cards hit all three requirements.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Nvidia just dropped a big hint about the RTX 50-series release date
nvidia rtx 4080 review 12

Speculation has been running rampant about Nvidia's launch of next-gen RTX 50-series GPUs, but the company itself just dropped a big hint about when they may show up. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is set to take the stage as the keynote speaker of CES 2025 on January 6, where there's a good chance we'll hear about Nvidia's next generation of graphics cards.

Although Nvidia is at the annual tech show each year, Huang -- who recently surpassed the worth of all of Intel -- hasn't made an appearance in five years. The executive will likely focus heavily on AI, as it has catapulted Nvidia to become one of the world's wealthiest companies. But RTX 50-series GPUs should make an appearance, too. Nvidia usually takes advantage of CES to launch new graphics cards.

Read more
Prime Day is the perfect time to ditch Nvidia for AMD
AMD's RX 7700 XT in a test bench.

There's no doubt that Nvidia makes some of the best graphics cards you can buy, but if you're shopping Prime Day deals, you'll want to take a careful look at Team Red. There's barely an Nvidia GPU in sight that's on sale, and even among those that are discounted, the prices aren't very good. On the other hand, AMD has cards marked down from already reduced prices, making Prime Day the perfect time to score a deal on a GPU.

By far, the best deal I've found is the XFX Speedster QICK319 RX 7800 XT. You can read more about the card in my RX 7800 XT review, but in short, it trades blows and sometimes even beats Nvidia's $600 RTX 4070 Super. The price right now is insane, too. This model normally sells for $520, but it's 18% off for Prime Day, bringing the price down to $427.

Read more
Nvidia’s CEO — yes, one person — is now worth more than all of Intel
Jensen Huang at GTX 2020.

Nvidia is one of the richest companies in the world, so it's no surprise that the company's CEO, Jensen Huang, is quite wealthy. The most recent net worth numbers from Forbes puts into context just how wealthy the executive really is, though. Huang has an estimated net worth of $109.2 billion, which is around $13 billion more than the market cap of Intel across the entire company.

Although Nvidia makes some of the best graphics cards, the obscene amount of money the company has racked up over the past two years stems from its AI accelerators. In 2020, Forbes estimated that Huang was worth $4.7 billion, and even in 2023, after ChatGPT had already exploded onto the scene, the executive was worth $21.1 billion. Now, Huang is the 11th richest person in the world, outpacing Bill Gates, Michael Dell, and Michael Bloomberg.

Read more