Philippines
No retaliatory measures
The Philippines holds a unique position in US trade as both a treaty ally and a growing electronics manufacturing hub. The country's semiconductor assembly and testing industry, centered in Clark and Subic Bay, handles chips for Texas Instruments, Analog Devices, and other US companies. The $5.5 billion deficit is modest, but the 17% tariff threatens to disrupt these supply chains.
Current Tariff
📊17%
Was 2.1%
US Imports
📥$14.6B
2024 total
US Exports
📤$9.1B
2024 total
Trade Balance
⚖️$-5.5B
US deficit
Trade Flow (2024)
Tariff Rate Change
📈 5-Year Import Trend
📋 Trade Relationship Analysis
The Philippines holds a unique position in US trade as both a treaty ally and a growing electronics manufacturing hub. The country's semiconductor assembly and testing industry, centered in Clark and Subic Bay, handles chips for Texas Instruments, Analog Devices, and other US companies. The $5.5 billion deficit is modest, but the 17% tariff threatens to disrupt these supply chains.
Electronics manufacturing is the Philippines' top export — the country is the world's sixth-largest semiconductor exporter by value. The industry developed around former US military bases (Clark, Subic Bay) that were converted to economic zones after the bases closed in 1992, giving the relationship historical depth.
Coconut products are the quintessentially Filipino export: the Philippines is the world's largest coconut exporter, supplying coconut oil for cooking, cosmetics, and biofuels. The health food trend toward coconut oil, coconut water, and coconut-based alternatives has boosted this trade category significantly.
The Philippines has not retaliated, reflecting both the security alliance (Manila hosts rotating US military deployments and is a key counterweight to Chinese expansion in the South China Sea) and economic dependence on US market access. Remittances from the 4 million Filipino-Americans represent another crucial economic link — $12 billion annually flows back to the Philippines.
Tariff Impact
Pre-2025
2.1%
Current
17%
Increase
+14.9%
🏷️ Top Imported Products
| Product | Tariff Rate | Import Value | Price Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Semiconductors & Electronics | 17% | $6.2B | +$10-50 per device |
| Electronic Components | 17% | $2.8B | +10-15% component costs |
| Coconut Oil & Products | 17% | $1.4B | +$1-3 per bottle |
| Machinery & Parts | 17% | $1.8B | +10-15% equipment costs |
| Clothing & Textiles | 17% | $1.2B | +$3-8 per garment |
📅 Tariff Timeline
🎯 Retaliation — US Products Targeted
| US Product Targeted | US Exports at Risk | Estimated Loss |
|---|---|---|
| No retaliation — security alliance and economic ties prioritized | N/A | N/A |
💡 Did You Know?
- •Former US military bases at Clark and Subic Bay are now the Philippines' largest electronics manufacturing zones
- •The Philippines is the world's largest coconut exporter — coconut oil is in thousands of US consumer products
- •4 million Filipino-Americans send $12B in remittances annually — the 4th largest remittance flow globally
- •The Philippines is the world's 6th largest semiconductor exporter, punching far above its economic weight