For Biden, Thwarting China's Development Is Job One
MIKE WHITNEY • AUGUST 9, 2023
https://www.unz.com/mwhitney/for-biden-thwarting-chinas-development-is-job-one/
The Biden administration has imposed a blockade on
advanced computer chips headed for China. The action is expected to slow
China’s technological development while inflicting serious damage on the
broader economy. The strategy has been widely praised by the media and foreign
policy experts, but a growing number of analysts wonder if the plan could
backfire?
Dan Wang is skeptical that Biden’s blockade will
succeed in the way the authors had intended. Wang is a technology analyst who
presented his views in an editorial at the New York Times. Here’s
what he said:
"The White House is intent on outcompeting China on
technology. The ground on which this competition is taking place is chip
making. But the Biden administration shouldn’t sit back and savor this accomplishment
for one reason: What if its core belief — that advanced semiconductors
are one of the critical fronts in the contest — is wrong?…
America’s actions are driven by the assumption,
articulated by the national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, that computing
chips are a force multiplier technology, staking it as critical to continued
U.S. leadership. But what if the U.S. government is too focused on the
most novel technologies rather than the most important ones? I believe
America is in a great power contest with China, one that will be
multidimensional and protracted, making it unlikely that success hinges solely
on who can stay ahead in a few advanced technologies….
An excessive focus by the United States on A.I. — and
on the advanced chip-making capabilities it requires — may represent a failure
to appreciate China’s broad technology strengths. While China has suffered serious setbacks in chip
production, its companies are vaulting ahead in other sectors. Last year China
overtook Germany in automobile exports, and it is on track to overtake Japan as
the global leader this year. While most of these exports consist of foreign
brands produced in China, the numbers reflect the deep expertise that Chinese
companies have built in the next era of automotive technologies, particularly
in car batteries.
It’s not just cars. Industry estimates put Chinese
companies at owning around 80 percent of the supply chain for solar
manufacturing. Chinese electronics makers have produced a rising share of the
components in Apple’s iPhone. And increasingly in less glamorous products —
such as industrial machinery and basic household equipment…
With one hand, the U.S. government is blocking China’s
progress on A.I. and supercomputing, but with the other, it is ushering Chinese
companies toward concentrating their efforts on chips for products of daily
use. And a world in which Chinese companies dominate the production of
mature chips — driven directly by American policy — hardly looks like a
victorious outcome for the United States…."
We need to spend less time making ever more marginal
refinements to restricting an emerging technology. Rather, we should
take a more holistic view of a long-term contest with a peer competitor. That
means broadening the strategic focus to a wider range of sectors and
following through on plans to build unglamorous technologies, too. Biden Is Beating China on Chips. It
May Not Be Enough, New
York Times
Wang’s op-ed helps to point out the shortcomings of
Biden’s blockade. Whatever technological gains the US may achieve in the
near-term, they will pale in comparison to China’s forward progress in other,
more mundane sectors of the economy. What the blockade illustrates is
the administration’s obsessive search for a “silver bullet”, that is, a
‘magical weapon’ that will help them to achieve their broader strategic
objectives. Unfortunately, there is no silver bullet that will make a
waning empire with dilapidated infrastructure, an aging workforce, a failing
educational system, and a hollowed out industrial core, more competitive. The
United States will have to spend less money on its wasteful and over-bloated
military and more on the development of its productive assets and industries if
it wants to compete head-to-head with a manufacturing powerhouse like China.
It’s also worth noting, that the blockade has
dramatically impacted the bottom line of the major chip producers. Headlines
like these can now be found in all the major mainstream media:
Samsung to extend production cuts after $7 billion
chip loss in first half, Reuters
SK Hynix, one of the biggest memory chipmakers,
reports record quarterly loss as prices slump, CNBC
Intel, Samsung, Micron and others are being hit by one
of the worst chip routs ever in a swift decent from the pandemic sales surge,
Bloomberg
Semiconductor giants are losing money on every chip as
historic glut threatens to wipe out earnings, South China Morning Post
An industry that still is undergoing post-Covid
distress syndrome, has now been whipsawed by precipitous policies aimed at
containing a rising China. Here’s more on the topic from an article at
the Global Times:
"During a recent White House meeting with the chief
executive officers of American semiconductor giants, Intel, Nvidia and
Qualcomm criticized the Biden administration’s relentless approach to curb exports
of advanced chips to Chinese customers, saying the restrictions will surely
backfire on them, depleting them of a big revenue source and endangering their
ability to lead the sector in the future.
The blunt warning is an attestation that the US government’s
so-called “small yard and high fence” strategy to scupper China’s technology
sector progress is ill-willed in the first place and to no avail in the end.
For an example, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told senior US officials that limiting
sales of American chips in China had “just made alternatives more popular.”
The undertone is if the American chip companies lose the market share in the world’s largest semiconductor market, they will lose them permanently. All the more, the availability and quality of the software that Chinese companies are using more than compensates for any hardware restrictions by Washington, the CEOs said.
Still, the Biden administration is charging ahead
blindly despite the protests of industry honchos or skeptical allies. They’re
not concerned about the loss of revenues for chip manufacturers or the impact
their blockade could have on the industry as a whole. They are convinced that
their onerous export controls will succeed and that, eventually, Beijing will
submit to Washington’s diktat.
Most analysts, however, believe it is only a matter of
time before China catches up and is able to produce its own advanced
semiconductors. After all, China spends “$400 billion in annual chip imports”
which will now be diverted to domestic production. Given China’s strides in
other areas of technological development, we expect that they will bridge the
gap within the decade. Consider, for example, what happened to Huawei. This is
from an article at the New York Times:
Huawei may prove instructive once again. Battered by
American sanctions and China’s strict pandemic controls, the company’s 2022
profits fell by a staggering 70 percent compared with the previous year. But
there are signs of life: Despite the plunge in profits, revenues rose slightly,
and the company’s operating system, HarmonyOS — which it developed after being
cut off from using Android — has been installed on more than 330 million
devices, mostly in China. …
Bereft of American chips and technology, Huawei has
been forced to redesign and remanufacture all of its legacy products to ensure
they contain no American components. The company is dragging along an entire
domestic supply chain in its wake, sending its own engineers to help train and
upscale Chinese suppliers it once shunned in favor of foreign
alternatives. Recently, Huawei claimed that it had made significant
breakthroughs in the electronic design software used to produce advanced
semiconductors at a size that, though still a few generations behind the U.S.,
would put it further along than any other Chinese company. If Huawei manages to
succeed, it could emerge from American sanctions stronger and more resilient
than ever.” ‘An Act of War’: Inside America’s
Silicon Blockade Against China, New York Times
So, yes, Trump’s sanctions put Huawei into a steep
tailspin, but now the tech-giant is back on its feet and gaining momentum. Can
we expect the same from China’s budding chips industry?
Yes, we can. China’s development may be delayed but it
won’t be stopped. And when China finally catches up, they will remember the
countries that violated WTO rules and abandoned their “free market” principles
in order to inflict as much pain on China as possible. This is from a post
at Econofact:
The rules of the WTO prohibit countries from acting
unilaterally in response to what they perceive as violations by other countries. WTO members are instead required to use the WTO
dispute settlement system for their complaints. This is intended to eliminate
the possibility of a retaliatory spiral of protectionist measures. Recent
moves by the United States to impose tariffs, justified as important to
national security, are widely regarded by other countries as unilateral action
that is illegal under WTO law…..
Unilateral action violating WTO rules risks destroying
a system that the United States has led for decades, and that has benefited
this country. U.S. Trade Policy: Going it Alone
vs. Abiding by the World Trade Organization, Econofact
Simply put, Biden’s advanced semiconductor
blockade is cheating. It is a clear violation of the rules the US agreed to
uphold.
As we noted earlier, the vast majority of western
journalists not only support the blockade but, also, take great delight in the
fact that China is being unfairly targeted. Michael Schuman at The
Atlantic, for example, is thrilled that Biden has taken such aggressive
action which he thinks is entirely justified. Here’s what he said:
"President Joe Biden showed Xi who’s boss. Two days earlier, on October 21, Biden had
dropped the hammer on China’s semiconductor industry by fully implementing a
slew of tough controls on the export of American chip technology to China. This
is a painful blow to Xi’s ambitions to rival the U.S….
Biden’s new policy reveals that the standard narrative
of China’s unstoppable ascent and America’s inexorable decline is based on
flawed assumptions. The U.S. continues to hold tremendous economic and
technological advantages over China, which, as Biden just signaled, Washington
is becoming more willing to use against its Communist competitor. Above
all, Biden’s export-control measures are a ruthless expression of
American clout—and an intentional reminder that, in many respects, America has
it and China does not. ..."
These controls mark a distinct shift in Washington’s
approach to China. On top of trying to outcompete China, which is the intent of
the CHIPS Act recently passed to support the U.S. semiconductor sector, Washington
is now purposely and openly working to hold back Chinese economic progress. Allen
called the controls a “genuine landmark in U.S.-China relations” that heralds “a
new U.S. policy of actively strangling large segments of the Chinese technology
industry—strangling with an intent to kill.” Why Biden’s Block on Chips to China
Is a Big Deal, The
Atlantic
Not surprisingly, Schuman’s views are shared by a vast
number of his colleagues in the media. They all seem to believe that
China must be punished for succeeding in a system the US helped to create.
What’s striking about Schuman’s piece, however, is the diabolical glee with
which he promotes the “new U.S. policy of actively strangling large segments of
the Chinese technology industry… with an intent to kill.” That might sound a
bit extreme for an opinion piece, but it does accurately reflect the aims of
the Biden team who seem fully-committed to “thwarting Chinese capabilities on a
broad and fundamental level.” In short, sabotaging China’s
technological rise looks to be Washington’s top priority.
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