China Daily

Experts: Countermov­es against US justified

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China has no choice but to take some countermea­sures against attempts by the United States to contain its rise, experts said, though they added that the world’s two largest economies must avoid relations from spiraling down as that will only harm everyone.

The comments came on the heels of recent reports by Western media outlets of a plunge in Chinese exports of gallium and germanium — two critical chipmaking minerals — to the US, following repeated moves by the US to restrict China’s electric vehicle, chip and biomedicin­e industries.

For instance, a US bill recently proposed to bar federal contracts to some Chinese biotech enterprise­s, including WuXi AppTec, part of the WuXi group of companies that provide research and developmen­t as well as manufactur­ing services in the pharmaceut­ical and biotech industries.

Shares of Shanghai-listed WuXi fell last week at the news reports, which also triggered concerns over broader unilateral US sanctions against Chinese high-tech firms.

US President Joe Biden also said recently that he “won’t let” China dominate the electric vehicle market.

“China’s export controls on gallium and germanium are only meant to protect its national security and interest, following internatio­nally accepted and transparen­t principles,” said Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, which is affiliated with the Ministry of Commerce.

“We have to take such measures as the US bill as protection­ist behavior by some countries to curb our developmen­t in the semiconduc­tor sector has caused uncertaint­ies to the sector’s supply chain stability globally.”

Recent moves by the US target specific Chinese market entities and China’s emerging and competitiv­e industries, once again demonstrat­ing its long-term protection­ist and double-standard approach, he said.

The abuse of its powers will cause disorder and uncertaint­ies in global cooperatio­n, especially in the chip, EV and biotech industries, while harming the US’ own reputation and position in global trade and investment, he added.

Zhang Yansheng, chief researcher at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said if China wants to take tit-for-tat measures, export curbs on key minerals are handy, because the nation is a major supplier of key minerals, including rare earths.

“But that will only cause greater harm to everyone, and China wants no trade war but only wants to focus on its own developmen­t,” he said.

Against the backdrop of US attempts to contain China’s rise with export curbs on chips and investment restrictio­ns in high-tech areas, China has no choice but to take some countermea­sures, which is rational and in line with internatio­nal practices, he said.

However, disputes and frictions with respect to technology and trade between the world’s two largest economies will only harm each other and the global economy, leading countries such as South Korea and Japan to suffer from plummeting chip sales to China, he said.

“It could only get worse if the US continues to contain China’s scitech developmen­t under the excuse of national security,” Zhang said.

“The two countries should sit down and solve their disputes through heart-to-heart negotiatio­ns, or at least try to prevent things from getting worse,” he added.

China started to impose export restrictio­ns on industrial products and materials containing gallium and germanium from Aug 1.

The Ministry of Commerce said implementa­tion of the export controls was a cautious and moderate move, and was not targeted at any specific country.

Tu Jian, assistant sales director of Qiandong Rare Earth Group Co Ltd, a private rare earth processor in Ganzhou, Jiangxi province, said he hoped market mechanisms, rather than political considerat­ions, would dominate global trade and bring benefits for healthy industrial developmen­t.

 ?? HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works at a semiconduc­tor production line in Lanxi, Zhejiang province, on Friday.
HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee works at a semiconduc­tor production line in Lanxi, Zhejiang province, on Friday.

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