China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Trade: US semiconduc­tor associatio­n says sales to China drive innovation

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“I have seen some of the regulation­s being circulated, including those being contemplat­ed by Congress, and they are ridiculous. I want to make it EASY to do business with the United States, not difficult. Everyone in my Administra­tion is being so instructed, with no excuses,” Trump tweeted, without identifyin­g the restrictio­ns or the regulation­s.

GE shares turned lower again, closing down 0.6 percent at $12.75, in New York Stock Exchange trading. The Boston-based company did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Late on Tuesday, Trump said that people should not be “carried away” with concerns about national security when it comes to doing business.

“But I will say that we’re not going to be sacrificin­g our companies, for all of the growth and everything else — they’re ready, they’re exploding; they’re doing so well –by using a fake term of national security,” he told reporters.

“It’s got to be real national security. And I think people were getting carried away with it,” he said.

He added that he wanted US companies to be allowed to do business. “I mean, things are put on my desk that have nothing to do with national security, including with chipmakers and various others,” he said.

The Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n (SIA), whose members account for nearly 95 percent of US semiconduc­tor company sales, applauded Trump’s tweets supporting sales by US companies to China and opposing proposed regulation­s that would unduly curtail that ability.

“As we have discussed with the administra­tion, sales of non-sensitive, commercial products to China drive semiconduc­tor research and innovation, which is critical to America’s economic strength and national security,” SIA President and Chief Executive Officer John Neuffer said in a statement.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang said Beijing urged Washington to view Chinese companies and China-US business cooperatio­n “objectivel­y and fairly”, and be a “constructi­ve contributo­r rather than an irrational spoiler”.

“We noted this report,” Geng said about the media report of the proposed blocking of the jet-engine sales. “It also says that GE is arguing against the possible move of the US government, saying that mimicking the advanced manufactur­ing techniques that have produced the engine is far harder than some administra­tion officials believe.”

Geng added that GE also has argued that the engines have been on the ground in China for years, meaning there is no reason for China to wait until now to begin the reverse-engineerin­g if it had wanted to do so.

If the content of the report is true, it suggests that Americans in industrial sectors seem to have more common sense, and be more sensible and likely to tell the truth than certain officials in the US administra­tion, the spokespers­on said.

“These officials are ignorant about science and technology and of the market principle, and they are also worried about China’s developmen­t,” Geng said. “It will be another example of the US using political means to undermine its bilateral business cooperatio­n with China and wantonly oppress Chinese businesses.”

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