Imperial Valley Press

Computer chip ban signals new era as Biden and Xi meet

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administra­tion’s move to block exports of advanced computer chips to China is signaling a new phase in relations between the globe’s two largest economies — one in which trade matters less than an increasing­ly heated competitio­n to be the world’s leading technologi­cal and military power.

The aggressive move, announced last month, will help set the tone for President Joe Biden’s upcoming meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Asia. It’s evidence of Biden’s determinat­ion to “manage” the U.S. competitio­n with China, whose officials were quick to condemn the export ban.

After more than two decades in which the focus was on expansion of trade and global growth, both countries are openly prioritizi­ng their national interests as the world economy struggles with high inflation and the risk of recessions. The U.S. and China have each identified the developmen­t and production of computer chips as vital for economic growth and their own security interests.

“We’re going to do whatever it takes to protect Americans from the threat of China,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in an interview. “China is crystal clear. They will use this technology for surveillan­ce. They will use this technology for cyber attacks. They will use this technology to, in any number of ways, harm us and our allies, or our ability to protect ourselves.”

Xi responded to the export ban in his statement at last month’s congress of the Chinese Communist Party, where he secured a third term as the country’s leader. He pledged that China would move more aggressive­ly to become self-reliant in producing semiconduc­tors and other technologi­es.

“In order to enhance China’s innovation capacity, we will move faster to launch a number of major national projects that are of strategic, big- picture and long- term importance,” Xi said.

The Chinese government has named the developmen­t of advanced computer chips that could handle everything from artificial intelligen­ce to hypersonic missiles as one of its top priorities. To bridge the gap until it can get there, China has been relying on imports of advanced chips and manufactur­ing equipment from the U.S., which imposed a series of export controls last month that block sending to China the world’s most advanced chips, factory equipment and industry experts tied to America.

The U.S. and its allies famously deployed export controls against Russia after the February invasion of Ukraine, making it harder for Russian forces to be resupplied with weapons, ammunition, tanks and aircraft. As a result of those constraint­s, Russia has relied on drones from Iran and the U.S. has accused North Korea of supplying them with artillery.

The U.S. had until recently operated from the premise that strong trade relationsh­ips would bring countries closer together in ways that made the world safer and wealthier, a post- Cold War order. Global supply chains were supposed to lower costs, boost profits and enable democratic values to seep into the terrain of oligarchie­s, dictatorsh­ips and autocracie­s.

But after a global pandemic, the war in Ukraine and China’s own ambitions, the Biden administra­tion and many European and Asian allies have chosen to prioritize national security and industrial strategies. Both the U.S. and European Union have provided tens of billions of dollars in incentives to spur more domestic production of computer chips.

In a speech last month at IBM, Biden said China specifical­ly lobbied against a law that provides $52 billion to produce and develop advanced semiconduc­tors in the U.S., an incentive package that has been followed by a string of announceme­nts by Intel, Micron, Wolfspeed and others about the constructi­on of computer chip plants in the U.S.

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