IN 2019, AS China’s trade war with America was heating up, the People’s Daily predicted that the Chinese monopoly
on rare earths, minerals crucial to the production of most modern
hardware, would become a tool to counter American pressure. “Don’t say
we didn’t warn you,” the Communist Party mouthpiece thundered. For years
the bluster was just that. Between 2009 and 2020 the number of Chinese
export controls on the books ballooned nine-fold, according to the OECD,
a club of mostly rich countries. Yet these restrictions were haphazard,
informal and aimed at narrow targets—random warning shots rather than a
strategic offensive.
As America ratchets up its sanctions against China,
which among other things make it impossible for Western chip companies
to sell Chinese customers cutting-edge semiconductors and the machines
to make them, new volleys from Beijing are coming thick and fast.
Earlier this month, after China announced its latest export controls,
this time on a pair of metals used in chips and other advanced tech, a
former commerce-ministry official declared that the measures were “just
the beginning” of Chinese retaliation. On July 20th Xie Feng, China’s
new ambassador to America, said that his country “cannot remain silent”
in the escalating war over technology. A response, he hinted, was
coming.
This time it looks much more
deliberate. To counter America’s effort to contain China’s technological
ambitions, Xi Jinping, China’s paramount leader, has called on
regulators to fight back against Western coercion in what he has called
an “international legal struggle”. The result is a flurry of lawmaking
that is creating a framework for a more robust Chinese reaction to
America’s commercial warfare.
The list of recent laws
is long. An “unreliable entities” list, created in 2020, punishes any
company undermining China’s interests. An export-control law from the
same year created a legal basis for an export-licensing regime. In 2021
an anti-sanctions law enabled retaliation against organisations and
individuals who carried out the sanctions of other countries. A sweeping
foreign-relations law enacted this year, and prompted by Western
sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, permits
countermeasures against a wide range of economic and national-security
threats facing the country. It came into effect on July 1st. The same
day an anti-espionage statute came into force, extending the reach of
Chinese security agencies. All the while, China has tightened various
data and cyber-security rules.
The new
rules are already being deployed, as opposed to merely brandished. In
February Lockheed Martin and a unit of Raytheon, two American armsmakers
with non-defence businesses in China, were placed on the
unreliable-entities list after shipping weapons to Taiwan (which China
regards as part of its territory). The companies are blocked from making
new investments in China and from trade activity, among other
restrictions. In April Micron,
an American chipmaker, was hit with an investigation by China’s
cyberspace regulator, based on a new cyber-security law. After Micron
failed a security review, Chinese authorities banned its semiconductors
from critical infrastructure.
The
laws’ vague wording makes it hard for Western companies to assess any
potential impact on their business in China. The “mother of all
sanctions laws”, as Henry Gao of Singapore Management University
describes the foreign-relations act, hazily vows to hold accountable
anyone acting in a manner that is deemed “detrimental to China’s
national interests…in the course of engaging in international
exchanges”. Several foreign law firms in China have been asked by their
Western clients to evaluate the risks of being investigated. One lawyer
looking into potential Chinese cyber-probes notes that American tech
companies producing commodified hardware components, such as Micron’s
memory chips, should be on guard for sudden investigations.
China’s
new laws allowing the government to restrict a broad range of minerals
and components, meanwhile, are injecting similar uncertainty into the
businesses of their foreign buyers. One affected group, notes David
Oxley of Capital Economics, a research firm, is Western manufacturers of
green-energy technologies. Battery-makers, in particular, are highly
dependent on China across the supply chain (see chart). Last year the
commerce ministry proposed a ban on exports of ingot-casting technology
used in making solar-panel wafers. If imposed, such a prohibition could
hold back the development of indigenous solar-power technology in the
West, which would hurt Western manufacturers, simultaneously increasing
foreign demand for finished Chinese solar panels.
Post-silicon volley
The restrictions on the two chip metals,
gallium and germanium, could cause a strategic headache for America.
The rules, which come into force on August 1st, require exporters to
apply for licences to sell the metals to foreign customers. China
produces 98% of the world’s raw gallium, a key ingredient in advanced
military technology. This includes America’s next-generation
missile-defence and radar systems. A shock to the supply of gallium
could create long-term problems for the American defence industry,
reckons CSIS, a think-tank in Washington. Moreover, a
gallium-based compound, gallium nitride, may one day underpin a new
generation of high-performance semiconductors. Keeping the material out
of foreign hands would stymie Western efforts to develop the technology,
while furthering Mr Xi’s goal for China to control it.
China
needs to tread carefully. The country reimports many of the finished
products that are manufactured abroad using rare earths, points out
Peter Arkell of the Global Mining Association of China, a lobby group,
so prohibitions could come back to bite Chinese companies. Outright
export bans would also prompt the West to build its own relevant
production capacity and seek substitutes, observes Ewa Manthey of ING,
a Dutch bank. This would in the longer term weaken China’s hand. And
labelling big Western firms with large Chinese operations as unreliable
entities could jeopardise thousands of Chinese jobs. That may explain
why rather than blacklisting all of Raytheon, whose aviation subsidiary,
Pratt & Whitney, employs 2,000 people in China, the commerce
ministry limited its ban to the American company’s defence unit.
So
far the relatively pragmatic ministries of commerce and foreign affairs
have led the implementation of the various laws. One concern among
Western businesses is that more hardline agencies supplant them. If the
tech war escalates further, China’s National Security Commission,
chaired by Mr Xi himself, may take the lead, fears Mr Gao. If that
happens, concerns about potential blowback for Chinese commerce are
likely to carry less weight. The consequences are scary to
contemplate—and not just for Chinese and American CEOs. ■