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脱钩中国 美国自寻死路

(2023-07-10 06:24:29) 下一个

为何美国无法彻底与中国“分手”

ANA SWANSON  2023年7月10日

今年5月,美中技术战给爱达荷州芯片制造商美光科技带来了沉重打击。中国政府禁止处理关键信息的企业购买美光芯片,称该公司没有通过网络安全审查。美光表示,这道禁令可能导致公司全球收入减少约八分之一。然而在6月,这家芯片制造商宣布将增加对华投资,斥资六亿美元扩建位于中国西安的一家芯片封测工厂。

 

 
“该投资项目彰显了美光对中国业务及中国团队成员坚定不移的承诺,”该公司在中国社交媒体帐号上发布的公告中表示。美中日益扩大分歧之际,全球半导体企业试图两头兼顾,然而它们的处境已经极其棘手。半导体行业已成为美中技术竞争的核心问题,双方都实施了新的制裁和惩罚性措施。
 
美国官员称,美国的产品被用于中国的军事和监视项目,这与美国的国家安全利益相悖。美国对可以运往中国的芯片及其制造设备的种类施加了越来越严格的限制,并为主动在美国建厂的芯片制造商提供新的激励措施,包括拨款和税收抵免。
 
但建厂可能需要数年之久,两国企业之间的联系依然牢固。中国是芯片的主要市场,因为这里许多工厂制造的产品都要使用大量芯片,包括智能手机、洗碗机、汽车和电脑,这些产品会出口到世界各地,也被中国国内的消费者购买。
 
中国占据了全球半导体销售总额的约三分之一。但对一些芯片制造商来说,中国占到了其营收的60%或70%。哪怕是在美国生产的芯片,也经常会被送到中国进行组装和测试。
“我们没办法按下一个开关,就能把一切都从中国突然拿走,”乔治城大学安全与新兴技术中心研究员艾米丽·韦恩斯坦表示。
 
芯片产业对中国的依赖凸显了中美之间密切却也充满矛盾的经济关系对双方都构成了挑战。
 
这种紧张关系也反映在财长耶伦本周的访华之行,她试图小心试探,对中国的一些行为提出批评,同时也坚称美国并不打算切断与中国的关系。
 
耶伦批评中国最近对外企施加的惩罚性措施,包括限制用于芯片制造的一些矿产出口。她表示,此类措施正是拜登政府希望美国制造商减少对中国依赖的原因。但她仍然肯定了美中关系的战略性和重要性。
 
“我已经明确表示,美国不寻求两国经济的全面分离,”耶伦与在华美企举行的圆桌会议上表示。“我们寻求多元化,而不是脱钩。两个世界上最大的经济体之间的脱钩将破坏全球经济稳定,而且几乎不可能做到。 ”
 
拜登政府准备开始大举投资美国半导体制造业,吸引工厂离开中国。今年晚些时候,商务部预计将开始发放资金,帮助企业在美建立芯片制造设施。这些资金附带了条件:接受资金的企业不可以在中国扩建高科技制造设施。
 
美国政府还在考虑进一步限制可以出口到中国的芯片,作为扩大并最终完成去年10月出台的全面限制措施的一部分。
 
据知情人士透露,这些措施可能包括有望限制对华销售用于人工智能的先进芯片,对中国企业使用美国云计算服务施加新限制,并限制美国风险资本对中国芯片行业的投资。
美国政府也一直在考虑停止向部分美国芯片制造商发放许可证,以免它们继续向中国电信公司华为销售产品。
 
日本与荷兰是不少先进芯片制造设备生产商所在地,部分是出于美国的施压,它们也在对华销售上施加了新的限制措施。
 
中国也出台了自己的限制措施,包括对用于芯片制造的矿物实施新的出口管制。
 
在美国与欧洲全都出台了更严格的监管措施及新的激励计划之际,全球芯片企业在选择下一个重点投资目的地时,越来越多地将目光投向中国以外。但这些设施可能需要数年时间才能建成,这意味着全球半导体市场的任何变化都将是渐进式的。
 
代表芯片行业的半导体产业协会会长约翰·诺伊弗在一份声明中表示,不断升级的管制措施对美国该行业的全球竞争力构成了重大风险。
 
“中国是全球最大的半导体市场,我们的企业必须在那里开展业务才能实现持续增长和创新,并保持领先于全球竞争对手的地位,”他说。“我们呼吁采取保护国家安全、不应对芯片行业造成无意且持久的损害,并避免未来冲突升级的解决方案。”

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Ana Swanson是时报驻华盛顿记者,负责报道贸易和国际经济新闻。她此前在《华盛顿邮报》工作,报道贸易、美联储和经济新闻。欢迎在Twitter上关注她:AnaSwanson

耶伦在北京批评中国打压在华美企

ALAN RAPPEPORT  

周四抵达北京的财长耶伦于周五会见了美国商会在华成员。

周四抵达北京的财长耶伦于周五会见了美国商会在华成员。 

美国财长耶伦周五批评中国政府严厉对待有外资背景的公司,以及不久前对某些关键矿产实施出口管制的决定,并表示此类行动证明了拜登政府为减少美国制造商对中国的依赖而做出的努力是正确的。

在北京举行会晤的第一天,她就为美国行业做出了强有力的辩护;耶伦此行意义重大,旨在缓和中美之间的紧张关系。她是对一群在华美企高管做出上述表示的,她的话凸显出世界上最大的两个经济体在寻求超越深刻分歧之际所面临的挑战。
 
“在与中方同行的会面中,我传达了从美国商界了解到的担忧——包括中国使用非市场工具,比如向国有企业和国内公司扩大补贴,以及对外国公司设置市场准入壁垒,”耶伦在一个圆桌会议上对在华美国商会成员说道。“近几个月来针对美国公司采取的惩罚行动让我尤其感到不安。”包括波音公司、美国银行和农业巨头嘉吉公司在内的代表出席了这次圆桌会议。
 
今年3月,中国当局拘留了美思明智集团北京办事处的五名中国公民,并关闭了该办事处,这是一家在全球设有18个办事处的美国咨询公司。次月,美国管理咨询公司贝恩公司上海办事处的员工遭当局问话
 
中国对在华美企进行审查之前,拜登政府对中国获得关键半导体制造技术和工具采取了限制措施。
拜登政府正在准备对双方的技术贸易实施更多限制,包括对先进芯片美国在华投资的潜在限制。美国政府还准备限制中国公司获得美国云计算服务,以堵住此前限制中国获得用于人工智能的先进芯片方面的漏洞。
 
本周,这种针锋相对的局面仍在继续,北京对拜登政府的半导体限制进行了报复,宣布将限制用于生产一些芯片的某些关键矿物的出口。
 
中国财政部的一名官员周五表示,希望与耶伦的会晤能改善两国的经济关系,并表示美国需要采取措施来实现这一目标。这位官员还说,两国都不会从“脱钩”和供应链中断中受益。
 
耶伦周五表示,她对中国实施出口管制的决定感到“担忧”。
 
耶伦说,“我们仍在评估这些行动的影响,但它们提醒我们,建立有弹性和多样化的供应链很重要。”她表示,美国可能会做出更多回应,以确保美国企业和工人得到公平对待。
 
“我将始终捍卫你们的利益,努力确保公平的竞争环境,”耶伦还说。“这包括与我们的盟友协调,对中国不公平的经济行为做出回应。”
 
企业还对中国不断收紧的国家安全法感到担忧,其中包括上周六生效的一项严格的反间谍法。美国国务院本周发出警告,建议美国人重新考虑前往中国的旅行,因为有可能被错误拘留。
 
耶伦计划在未来两天与中方高层官员的密集会晤中提出这些问题。
 
除了商界领袖,耶伦周五还会见了前中国副总理刘鹤和即将离任的中国人民银行行长易纲。一名财政部官员说,耶伦与这些前对等官员进行了一个多小时的非正式讨论,谈到了经济前景。
 
周五下午晚些时候,她将在人民大会堂与总理李强会面。

One Reason the U.S. Can't Quit China? Chips.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/08/business/economy/us-china-chips-janet-yellen.html?_ga= 

Chipmakers are finding it increasingly hard to operate in China but say doing business in the country is still key to their survival.

 

Three workers in masks, hard hats and protective gowns inspect a canister inside a factory, with numerous machines around them.

A Micron Technologies plant in Manassas, Va. Global semiconductor companies like Micron are in an extremely tricky position as they try to straddle a growing rift between the United States and China.

Ana Swanson By Ana Swanson, covers international trade and tracks the U.S.-China relationship.  

In May, Micron Technologies, the Idaho chipmaker, suffered a serious blow as part of the U.S.-China technology war. The Chinese government barred companies that handle crucial information from buying Micron’s chips, saying the company had failed a cybersecurity review.

Micron said the change could destroy roughly an eighth of its global revenue. Yet in June, the chipmaker announced that it would increase its investments in China — adding $600 million to expand a chip packaging facility in the Chinese city of Xian.

“This investment project demonstrates Micron’s unwavering commitment to its China business and team,” an announcement posted on the company’s Chinese social media account said.

Global semiconductor companies are finding themselves in an extremely tricky position as they try to straddle a growing rift between the United States and China. The semiconductor industry has become ground zero for the technology rivalry between Washington and Beijing, with new restrictions and punitive measures imposed by both sides.

U.S. officials say American products have fed into Chinese military and surveillance programs that run counter to the national security interest of the United States. They have imposed increasingly tough restrictions on the kind of chips and chip-making equipment that can be sent to China, and are offering new incentives, including grants and tax credits, for chipmakers who choose to build new operations in the United States.

But factories can take years to construct, and corporate ties between the countries remain strong. China is a major market for chips, since it is home to many factories that make chip-rich products, including smartphones, dishwashers, cars and computers, that are both exported around the world and purchased by consumers in China.

Overall, China accounts for roughly a third of global semiconductor sales. But for some chipmakers, the country accounts for 60 percent or 70 percent of their revenue. Even when chips are manufactured in the United States, they are often sent to China for assembly and testing.

“We can’t just flip a switch and say all of sudden you have to take everything out of China,” said Emily S. Weinstein, a research fellow at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology.

The industry’s reliance on China highlights how a close — but extremely contentious — economic relationship between Washington and Beijing is posing challenges for both sides.

Those tensions were reflected during Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen’s visit to Beijing this week, where she tried to walk a fine line by faulting some of China’s practices while insisting the United States was not looking to sever ties with the country.

Ms. Yellen criticized punitive measures China has recently taken against foreign firms, including limiting the export of some minerals used in chip making, and suggested that such actions were why the Biden administration was trying to make U.S. manufacturers less reliant on China. But she also affirmed the U.S.-China relationship as strategic and important.

“I have made clear that the United States does not seek a wholesale separation of our economies,” Ms. Yellen said during a roundtable with U.S. companies operating in China. “We seek to diversify, not to decouple. A decoupling of the world’s two largest economies would be destabilizing for the global economy, and it would be virtually impossible to undertake.”

The Biden administration is poised to begin investing heavily in American semiconductor manufacturing to lure factories out of China. Later this year, the Commerce Department is expected to begin handing out funds to help companies build U.S. chip facilities. That money will come with strings: Firms that take funding must refrain from expanding high-tech manufacturing facilities in China.

The administration is also weighing further curbs on the chips that can be sent to China, as part of a push to expand and finalize sweeping restrictions it issued last October.

These measures could include potential limits on sales to China of advanced chips used for artificial intelligence, new restrictions for Chinese companies’ access to U.S. cloud computing services, and restrictions on U.S. venture capital investments in the Chinese chip sector, according to people familiar with the plans.

The administration has also been considering halting the licenses it has extended to some U.S. chipmakers that have allowed them to continue selling products to Huawei, the Chinese telecom firm.

Japan and the Netherlands, which are home to companies that make advanced chip manufacturing equipment, have also put new restrictions on their sales to China, in part because of urging from the United States.

China has issued restrictions of its own, including new export controls on minerals used in chip manufacturing.

Amid tighter regulations and new incentive programs from the United States and Europe, global chip companies are increasingly looking outside China as they choose the locations for their next major investments. But these facilities will likely take years to construct, meaning any changes to the global semiconductor market will unfold gradually.

John Neuffer, the president of the Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents the chip industry, said in a statement that the ongoing escalation of controls posed a significant risk to the global competitiveness of the U.S. industry.

“China is the world’s largest market for semiconductors, and our companies simply need to do business there to continue to grow, innovate and stay ahead of global competitors,” he said. “We urge solutions that protect national security, avoid inadvertent and lasting damage to the chip industry, and avert future escalations.”

Ana Swanson is based in the Washington bureau and covers trade and international economics for The Times. She previously worked at The Washington Post, where she wrote about trade, the Federal Reserve and the economy. More about Ana Swanson

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section B, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Geopolitics Challenges Chipmakers. 
 
Yellen, in Beijing, Criticizes China's Treatment of U.S. Companies

The concerns of Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reflect continuing tensions between the two countries.

Alan Rappeport, who covers the Treasury Department, reported this article from Beijing with Keith Bradsher, the Beijing bureau chief.

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Yellen Shares Concerns Over China's Treatment of U.S. Companies

During her first day of meetings in Beijing, Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen criticized punitive measures the Chinese government has taken against American firms.

During meetings with my counterparts, I'm communicating the concerns that I've heard from the U.S. business community, including China's use of non-market tools like expanded subsidies for its state owned enterprises and domestic firms, as well as barriers to market access for foreign firms. I've been particularly troubled by punitive actions that have been taken against U.S. firms in recent months. I've made clear that the United States does not seek a wholesale separation of our economies. We seek to diversify and not to decouple. A decoupling of the world's two largest economies would be destabilizing for the global economy, and it would be virtually impossible to undertake.

Of all the economic rifts between the United States and China, one felt personally by American executives is what they describe as the difficult, even hostile, conditions they face doing business in China.

Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen laid bare those concerns on Friday by leveling a forceful objection in Beijing to punitive measures the Chinese government has taken against foreign firms, as tension between the two nations has escalated.

Surrounded by executives from some of the most powerful American companies, Ms. Yellen criticized the Chinese government’s harsh treatment of companies with foreign ties and its recent decision to impose export controls on certain critical minerals. She suggested that such actions justified the Biden administration’s efforts to make U.S. manufacturers less reliant on China.

Ms. Yellen’s comments, made to a group of executives from American businesses operating in China, underscored the challenges that the world’s two largest economies face as they struggle to reconcile their deep differences.

She delivered the forceful defense of American industry on her first day of meetings in Beijing during a high-stakes trip to ease tension between the United States and China. Ms. Yellen conveyed her objections to China’s top officials, including Premier Li Qiang, in what was the first visit to China by a Treasury secretary in four years.

“During meetings with my counterparts, I am communicating the concerns that I’ve heard from the U.S. business community — including China’s use of nonmarket tools like expanded subsidies for its state-owned enterprises and domestic firms, as well as barriers to market access for foreign firms,” Ms. Yellen said at an event held by the American Chamber of Commerce in China.

“I’ve been particularly troubled by punitive actions that have been taken against U.S. firms in recent months,” she added. Representatives of Boeing, Bank of America and the agriculture giant Cargill were among those in attendance.

In March, the Chinese authorities detained five Chinese nationals working in Beijing for the Mintz Group, an American consulting company with 18 offices around the world, and closed the branch. The next month, the authorities questioned employees in the Shanghai office of Bain & Company, the U.S. management consulting firm.

Scrutiny of American businesses operating in China followed restrictions that the Biden administration imposed on China’s access to critical semiconductor-making technology and tools.

The Biden administration is preparing additional restrictions on U.S. technology trade with China, including potential limits on advanced chips and U.S. investment in the country. The administration is also preparing to restrict Chinese companies’ access to U.S. cloud computing services to curtail China’s use of advanced chips for artificial intelligence.

The tit-for-tat continued this week when Beijing retaliated against the Biden administration’s limits on semiconductors, announcing that it would restrict the export of certain critical minerals used in the production of some chips. Ms. Yellen said on Friday that she was “concerned” by China’s export controls and suggested that additional responses from the United States could be looming.

Janet Yellen, wearing a dark suit, sitting in a yellow chair next to Li Qiang, sitting in an identical chair.

Ms. Yellen meeting with Li Qiang, China’s premier, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday.

Chinese companies have also felt a chill of distrust in the United States and have been unsettled by recent actions, including the congressional hearings about the Chinese-owned social media network TikTok, where lawmakers spent five hours blasting the platform’s ties to China. The Biden administration has told TikTok that it wants ByteDance, the app’s Chinese owners, to sell the app or face a possible ban in the United States.

Deepening American barriers to Chinese investments and corporate deals, including in once prosaic sectors such as farmland purchases, have also unsettled Chinese businesses, according to Wang Yong, the director of the Center for American Studies at Peking University.

“Unfortunately, these relationships that have been mutually beneficial have now become politicized, securitized and even demonized — treated as having an impact on national security,” Professor Wang said. “But I personally think that while there is so-called strategic competition between China and the United States, they still have many common interests.”

An official from China’s ministry of finance expressed hope on Friday that the meetings with Ms. Yellen would improve economic relations and suggested that the United States needed to take steps to make that happen. The official added that neither country benefited from “decoupling” and disrupting supply chains.

Longtime observers of the relationship between the two countries were skeptical of the chances of a swift breakthrough.

Shi Yinhong, a political scientist at Renmin University in Beijing, said Ms. Yellen’s visit could not be expected to “really mitigate substantially” the numerous and broad differences between the two countries. But given those differences, he said, Chinese officials were unlikely to be surprised by Ms. Yellen’s remarks in support of American businesses in China.

“I doubt that the Chinese side would have much higher expectation at all,” he said.

U.S. businesses have been alarmed by China’s ever-tightening national security laws, which include a stringent counterespionage law that took effect on Saturday. The U.S. State Department issued a warning this week advising Americans to reconsider traveling to China because of the possibility of wrongful detention.

Michael Hart, the president of the Chamber of Commerce in China, said American companies were trying to play a constructive role in the economic relationship between the United States and China.

“We’ve been trying, regardless of what’s happened at the political level, to find common cause with our Chinese counterparts by employing, manufacturing, producing, buying, selling, paying our taxes and doing it all in a manner that reflects our values,” Mr. Hart, who was seated next to Ms. Yellen, said.

The Treasury secretary planned to raise these issues during a blitz of meetings with top Chinese officials over the next two days.

Ms. Yellen also met on Friday with Liu He, China’s former vice premier, and Yi Gang, the departing governor of the People’s Bank of China. A Treasury Department official said Ms. Yellen had discussed the outlook for the economy in an informal discussion with her former counterparts that lasted more than an hour.

Later on Friday afternoon, she met with Mr. Li at the Great Hall of the People, which sits on the edge of Tiananmen Square.

Ahead of her meeting with Mr. Li, China’s No. 2 leader, Ms. Yellen emphasized the importance of “healthy competition” between the two nations and stressed that measures taken by the United States on the basis of national security should not be misconstrued as attacks on China.

“The United States will, in certain circumstances, need to pursue targeted actions to protect its national security,” Ms. Yellen said. “And we may disagree in these instances.”

She added: “However, we should not allow any disagreement to lead to misunderstandings that needlessly worsen our bilateral economic and financial relationship.”

Seated next to Ms. Yellen, Mr. Li noted that the world had high expectations for their meeting.

Offering a ray of optimism, the premier noted that when Ms. Yellen arrived in Beijing, she was photographed pointing to a rainbow in the sky and suggested that it was a sign that the relationship between China and the United States could be mended.

“I’m really looking forward to this opportunity to have an exchange of views with you,” Mr. Li said through an interpreter.

The meeting lasted over an hour, twice as long as planned, according to a Treasury official. Both sides struck positive tones in their summaries of the discussions.

The United States described it as “candid and constructive” with an emphasis on closer communication. China’s state television service, CCTV, delivered a fairly upbeat assessment of the meeting, in contrast with recent Chinese official statements about the United States.

CCTV summarized Mr. Li’s remarks to Ms. Yellen as saying that “strengthening cooperation is the realistic demand and correct choice of China and the United States.”

Claire Fu and Christopher Buckley contributed reporting.

Alan Rappeport is an economic policy reporter, based in Washington. He covers the Treasury Department and writes about taxes, trade and fiscal matters. He previously worked for The Financial Times and The Economist. More about Alan Rappeport

Keith Bradsher is the Beijing bureau chief for The Times. He previously served as bureau chief in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Detroit and as a Washington correspondent. He has lived and reported in mainland China through the pandemic. More about Keith Bradsher

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