ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch (online ISSN 2837-3863, print ISSN 2837-3855) is published about every two weeks throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch can be found at chinaus-icas.org/icas-trade-technology-program/tnt-dispatch/.
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So, what had the two sides agreed upon in Geneva? On May 12th, the U.S. and China agreed to reduce their sky-high tariffs on each other for 90 days and desist from implementing new tariff and non-tariff measures for the duration of the truce. Additionally, China agreed to suspend or remove the non-tariff countermeasures – most notably the adding of a string of rare-earth minerals to its export control lists – that it had imposed following Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ announcement. In Beijing’s view, the terms of the Geneva trade truce were violated from the get-go when the U.S. Commerce Department issued advisories the very next day (May 13th), cautioning industry against the use of American AI chips for training and inference of Chinese AI models as well as the use worldwide in any form of Huawei’s Ascend series of chips. The Trump administration rationalized the advisories as a continuation of existing export control measures, not new ones. In response, Beijing began slow-walking its approval of rare-earth minerals, including permanent magnets. In counter-response, the U.S.: (a) suspended licenses for transfer of the LEAP-1C jet engine components to China’s aerospace national champion COMAC and its C919 airliner. The LEAP-1C engine is the only Western engine cleared for sale to China; (b) ordered U.S. companies specializing in chip design software tools to suspend their services to Chinese groups. U.S. EDA (electronic design automation) players account for 80% of China’s EDA market; (c) denied export licenses for a number of ethane cargoes (which is used in the manufacture of plastics) destined for China. Denial of these cargoes was essentially just a pinprick; and (d) threatened to revoke visas for Chinese students, including those with Party connections or studying in critical fields.
So, what did they now restore in London? China is to ease its rare earth mineral exports for a temporary six-month period for U.S. non-defense sector companies. Beijing had already hinted at such after the Trump-Xi phone call on June 5 when it issued temporary rare earth export licenses for three U.S. auto manufacturers. More such restoration of temporary licenses is expected to follow. Once Chinese rare earths start flowing, the U.S. will withdraw its suspension of transfer of jet engines as well as EDA software tools and allow ethane cargoes to resume. As Trump also noted, Chinese student visas will not be revoked, although the State Department will probably pay a more critical eye to Chinese visa applications for study in critical S&T fields. And, finally, both sides will continue to desist from imposing additional tariffs during the remainder of the truce period which runs until August 12. It is just as important to note what was not withdrawn. The U.S. Commerce Department’s advisories against the use of American AI chips for training and inference of Chinese AI models as well as the use worldwide of Huawei’s Ascend series of chips are to stay. They are not being revoked. U.S. AI chips will not flow to China. The Commerce Department advisories had been the proximate cause of the immediate spiral downward after the Geneva meeting.
Make no mistake, the U.S. and China are still far, far away from anything resembling a materially useful deal. The U.S.-China negotiation train had jumped the tracks within a few yards of departing the Geneva station. In London, the two sides appear to have fixed the derailment. Still, the train is lodged at or near Geneva station; basically, at square one. There is still a long distance to go. Going forward, one hopes that with the two commerce ministers present in London, there is better awareness of the almost unbridgeable gap on the export control front, and that a modus vivendi will need to be crafted to manage this difference. The export control cloud will, after all, continue to hover over the trade negotiation and, unless better managed, could dampen any chances of success.
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