U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, who has been leading the Joe Biden administration’s efforts to limit China’s progress in developing and using advanced chips, now says the effort is a “fool’s errand.”
“It would be foolish to try to stop China,” Raimondo told the Wall Street Journal, adding that investments in building chip supply chains would be more effective against tech rival Beijing than export controls.
Raimondo said the export controls were just a “speed bump” for China and did not slow the country's pursuit of technological dominance or its progress in building semiconductor capabilities.
“The only way to beat China is to stay ahead… We have to run faster and out-innovate them. That's how to win,” Raimondo told the Wall Street Journal.
Raimondo's comments came before President-elect Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. Trump has been a strong critic of Biden's chip bill, which allocates billions of dollars to U.S. and foreign chip manufacturers to boost semiconductor investment in the United States.
“You didn't have to put in 10 cents. You could have done it through a series of tariffs,” Trump said during the campaign, and has since pledged to cut chip funding promised under the bill.
Earlier this month, Raimondo said it was a “terrible” and “reckless” idea that would only benefit China.
Read the full report: wall street journal.
Also read:
US announces new investigation into traditional Chinese chips
Nvidia is investigating how its chips found their way to China
China's Huawei and SMIC will “increase” production of latest artificial intelligence chips
Chinese industry body says buying U.S. chips 'unsafe'
The United States and TSMC sign a $6.6 billion chip agreement, and other agreements will be signed soon
China 'more vulnerable to Trump tariffs' after slowdown
Analysts warn that the United States may sanction Chinese DRAM chip giants next
Raimondo says Huawei’s China-made 7nm chips are “years behind the U.S.”
U.S. pressures South Korean chipmakers to further restrict Chinese chips
ASML CEO: The United States has economic motives to curb Chinese chip technology
China will build 18 new fabs to lead chip expansion in 2024 – SEMI