China Brings WTO Case against U.S. and Its Sweeping Chip Export
Curbs as Tech Tensions Escalate
·
China initiated a dispute against the
U.S. at the World Trade Organization over Washington’s sweeping semiconductor
export curbs.
·
In October, the U.S. introduced rules
that restricted chips made using American tools from being exported to China,
which effectively kneecapped China’s semiconductor industry.
·
The Chinese Ministry of Commerce
confirmed the trade dispute in a statement Monday and accused the U.S. of
abusing export control measures and obstructing normal international trade in
chips.
China initiated a dispute
against the U.S. at the World Trade Organization over Washington’s sweeping semiconductor
export curbs that look to cut the world’s second-largest economy off from high-tech
components.
In October, the U.S. introduced
rules that restricted chips made using American tools from being exported to China
as well as any semiconductors designed for artificial intelligence applications.
The move has effectively kneecapped China’s semiconductor
industry.
The Chinese Ministry of
Commerce confirmed the trade dispute in a statement Monday and accused the U.S.
of abusing export control measures and obstructing normal international trade in
chips and other products.
It said that the WTO dispute
is a way to address China’s concerns through legal means.
Washington has maintained
that its export restrictions are in the interest of national security.
China’s dispute on chips
comes days after the WTO ruled that tariffs imposed by former President Donald Trump
on steel and aluminum imports violated global trade rules.
China was among the countries that brought action against the U.S.
Trade disputes via the
WTO can take years to resolve. China has taken the first step known as a request
for consultations. The WTO also has provisions in its rules that allow countries
to impose restrictions in the interest of national security. This could make it
difficult for China to win this particular dispute.
“If this is the response
to the export controls, it suggests that China has limited options,” Pranay Kotasthane, chairperson of the high tech
geopolitics program at the Takshashila Institution, tweeted
on Tuesday.
“Given that WTO has exceptions
for national security concerns, which can be defined broadly, it’s unlikely to result
in any policy changes.”
But spokesperson Adam
Hodge told Reuters on Monday that the U.S. has received the request for consultations
from China in regards to the semiconductor export restrictions.
“As we have already communicated
to the PRC (People’s Republic of China), these targeted actions relate to national
security, and the WTO is not the appropriate forum to discuss issues related to
national security,” Hodge said.