San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. TO GATHER INTELLIGEN­CE ON CHINESE CHIPMAKERS

Commerce Dept. to conduct survey as Biden mulls tariffs

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

The U.S. Commerce Department will begin gathering informatio­n on Chinese production of legacy semiconduc­tors — chips that aren’t cutting-edge but are still vital to the global economy — as it looks to track how deeply reliant U.S. companies have become on the technology from China.

In January, the agency’s Bureau of Industry and Security will survey more than 100 companies in autos, aerospace, defense and other sectors to understand how they procure and use legacy chips, according to a Commerce official.

Some Chinese chipmakers have used low prices to undercut competitor­s, according to the official, and Washington wants to prevent China from dominating that industry like it did in steel and solar.

“Over the last few years, we’ve seen potential signs of concerning practices from the PRC to expand their firms’ legacy chip production and make it harder for U.S. companies to compete,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in a statement, referring to the People’s Republic of China. The survey will “inform our next steps,” she said.

Those steps could include tariffs or other trade tools to counter China’s push, said the official, who asked not to be identified discussing the administra­tion’s thinking. The House Select Committee on China recently urged the U.S. to impose legacy chip tariffs in a bipartisan report.

Raimondo said in August that the U.S. will use “all the tools at our disposal” if China floods the global market with underprice­d legacy chips. Under Secretary for Industry and Security Alan Estevez reiterated that message in October, pointing to laws enabling Washington to investigat­e and respond to unfair trade practices that affect national security.

But the U.S. won’t use export controls to deal with oversuppli­es of older-generation semiconduc­tors, Raimondo has said, reserving that tool only for the most advanced models.

President Joe Biden has imposed broad curbs on China’s ability to secure and make the kind of advanced semiconduc­tors that power artificial intelligen­ce models and military applicatio­ns. Beijing responded by pouring billions into factories for the chips that haven’t been banned, which include simpler models using older production techniques.

A pandemic shortage of such chips bedeviled auto and tech firms and spurred Washington to enact the 2022 Chips and Science Act, which sets aside subsidies worth $100 billion to revitalize American semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing. At least $2 billion from that fund will go to mature technologi­es.

The BIS survey will inform those investment decisions, the official said, and help ensure Chinese subsidies don’t drown out U.S. incentives. The survey also seeks to nudge defense contractor­s toward phasing Chinese chips out of their supply chains, the official added.

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