Taiwanese lessons for the American chip industry
...and forced Uyghur labor in gold mines | October 12, 2023
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Editor-in-Chief ย |
CURRENT AFFAIRS
What the U.S. must learn from Taiwan to rebuild a computer chip business |
Illustration for The China Project by Derek Zheng |
Taiwanese semiconductor giant TSMC is building a new factory in Arizona for advanced chipmaking, but the U.S. is going to need more than just one fab if it wants to revitalize its own semiconductor industry.
Americaโs industry will have to invest in these areas as it looks to build out chipmaking at home amid fears of possible future supply chain disruptions, but challenges abound.
Former TSMC employee Margaret Siu lays out the case for emulating Taiwan in a new opinion piece. ย |
NEWS BRIEFING
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Hereโs what else you need to know about China today:
China barred brokers from opening offshore trading accounts for new local clients, according to a document by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) first seen by Reuters. The CSRC ordered Chinese brokerages and their offshore units to โclose all new account opening channels for domestic investorsโ including onshore apps and websites, by October 31, according to a notice also seen by Bloomberg and the Financial Times. India and China agreed to maintain peace along their disputed border at the 20th round of military chief-level talks on October 9โ10. The Chinese defense ministry said today that the two sides had โa positive, in-depth, and constructive discussion on resolving the remaining issuesโ along the western part of their 3,488-kilometer (2,167-mile) border in โa mutually acceptable manner at the earliest possible date.โ (Indiaโs readout is here.) China reached a tentative deal with Sri Lanka to cover about $4.2 billion of outstanding debt, the Chinese foreign ministry said on October 10. While further details are sparse, the deal, reached between Export-Import Bank of China and Sri Lanka late last month, has caught other major creditors including Japan, India, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) by surprise. It also helps Sri Lanka get past the IMFโs first upcoming review to keep tapping funds from its $3 billion bailout program. Fresh graduates can make roughly 18,592 yuan ($2,600) a month in Chinaโs AI industry, the highest average salaries for Chinese university graduates this year and more than 40% over the levels seen in the past three years, according to a report by Chinese recruitment platform Liepin. It comes as Chinese companies race to lure in talent to help produce their own AI chatbot services, such as OpenAIโs ChatGPT or Baiduโs Ernie Bot. Serbia is turning to Chinese arms suppliers as tensions build up along the border with Kosovo, its smaller Balkan neighbor. Imports of Chinese-made HQ-22 surface-to-air missiles and CH-92 armed drones worth $310 million made China Serbiaโs top arms source in trade value in 2022, overtaking Russia in the wake of its invasion on Ukraine, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Chinese state media: The Peopleโs Daily focuses on the Belt and Road today with two top front page stories: High-quality joint construction of the Belt and Road will make steady and long-term progress, and Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ will attend the third Belt and Road International Cooperation Summit Forum and hold related activities. The Belt and Road Summit will be held in Beijing on October 17 and 18. Vladimir Putin and dozens of other world leaders are expected to attend. Xinhua News Agency follows yesterdayโs report and photo album of Xi Jinping visiting Jiujiang, Jiangxi Province with another short report and gallery of Xi looking at things while surrounded by adoring sycophants as he tours Jiangxiโs most famous town, Jingdezhen, the historic heart of Chinaโs traditional porcelain industry. ย |
UYGHUR BULLETIN
Gold mined by Uyghurs forced to work for Chinese firms ends up in Western investments and products, report shows |
Chinese national flag raising ceremony at Western Region Gold Yili Company in 2017. Image courtesy C4ADS, from October 11, 2023 report,โFractured Veins: The Worldโs Reliance on Minerals From the Uyghur Region” |
Gold produced in China is mined by Uyghurs working in conditions akin to slavery, according to a report published yesterday by C4ADS, a Washington, D.C. think tank.
Industry bodies have turned a blind eye to forced labor in gold mining in China by giving mining companies a clean bill of health, the C4ADS report said.
Ruth Ingram has the full story in her weekly column on Uyghur affairs. ย |
BOOKS
Whatโs the problem with Chinese soccer? |
Englishman Rowan Simons became a household name among Chinese soccer fans for his TV commentary on English football. His efforts to promote grassroots soccer within China proved much more difficult, as he encountered a country ill-suited to the โbeautiful game.โ
All the while, the continually dismal performance of Chinaโs national team โ most recently losing 1-0 to Syria last month โ doesnโt exactly encourage hope. Simons writes about it in the book Bamboo Goalposts, which is the latest entry in Paul Frenchโs Ultimate China Bookshelf. ย |
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FROM THE NEWSBASE
Below are links from our NewsBase to other noteworthy reports published in the last 24 hours from and about China.BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:Globalization isnโt over Banking IPOs Steel TikTok bans EVs and smartphones AI POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:Police and military Uyghurs Taiwan U.S.-China competition and tensions U.S. and Chinese universities North Korea Australia Israel-Palestine Middle East Sri Lanka Serbia India Europe SOCIETY AND CULTURE:Shanghaiโs history sheltering Jewish refugees Chinese opera ย |
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