From cars and phones to satellite technology, semiconductors play a key role in many of our modern utilities and consumer goods. As such, semiconductors are China’s main import item and an essential component of a lot of its exports. Since the US push to restrict this trade, China has been investing heavily on its semiconductor industry, to reduce their dependence on the rest of the world. In this episode of The Sound of Economics,
Giuseppe Porcaro is joined by Bruegel’s
Alicia García-Herrero and
Jason Hsu, a Senior Research Fellow at The Ash Centre for Democratic Governance and Innovation Harvard Kennedy School, to discuss China’s semiconductor policies, as well as its implications and lessons for Taiwan and the rest of the world.
This episode is part of the ZhōngHuá Mundus series of The Sound of Economics.
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China’s semiconductors push already has lessons for the rest of the world.