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After the US and its partners placed export controls on dilution refrigerators, China rapidly mobilized to build its own. Within a few years, it created more domestic firms in this critical space than the rest of the world combined, accelerating its path to self-sufficiency.

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Jensen Huang argues that aggressive export controls are a strategic error. They force China to develop its own hardware and software stack, which could lead to a bifurcated global standard and prevent the American tech ecosystem from benefiting from China's vast developer talent.

China's heavy investment in quantum component manufacturing, like photonic integrated circuits (PICs), allows its researchers to go from idea to physical prototype in just two weeks. In the US, the same process can take 12-18 months, giving China a massive advantage in iteration speed and adaptability.

The argument that US export controls on advanced chips backfired by incentivizing China to develop its own industry is flawed. China had publicly declared its goal to indigenize its chip stack and invested heavily in it since the mid-2010s, long before the most stringent US controls were enacted.

Instead of crippling China, aggressive US sanctions and tech restrictions are having the opposite effect. They have forced China to accelerate its own domestic R&D and manufacturing for advanced technologies like microchips. This is creating a more powerful and self-sufficient competitor that will not be reliant on the West.

Contrary to their intent, U.S. export controls on AI chips have backfired. Instead of crippling China's AI development, the restrictions provided the necessary incentive for China to aggressively invest in and accelerate its own semiconductor industry, potentially eroding the U.S.'s long-term competitive advantage.

The US ban on selling Nvidia's most advanced AI chips to China backfired. It forced China to accelerate its domestic chip industry, with companies like Huawei now producing competitive alternatives, ultimately reducing China's reliance on American technology.

China's superior ability to rapidly build energy infrastructure and data centers means it could have outpaced US firms in building massive AI training facilities. Export controls are the primary reason Chinese hyperscalers haven't matched the massive capital spending of their US counterparts.

The argument that U.S. export controls accelerate China's domestic tech efforts is a fiction. China's "indigenization pedal has been on the floor" since 2014, long before recent controls were implemented. It is a core national priority, meaning U.S. policy has little marginal effect on an already maxed-out effort.

China is no longer just mirroring US trade restrictions in a tit-for-tat manner. It is now offensively mapping its own supply chains to identify and control global choke points, proactively weaponizing its dominance in critical materials and technologies to exert geopolitical pressure.

U.S. export controls on advanced semiconductors, intended to slow China, have instead galvanized its domestic industry. The restrictions accelerated China's existing push for self-sufficiency, forcing local companies to innovate with less advanced chips and develop their own GPU and manufacturing capabilities, diminishing the policy's long-term effectiveness.