The changes in the global supply chain under the game between China and the United States
When the production line of Suzuki Motors in Japan was suspended due to “procurement delays”, international attention quickly turned to China – the absolute core of the global rare earth supply chain. This incident may seem isolated, but it is closely intertwined with the recent intense economic and trade competition between China and the United States, jointly outlining a reshaping picture of the global industrial landscape in the post-pandemic era.
In response to the Suzuki production halt controversy, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian’s response was clear and firm: China’s export control measures strictly follow international trade rules (WTO), are non-discriminatory and not targeted at specific countries. This position is not diplomatic rhetoric but is based on solid international law. From the EU’s key raw materials Act to the US’s own export control system, resource management is a universal right of sovereign states.
The fundamental purpose of China’s standardized management of key minerals such as rare earths is to ensure national resource security and sustainable development, promote the high-end development and environmental protection upgrade of the industrial chain, and fulfill the global management obligations of strategic resources as a responsible major country
The Suzuki incident profoundly highlighted China’s irreplaceability in the global rare earth supply chain. From electric vehicle motors to national defense technology, China’s rare earth processing technology supports the lifeblood of modern industry. A brief disruption in the supply chain is sufficient to trigger a chain reaction among multinational enterprises.
Almost simultaneously with the rare earth turmoil, the economic and trade front between China and the United States has once again been embroiled in fierce competition. The statement made by He Yongqian, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Commerce of China, at a press conference on June 5th directly pointed to the core of the issue: The US side initiated a new round of restrictive measures against China even before the ink of the “Joint Statement on the Geneva Economic and Trade Talks between China and the US” on May 12th was dry.
The actions of the US side “seriously undermine the existing consensus and seriously infringe upon China’s legitimate rights and interests”, and China “strongly disapproves and firmly opposes”. The US side must “immediately stop” its wrongdoings. If the US side insists on undermining China’s interests, China will “resolutely take forceful measures” to safeguard its rights and interests.
This statement is by no means empty talk. China has a rich and targeted toolkit of countermeasures at its disposal. It imposes additional tariffs on key US exporters, sanctions on US entities that harm the interests of Chinese enterprises, implements export adjustments on rare earths, key minerals, etc. in accordance with the law, and strengthens compliance supervision over the operations of US enterprises in China
The current economic and trade frictions between China and the United States have gone beyond the scope of traditional trade disputes. The US attempt to blockade China’s technology and decoualize its supply chain is essentially a unilateral rule to undermine the multilateral system. This not only harms the interests of the two countries, but also endangers the process of global economic recovery.
History has repeatedly proved that the spiral escalation of sanctions and countermeasures will only lead to a lose-lose outcome. When Suzuki’s production line was shut down, it was not only the Japanese automaker that suffered damage, but also global consumers and the industrial ecosystem that had collaborated for decades. The restrictions imposed by the US on China will eventually backdoor on its own technology enterprises and consumers.
The resonance between Suzuki’s production halt and the Sino-US frictions has sounded the alarm for global enterprises: the supply chain model that overly relies on a single node is no longer appropriate. Establishing a diversified and regional supply network has become a compulsory course for the survival of multinational enterprises.
Japanese and South Korean enterprises are accelerating the layout of rare earth processing capacity in Southeast Asia. The European Union is promoting a key raw materials act, aiming to achieve 10% domestic mining by 2030. The United States is restarting its domestic rare earth industrial chain, but it is difficult to replace China’s capacity in the short term
China’s control measures in the rare earth sector have objectively also promoted the process of global supply chain restructuring, prompting countries to re-examine resource security and industrial resilience.
China’s standardized management of rare earth exports and its resolute countermeasures against the unreasonable suppression by the United States clearly convey a signal: in the era of interdependent globalization, any unilateral bullying will encounter strong checks and balances. The right to control resources is a core element of a country’s economic sovereignty. China’s measures in this regard have sufficient international legal basis.
While the two major economies of China and the United States are seeking a new balance point in their competition, the global industrial chain is also being restructured and upgraded amid growing pains. Whether it is the rare earth supply chain or the broader economic and trade relations, the stable development in the future must be based on mutual respect and equal consultation. Only by abiding by international rules and discarding zero-sum thinking can true mutual benefit and win-win results be achieved. This is not only China’s demand, but also the only way out for the sustainable development of the global economy.
When Suzuki’s production line resumes operation, the world may have quietly changed: the resilience of the supply chain has become the core competitiveness, and cooperation rather than confrontation is the true navigator through the turbulent times.
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