兩黨再如何吵鬧,實際上他們的政策是連續的,尤其是對外。friend-shoring這個詞就是在biden presidency 期間叫響起來的。不要殺掉前人種下的樹和苗,要給別人應該有的credit。如果問中共怕恨哪個黨,我相信他們會說民主黨。因為民主黨很多時候是做不說,這可能也是你們沒知道的原因。川普正相反,邪乎別人先,先嚷出去先,弄雞飛狗跳,再回頭來來回回改。Why? 做人呢,別人應該的到的credits要大方給人家,不要太Trump. 我還是英文表達清楚一下。
During the Biden administration, diversifying supply chains and reducing U.S. dependence on China became a core economic and national security priority. You can go back to count how many times U.S. officials visited China to communicate these goals, ensuring that China understood our intentions while avoiding misunderstandings, demonstrating that we take a firm and responsible stance.
Biden, Blinken, Yellen have all emphasized what they call "de-risking, not decoupling" many many many times. That means not cutting off China entirely (you can't. you just simply can't because you don't have the ability to do so), but reducing dependencies in critical sectors such as semiconductors, batteries, pharmaceuticals, and rare earths. The strategy aims to make US supply chains more resilient and geographically diversified, which means bring some production back to the US or allies(friend-shoring). They know they need allies to face China together and they know we cannot do this alone! Trump does not know, even now.
Here were the key actions:
-
CHIPS and Science Act (2022): Massive subsidies to boost U.S. semiconductor manufacturing and reduce reliance on Asian chip production (especially China and Taiwan).
-
Inflation Reduction Act (2022): Encourages electric-vehicle and clean-energy supply chains within the U.S. and friendly nations.
-
Treasury initiatives: Yellen pushed for deeper supply-chain partnerships with India, Vietnam, Mexico, and the EU.
-
State Department diplomacy: Blinken promoted economic “corridors” and agreements with Southeast Asia, Japan, and South Korea to rebalance global production networks.
Here were the achievements:
-
Some companies (like Apple, Dell, and Tesla) have shifted partial production to India and Vietnam.
-
Imports of Chinese goods have fallen modestly, while U.S. imports from Mexico and ASEAN countries have risen.
-
However, the U.S. still depends heavily on China for components like rare earth materials, solar panels, and medical supplies — meaning full independence is still far away.
-
U.S. imports from China as a share of total U.S. imports declined: according to the 2024?Economic Report of the President, China’s share of U.S. imports dropped from 21.6?% in 2017 to 13.9?% by early 2023. The White House+2Aspen Institute Economic Strategy+2
-
The U.S. passed major legislation oriented toward supply chains and manufacturing: e.g., the CHIPS and Science Act (2022) and other policies to expand domestic capacity. CrossDock Insights+2The White House+2
-
The U.S. moved to raise tariffs / trade enforcement in targeted sectors under the Biden administration, including on Chinese imports of solar wafers, polysilicon, and other products. U.S. Department of Commerce+3AP News+3The White House+3
-
The U.S. import ranking shifted: by 2023, the U.S. imported more goods from Mexico than from China for the first time in over 20 years.