// Global Analysis Archive
A 2020 CSET brief describes U.S. semiconductor export controls toward China as a layered system combining list-based technology controls with stricter end-use and end-user restrictions. It suggests exports rose through 2019 amid permissive licensing and declining coverage, but notes a tightening trajectory via entity listings, military end-use controls, and stricter licensing practices.
A 2020 CSET brief describes how U.S. semiconductor export controls on China combine list-based restrictions with end-use/end-user rules and entity listings, historically implemented with largely permissive licensing. The source indicates SME exports to China more than doubled from 2014–2019 amid declining control coverage, but suggests a tightening trend driven by stricter licensing, expanded military end-use controls, and heightened restrictions on major entities.
A 2020 CSET brief finds U.S. semiconductor exports to China rose through 2019, driven in part by permissive licensing and declining control coverage—especially for semiconductor manufacturing equipment. The report also highlights a shift toward tighter, more targeted restrictions via entity listings, military end-use controls, and stricter deemed export licensing.
A 2020 CSET brief describes U.S. semiconductor export controls toward China as a layered system combining list-based technology controls with stricter end-use and end-user restrictions. It suggests exports rose through 2019 amid permissive licensing and declining coverage, but notes a tightening trajectory via entity listings, military end-use controls, and stricter licensing practices.
A 2020 CSET brief describes how U.S. semiconductor export controls on China combine list-based restrictions with end-use/end-user rules and entity listings, historically implemented with largely permissive licensing. The source indicates SME exports to China more than doubled from 2014–2019 amid declining control coverage, but suggests a tightening trend driven by stricter licensing, expanded military end-use controls, and heightened restrictions on major entities.
A 2020 CSET brief finds U.S. semiconductor exports to China rose through 2019, driven in part by permissive licensing and declining control coverage—especially for semiconductor manufacturing equipment. The report also highlights a shift toward tighter, more targeted restrictions via entity listings, military end-use controls, and stricter deemed export licensing.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-4522 | U.S. Semiconductor Export Controls on China: Layered Restrictions, Coverage Gaps, and Shifting Trade Trends | Export Controls | 2020-08-10 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-3833 | U.S. Semiconductor Export Controls on China: Coverage Gaps, Entity Targeting, and Shifting Trade Flows | Semiconductors | 2020-07-28 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-3850 | U.S. Semiconductor Export Controls on China: Coverage Gaps, Licensing Leverage, and the 2014–2019 Trade Surge | Semiconductors | 2019-12-22 | 0 | ACCESS » |