July 31, 2024
Sharper: Economic Security
Analysis from CNAS experts on the most critical challenges for U.S. foreign policy.
U.S. international economic policy now centers squarely on economic security objectives, as a result of geopolitical competition with China, post-pandemic awareness of the fragility of supply chains, and a resurgence of industrial policy. Security concerns drive economic policy, and the lines between economic and national security are increasingly blurred. CNAS experts are sharpening the conversation to advance a more strategic approach to economic security, one that advances U.S. security interests while promoting long-term U.S. economic prosperity and competitiveness.
Features
U.S. Economic Security Strategy, Authorities, and Bureaucratic Capacity
“China is a foremost geopolitical challenge for the United States,” said Emily Kilcrease, senior fellow and director of the Energy, Economics, and Security program in a testimony for the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs on national security challenges. Her testimony focuses on issues of strengthening economic security strategy, authorities, and bureaucratic capacity to keep pace with China on emerging technologies.
Disorderly Conduct
A new report explores the rise of security issues within the U.S.-China economic relationship, emphasizing how strategic competition has disrupted the global economic order, and proposes a framework for the United States to navigate this evolving landscape. While historically U.S. strategies have sought to integrate China into the global order, policymakers no longer believe they can change China’s behavior and instead seek to constrain actions that threaten U.S. economic security interests.
U.S. Economic Security Strategy, Authorities, and Bureaucratic Capacity
Watch:...
Disorderly Conduct
The United States must develop a strong, pragmatic strategy for advancing its economic and security interests within the U.S.-China economic relationship, accounting for the f...
How to Regulate Smart, Not Dumb, with Alan Estevez
Under Secretary of Commerce Alan Estevez recently joined Derisky Business to talk tech competition with China, how Russia can still get western chips, and why all our cars might be spying on us.
No Winners in This Game
The relationship between the United States and the PRC is marked by both geopolitical tensions and deep economic linkages. And the once unthinkable idea of imposing severe sanctions on China has become a strategic imperative to consider. A report from the Energy, Economics, and Security team at CNAS seeks to advance policy debates on how to sanction China, if geopolitical conditions warranted doing so at scale. A new video breaks down how sanctions can be used to greatest effect as part of a broader strategy that integrates all instruments of national power.
Rebuild: Toolkit for a New American Industrial Policy
As economic security comes to the forefront of U.S. foreign policy, the U.S. strategy has been largely reactive and focused on playing defense rather than offense. Actions have centered on slowing down competitors—namely China—rather than defining an affirmative vision for growing American strength in the economic domain. A uniquely American industrial policy is the missing piece of the U.S. economic security strategy. A report from Emily Kilcrease and Emily Jin lays out the tools available to the U.S. government for implementing industrial policy effectively.
How to regulate smart, not dumb, with Alan Estevez
This week, Under Secretary of Commerce Alan Estevez joins Derisky Business to talk tech competition with China, how Russia can still get western chips, and why all our cars mi...
No Winners in This Game
Watch...
Rebuild: Toolkit for a New American Industrial Policy
As economic security comes to the forefront of U.S. foreign policy, the U.S. strategy has been largely reactive and focused on playing defense rather than offense. Actions hav...
Commentary
Rumors of China’s Decline Are Premature and Dangerous
January 2024
“China continues to rise and seems bent on regional domination and international revisionism,” wrote Richard Fontaine for The Washington Post. “In the grand U.S.-China contest that increasingly drives international politics, however, Beijing’s absolute strength is only half of the equation. Relative power ultimately matters most in contests of this sort, and so America’s own strength will be all-important. Here we have work to do.“
How to Win Friends and Choke China’s Chip Supply
January 2023
”To forge a consensus, the United States should remain laser focused on the national security justification for the new controls and offer foreign partners a clear picture of how far it intends to extend its aggressive new approach, specifically in sectors other than chips and supercomputing,” writes Emily Kilcrease for War on the Rocks. “Washington should proactively work with partners to mitigate the economic effects of the new controls, providing clarity and predictability for industry participants with investment timelines that stretch over a decade. Guidance on future licensing policy, as well as exemptions from the extraterritorial aspects of the new rules for those countries that implement substantially similar controls, should feature prominently in the ongoing negotiations.”
Rumors of China’s Decline Are Premature and Dangerous
The chief near-term risk is not that Beijing’s ascent will fizzle, but rather that Washington will fail to muster the strength necessary for an adequate response....
How to Win Friends and Choke China’s Chip Supply
U.S. officials should prioritize aligning controls with other major producer nations to target the most significant technology chokepoints and the areas where the risk of back...
How to Stop Our High-Tech Equipment From Arming Russia and China
December 2023
”During the Cold War, the West imposed expansive controls on metalworking tools to prevent them from being used for Soviet military purposes,” write Chris Miller and Jordan Schneider for The New York Times. “Getting serious about machinery export controls today is one of the most cost-effective ways to meaningfully limit our adversaries’ militaries. Facing a revanchist Russia and adversarial China, we need to revitalize these techniques, or else our tools will continue to be used to build their militaries.”
America’s Chance to Blunt China’s Encroachment
December 2023
“While the U.S. rightfully focuses on bringing its hostages home from Gaza and alleviating broader tensions in the Middle East, the U.S.-China competition continues unabated,” observes Daniel Silverberg and Elena McGovern for The Wall Street Journal. “The supplemental funding package for Israel that President Biden proposed in October contains a $1.25 billion funding request for the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development—a part of the World Bank—to help developing nations such as Kenya, Morocco and Nigeria get loans from Western organizations instead of from China. Congress should endorse this package and enact additional measures to weaken Chinese economic influence in the developing world.”
How to Stop Our High-Tech Equipment From Arming Russia and China
The U.S. government’s efforts to stop Russia and China from using American equipment to boost their defense sectors have resulted in tough rules — but leaky enforcement. As a ...
America’s Chance to Blunt China’s Encroachment
If the U.S. spreads its efforts too thin or focuses primarily on military power at the expense of economic diplomacy, it will lose this competition....
In the News
Commentary and analysis from Emily Kilcrease and Geoffrey Gertz.
Japanese Company’s Bid for U.S. Steel Tests Biden’s Industrial Policy
Independent experts say it would be well within historical norms for the committee to evaluate the sale. That will likely include a detailed economic analysis of whether the d...
U.S. and Europe chafe over “overcapacity” — but is it real?
Overcapacity is kind of a fuzzy word, and that’s saying a lot for an economic term. “At a basic level, overcapacity is too much production and too little demand,” said Geoffr...
The US is known for designing chips, not making them. Can the CHIPS Act funding change that?
Speed matters here, because the U.S. is competing with other countries who are offering their own incentives to chipmakers, said Emily Kilcrease, director of the energy, econo...
About the Sharper Series
The CNAS Sharper series features curated analysis and commentary from CNAS experts on the most critical challenges in U.S. foreign policy. From the future of America's relationship with China to the state of U.S. sanctions policy and more, each collection draws on the reports, interviews, and other commentaries produced by experts across the Center to explore how America can strengthen its competitive edge.
Subscribe
Sign up to receive the latest analysis from the CNAS expert community on the most important issues facing America's national security.
Thank you for registering! You will receive a confirmation email shortly. All CNAS events are free, open to the public, and viewable from cnas.org/live.
Stay up-to-date with report releases, events, major updates, and announcements from the Center for a New American Security.
More from CNAS
-
How America Wasted Its Most Powerful Economic Weapon
As Donald Trump embarks on his much-anticipated peace negotiations, they will provide important leverage—Putin will be desperate to recover them, while Ukrainian President Vol...
By Edward Fishman
-
Edward Fishman on the Age of Economic Warfare
In the latest episode of the Sanctions Space Podcast, Justine is joined by Edward Fishman, author of Chokepoints: American Power in the Age of Economic Warfare and an adjunct ...
By Edward Fishman
-
What Have U.S. Sanctions on Russia Achieved Since the War in Ukraine Began?
Three years after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine began, what have U.S. sanctions achieved? NPR talks to Edward Fishman, author of "Chokepoints: American Power in the ...
By Edward Fishman
-
Ziemba: Sanctions Enforcement on Russia To Ease Up
Rachel Ziemba, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), speaks with Bloomberg TV’s Joumanna Bercetche on the Horizons Middle East and Africa ...
By Rachel Ziemba