China seeks self-reliance in science
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China's top leaders have pledged to boost the country's self-reliance in advanced technologies and spur stronger domestic demand over the next five years
China’s official Xinhua News Agency noted in a commentary yesterday the gathering “is poised to shape the direction of the 15 th Five-Year Plan that will steer the world’s second-largest economy from 2026 to 2030, a defining phase on China’s path toward basically achieving socialist modernization by 2025.”
China released new interim measures Friday tightening controls on mining and processing of rare earths that are used in many high-tech products
A new visa aimed at highly skilled science and technology workers comes as the Trump administration is making it more difficult for such workers to go to the U.S.
HONG KONG (AP) — China outlined new curbs on exports of rare earths and related technologies ... significant development and escalation” by extending controls to related technology and equipment and to sectors like chipmakers. “This should be a ...
China will seek to become more self-sufficient technologically over the coming five years, the ruling Communist Party said in a new economic blueprint.
China’s leadership have just concluded a closed-door conclave focused on drawing up the country’s next five-year economic blueprint – a sweeping plan covering everything from accelerating tech innovation to streamlining how Chinese farms grow food.
“We should not miss the fundamental point on rare earths: China has crafted a policy that gives it the power to forbid any country on Earth from participating in the modern economy,” Dean Ball, who served as a senior advisor in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy earlier this year, wrote on X on Saturday.