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    Home » US vs. China: The Evolving Tech Stacks in the Era of Trump 2.0

    US vs. China: The Evolving Tech Stacks in the Era of Trump 2.0

    webmasterBy webmasterSeptember 13, 2025Updated:September 13, 2025 News 8 Mins Read
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    US vs. China: The Evolving Tech Stacks in the Era of Trump 2.0

    In the rapidly shifting landscape of global technology dominance, the United States and China stand as the primary contenders, each wielding formidable tech stacks that encompass artificial intelligence, semiconductors, telecommunications, quantum computing, and emerging fields like biotechnology and electric vehicles. Drawing from discussions on US-China tech rivalries, such as those highlighted in recent analyses, this comparison explores how these stacks measure up as of mid-2025, with a forward-looking lens on President Trump’s second term. Trump’s administration has already begun implementing aggressive policies, including tariffs, export controls, and strategic negotiations, aiming to bolster American superiority while countering China’s advances. These actions signal a continuation of the “tech cold war,” but with Trump’s deal-making flair potentially introducing unpredictable twists.
    Semiconductors: The Foundation of Tech Supremacy. At the heart of the tech rivalry lies semiconductor manufacturing, where the US maintains a qualitative edge through companies like Nvidia, Intel, and TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company), which produce the world’s most advanced chips. The US tech stack benefits from cutting-edge extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography technology, primarily controlled by Dutch firm ASML, enabling sub-5nm processes essential for high-performance computing.

    This has allowed American firms to dominate in AI accelerators and military applications. Under Trump 1.0, export controls prevented China from accessing EUV tools, a policy reinforced in Trump 2.0 with threats of 200% tariffs on rare earth magnets critical for chip production.

    China, however, has made remarkable strides in self-reliance. Through state-backed giants like SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) and Huawei, Beijing has ramped up production of 7nm chips, bypassing some US restrictions via domestic tools and stockpiling. By 2025, China aims to triple AI chip output, with Huawei’s Ascend 910D and Cambricon’s processors supporting native FP8 formats for efficient AI training.

    Trump’s recent actions, including lifting the Biden-era ban on Nvidia’s H20 chips to China after negotiations, reflect a pragmatic approach: securing concessions like relaxed rare earth exports in exchange for limited tech access. Going forward, Trump’s proposed 15% commission on US AI chip sales to China could fund domestic fabs under the CHIPS Act, potentially widening the US lead, but risks alienating allies if overzealously applied.

    China, meanwhile, is poised to export more mid-tier chips to the Global South, challenging US market share. Artificial Intelligence: Innovation vs. ScaleIn AI, the US tech stack shines in foundational research and model development. Powerhouses like OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and xAI lead with models surpassing 20% accuracy on advanced benchmarks, driven by vast datasets, talent pools, and venture capital ecosystems.

    The US benefits from open-source contributions and alliances, such as with the EU and Japan, fostering innovation in areas like multimodal AI and ethical frameworks. Trump’s executive order promoting American AI exports underscores this, positioning the US stack as the “global standard,” akin to the dollar’s dominance. China’s AI stack, bolstered by firms like Baidu, Alibaba, and DeepSeek, excels in rapid scaling and application deployment. With a massive domestic market and government subsidies, China has closed gaps in large language models, achieving 14% benchmark accuracy and integrating AI into surveillance, manufacturing, and e-commerce.

    Beijing’s “whole-of-society” approach, including heavy embedding in global open-source communities, has accelerated progress despite US curbs. Under Trump, intensified export controls on AI chips and software could slow China’s momentum, but his administration’s reversal of Biden’s “Diffusion Rule” suggests a focus on competitive dominance rather than blanket restrictions.

    Analysts predict Trump will expand entity lists to target affiliates, denying licenses more aggressively, which might force China to innovate domestically but at a higher cost.

    By 2030, if Trump prioritizes alliances, the US could maintain a 2-3 year lead; otherwise, China’s scale might dominate emerging markets.

    Telecommunications and 5G/6G: Deployment vs. Standards
    China leads in 5G deployment, with Huawei’s equipment powering over 1.5 billion connections globally, particularly in Asia and Africa. Its tech stack emphasizes cost-effective infrastructure, integrated with IoT and smart cities, giving it an edge in scale and affordability.

    Looking to 6G, China invests heavily in terahertz tech and satellite integration, aiming for ubiquitous connectivity.The US, through companies like Qualcomm and Ericsson (via alliances), dominates standards-setting via bodies like 3GPP, ensuring interoperability and security. Trump’s policies, including bans on Huawei in US networks and pressure on allies, have fragmented global telecom, but his 2025 truce extended tariff pauses in exchange for tech concessions. Future actions may include curbs on Chinese smart cars and connected devices, expanding the “tech wall.”

    This could protect US infrastructure but risk isolating American firms if the Global South opts for Huawei’s affordable stack.

    Quantum Computing and Biotechnology: Emerging Frontiers
    Quantum computing sees the US ahead with IBM and Google’s hybrid systems achieving quantum advantage in simulations. China’s stack, via Alibaba and Origin Quantum, focuses on scalable qubits, though lagging in error correction.

    Trump’s $1 billion+ AI funding bill, which includes quantum, aims to accelerate US R&D.

    In biotech, the US leads in mRNA tech (Moderna, Pfizer), while China dominates in genomics via BGI and rapid drug trials. Trump’s tariffs on Chinese EVs and green tech could extend to biotech imports, fostering US self-reliance.

    Electric Vehicles and Green Tech: Market DisruptionChina’s EV stack, led by BYD and CATL, controls 60% of global battery production, emphasizing affordability and supply chain integration. The US, with Tesla and Ford, excels in software and autonomous driving. Trump’s threats of 25% tariffs on Chinese goods could shield US manufacturers but inflate costs.

    Trump’s Actions and Future Outlook

    President Trump’s 2025 policies blend confrontation and negotiation. Executive orders impose 10% global tariffs (escalating to 20% on China), declare emergencies for competitive edges, and rescind some chip restrictions to secure deals. This “America First” approach aims to dominate, but risks backlash if it alienates partners. Chinese analysts anticipate heightened competition, with Beijing focusing on domestic innovation to counter.

    By 2030, the US could retain leads in high-end tech if Trump forges alliances, while China’s resilience might erode edges in scale-driven sectors. The rivalry will reshape global supply chains, with Southeast Asia benefiting from diversification. Ultimately, Trump’s actions will determine if the US stack becomes the global benchmark or if bifurcation accelerates.

    • US vs. China dominance: How tech stacks measure up
    • The AI Showdown: How the US and China Stack Up – Bloomberg.com
    • Making the case for a third AI technology stack – Brookings Institution
    • 2025 Gaps Analysis Report – SCSP.ai
    • China vs. The US in 2025: A Shifting Business and Technology …
    • The AI Superpower Showdown. Inside the US-China Race for…
    • The Great Tech Rivalry: China vs the U.S. – Belfer Center
    • China’s racing to beat U.S. chip curbs. How its supply chain stacks up
    • US-China high-tech friction and Japan’s response – CEPR
    • China’s drive toward self-reliance in artificial intelligence: from chips …
    • US-China Relations in the Trump 2.0 Era: A Timeline
    • Presidential 2025 Tariff Actions: Timeline and Status | Congress.gov
    • Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Promotes the Export of …
    • Trump 2.0 tariff tracker – Trade Compliance Resource Hub
    • Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Declares National …
    • President Trump Signs Law with Over $1 Billion of AI … – Mintz
    • Donald Trump’s executive orders and actions on trade and tariffs, 2025
    • Trump’s 2025 Executive Orders – Holland & Knight
    • Trump’s Tech Wall: Intensifying “Tough on China” Policy Approach …
    • As Trump Courts a More Assertive Beijing, China Hawks Are Losing …

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