The customers can always take their business elsewhere...........oh wait, they can't, oh crap. No one has the right to tell them who they can trade with. it's not like i can dictate anything to any company i buy stuff from is it. I'm sure TSMC will have other companies queueing up for their services.
I guess you don't work in the manufacturing business? You can actually stipulate a lot of things when you write a contract.
A US company signed a contract with a company I used to work for that was some 400-pages with terms of how the product was supposed to be made, when it was supposed to done etc.
It took a week to negotiate all the terms and I'm just happy I wasn't part of that process.
TSMC is a bit of an edge case, but as we've seen, Nvidia took its business and went to Samsung, so it's possible to go elsewhere.
The US also convinced TSMC to ban HiSilicon as one of its customers, which pretty much put Huawei out of business.
Ahem, before the Japanese Taiwan was ruled by the Chinese Qing dynasty, between 1683 and 1895.
Or not. That's Xinese propaganda. Go read up on things and you'll see that they ruled nothing.
What they did, was doing trade with the locals in Taiwan, that's hardly ruling Taiwan.
Do you believe in the nine-dash line too?
Basically, it all boils down to Americas paranoia over china.
If America blocked them from building fabs there, surely they would be shooting themselves in the foot,
Why would the US be shooting themselves in the foot for that?
It wouldn't matter the least in the long run.
And it's not just paranoia, why can't people see this?
Had it been before Xi, I would agree, but things are changing fast in Xina and it's not changing for the better.
This is how they treat their own companies, so why would they even blink when it comes to taking over companies that aren't local if it benefited them?
www.taiwannews.com.tw