FairAndUnbiased
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In the short term, all countries who have a dependency on Chinese products will suffer a impact but this is no more harmful than the bitter pill that physician gives you when you are sick. In the long run, markets will settle down and new alternatives will be found. Consumer prices might go up but it will be beneficial for everyone in the long run.
After China, US next target will be India:which maybe a fair assumption but we are still a very long way from this scenario. As long as China holds this stance and threatens global peace, a strong and secure India will always be needed to balance it, and if ever we see a day when the US is concerned about India's rising prowess - it will be a day when more than billion Indians have entered the Middle class and India has surpassed 10 trillion dollars in nominal GDP - which will still be a better position to be in under any circumstances.
They will never make the same mistake again. The boot will be on India's neck forever.
China opened its first commercial semiconductor foundry (note there were academic/government ones starting in the 1970's) in 2000 - SMIC. Today SMIC fabricates 14 nm chips (same level as US based Global Foundries, the 3rd largest foundry in the world) and is moving towards 7 nm within the year. China still has its own semiconductor equipment companies including AMEC which won VLSI supplier of the year. This is a relatively "weak" area for China. But even relative weakness in this sector is still massive strength at China's scale: China is still the 4th most productive region in semiconductor volume, below only Taiwan/SK/Japan and above North America.
Meanwhile India has a single 1990's semiconductor fab: ISRO's 180 nm process, 200 mm wafer fab. Just for an idea of how backwards this is: this is too primitive to even build commodity ADCs or cheap embedded 8 bit microprocessors, forget smartphones. India's semiconductor industry will never be allowed to get started.
You think China has it bad now? Wait until you see what India is going to deal with. Think Huawei is having a tough time because it only designs chips and has to 'downgrade' with SMIC at 14 nm instead of TSMC 7 nm? India is at 180 nm. Let that sink in for a second. It took SMIC 20 years to get to where it is now. Is there a single foundry breaking ground in India right now? No. India is already 20 years late, and counting.
You assume that India will be allowed to reach $10 trillion GDP - it won't be, and it also won't be China restricting you.