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Nvidia CEO highlights deep China–US interdependence amid tech and trade tensions

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yesterday

As geopolitical frictions between Washington and Beijing continue to ripple through global markets, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has pushed back against the idea that the United States can realistically decouple from China. In remarks that have drawn wide attention across political, business, and technology circles, Huang underscored the depth of economic and technological interdependence between the world’s two largest economies, warning that simplified narratives of separation ignore complex realities shaping global innovation and trade.

Huang’s comments come at a time when China and the United States remain locked in a prolonged dispute over intellectual property protection, technology transfer, export controls, and national security. These tensions have increasingly defined the global technology landscape, affecting supply chains, investment decisions, and the pace of innovation in critical sectors such as semiconductors and artificial intelligence (AI).

“The idea that floated around about US decoupling from China, I think, is flawed,” Huang said in a recent video interview with Time. “Our dependency on each other is quite significant and it’s deeper than people think.” His remarks challenge a growing policy trend in Washington that seeks to reduce reliance on Chinese manufacturing and technological ecosystems, particularly in strategically sensitive industries.

For years, US policymakers have accused China of engaging in unfair trade practices, including intellectual property theft, forced technology transfer, and heavy state subsidies that disadvantage foreign competitors. These concerns have fueled bipartisan support for tougher trade policies, tighter export controls, and increased scrutiny of Chinese companies operating in the United States.

Beijing, for its part, has rejected these accusations and argues that Washington is weaponizing trade and technology policy to contain China’s rise. Chinese officials have repeatedly criticized US export controls as discriminatory and politically motivated, warning that such measures disrupt........

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