Glossary
Key Terms {-}
Asset Freeze: A form of financial sanction that prevents a targeted individual, entity, or government from accessing or transferring assets held in the sanctioning country's financial system.
ASML (Advanced Semiconductor Materials Lithography): Dutch company with monopoly on extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines essential for manufacturing advanced semiconductors.
Autocracy: A system of government in which power is concentrated in the hands of a single leader or small elite group, with limited political pluralism or democratic accountability.
Blackout: Temporary disruption of service, particularly in telecommunications or internet connectivity, often used as a tool of information control.
Choke Point: A geographic location or technological node through which a disproportionate share of trade, data, or resources must pass, creating potential leverage for control or disruption.
Coercion: The practice of persuading or forcing someone to do something through threats, pressure, or force.
Comprehensive Sanctions: Broad economic measures that severely restrict or prohibit most trade, investment, and financial transactions with a target country.
Critical Infrastructure: Systems and assets essential for the functioning of a society and economy, including energy, telecommunications, transportation, and financial systems.
Critical Minerals: Raw materials essential for key technologies and industries that face supply chain vulnerabilities due to geographic concentration or geopolitical risk.
De-dollarization: The process of reducing reliance on the U.S. dollar in international trade, finance, and foreign exchange reserves.
Dual-Use Technology: Goods, software, or technology that can be used for both civilian and military applications.
Economic Coercion: The use of economic tools and interdependencies to compel, deter, or punish specific policy changes in target states.
Economic Interdependence: The mutual dependence between countries arising from trade, investment, technology transfer, and financial flows.
Economic Statecraft: The use of economic tools to achieve foreign policy objectives, including positive inducements and negative coercion.
Entity List: A U.S. government list of foreign parties prohibited from receiving certain U.S.-origin items without a license, primarily for national security or foreign policy reasons.
EUV (Extreme Ultraviolet) Lithography: Advanced semiconductor manufacturing technology essential for producing chips at 7nm and below.
Export Controls: Government restrictions on the export of specific goods, technologies, or services, typically for national security, foreign policy, or nonproliferation reasons.
Extraterritorial Sanctions: Sanctions that apply not only to entities under the sanctioning country's jurisdiction but also to foreign entities engaging in specified activities.
Financial Sanctions: Measures that target financial transactions, assets, or access to financial systems to pressure targeted entities or countries.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI): Investment made by a firm or individual in one country into business interests located in another country.
Geoeconomics: The use of economic instruments to produce geopolitical outcomes, or the ways in which geopolitics shapes economic flows and structures.
Great Power Competition: Strategic rivalry between major powers (primarily the United States and China) across military, economic, technological, and ideological dimensions.
Industrial Policy: Government intervention in the economy to promote specific industries or technologies deemed strategically important.
Investment Screening: Government review of foreign investments to assess potential national security, critical infrastructure, or strategic technology risks.
Leverage: The ability to influence another actor's behavior through control of resources, access, or relationships that the target values.
Multilateral Sanctions: Coordinated economic sanctions implemented by multiple countries or international organizations.
National Security: The protection of a nation's sovereignty, territorial integrity, and core interests from external and internal threats.
Proliferation: The spread of weapons of mass destruction (nuclear, chemical, biological) or their delivery systems to additional countries or non-state actors.
Rare Earth Elements (REEs): A group of 17 metallic elements essential for high-tech products including electronics, magnets, batteries, and defense systems.
Regime Change: Foreign policy objective seeking to remove or replace a target country's political leadership or governing system.
Resilience: The ability of a system, supply chain, or economy to withstand and recover from shocks, disruptions, or coercive pressure.
Sanctions: Economic or political penalties applied by one or more countries against a targeted country, organization, or individual.
Secondary Sanctions: Sanctions that penalize third parties (foreign entities) for conducting business with a primary sanctions target.
Sectoral Sanctions: Targeted economic restrictions on specific sectors of a target country's economy, such as finance, energy, or defense.
Self-Sufficiency: A country's ability to meet its essential needs through domestic production without relying on foreign supply.
Semiconductor: Electronic component made from materials that conduct electricity under certain conditions, essential for modern electronics and computing.
Smart Sanctions: Targeted sanctions designed to affect specific individuals, entities, or economic sectors while minimizing humanitarian impact on civilian populations.
Strategic Autonomy: A country or region's ability to make independent strategic choices without being constrained by dependence on other powers.
Supply Chain: The network of organizations, people, activities, information, and resources involved in creating and delivering a product or service.
SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication): Belgium-based cooperative providing secure financial messaging services for international banking transactions.
Targeted Sanctions: Economic measures focused on specific individuals, entities, or sectors rather than comprehensive sanctions affecting an entire economy.
Technology Transfer: The sharing or movement of technology, knowledge, or capabilities from one country, organization, or context to another.
Unilateral Sanctions: Economic sanctions imposed by a single country acting alone rather than as part of a multilateral coalition.
Value Chain: The full range of activities required to create a product or service, from initial conception through production to final consumers.
Weaponization: The use of economic interdependencies, institutions, or tools as instruments of coercion or geopolitical pressure.
Acronyms and Abbreviations {-}
AI: Artificial Intelligence
ASEAN: Association of Southeast Asian Nations
BIS: Bank for International Settlements
BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa (economic cooperation group)
CFIUS: Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
CHIPS Act: Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors for America Act (2022)
CIPS: Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (China's alternative to SWIFT)
CNY: Chinese Yuan (currency)
COCOM: Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls (Cold War era)
COVID-19: Coronavirus Disease 2019
CPTPP: Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership
CSIS: Center for Strategic and International Studies
DoD: U.S. Department of Defense
EAR: Export Administration Regulations (U.S.)
EC: European Commission
EU: European Union
EUV: Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography
EV: Electric Vehicle
FDI: Foreign Direct Investment
FIRRMA: Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (2018)
G7: Group of Seven (major advanced economies)
G20: Group of Twenty (major economies)
GDP: Gross Domestic Product
IAEA: International Atomic Energy Agency
ICTS: Information and Communications Technology and Services
IMF: International Monetary Fund
IP: Intellectual Property
IRA: Inflation Reduction Act (2022)
ITAR: International Traffic in Arms Regulations
NATO: North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NDAA: National Defense Authorization Act
NPT: Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
NSS: National Security Strategy
OFAC: Office of Foreign Assets Control (U.S. Treasury)
OPEC: Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
PRC: People's Republic of China
R&D: Research and Development
REE: Rare Earth Elements
RISC: Reduced Instruction Set Computing
SDN: Specially Designated Nationals (U.S. sanctions list)
SMIC: Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (China)
SOE: State-Owned Enterprise
SWIFT: Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication
TPP: Trans-Pacific Partnership
TSMC: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company
UN: United Nations
UNSC: United Nations Security Council
USD: United States Dollar
USMCA: United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement
VC: Venture Capital
WMD: Weapons of Mass Destruction
WTO: World Trade Organization
Chinese Terms {-}
百年国耻 (bǎinián guóchǐ): "Century of Humiliation" - Period of foreign intervention and defeat (1839-1949) central to Chinese national narrative.
不可靠实体清单 (bùkěkào shítǐ qīngdān): "Unreliable Entity List" - China's mechanism for restricting foreign entities that threaten Chinese interests.
东升西降 (dōng shēng xī jiàng): "The East is rising, the West is declining" - Phrase describing perceived shift in global power.
独立自主 (dúlì zìzhǔ): "Independence and self-reliance" - Principle of national sovereignty and self-sufficiency.
霸权主义 (bàquán zhǔyì): "Hegemony" or "hegemonism" - Pejorative term for U.S. dominance of international system.
科技自立自强 (kējì zìlì zìqiáng): "Technology self-reliance and self-strengthening" - Xi Jinping-era emphasis on indigenous innovation.
两弹一星 (liǎng dàn yī xīng): "Two bombs, one satellite" - Nuclear weapons and space program developed under self-reliance during Cold War.
韬光养晦 (tāo guāng yǎng huì): "Hide capabilities and bide time" - Deng Xiaoping's strategic principle (partially superseded under Xi).
中华民族伟大复兴 (Zhōnghuá mínzú wěidà fùxīng): "Great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation" - Central goal of Chinese Communist Party.
双循环 (shuāng xúnhuán): "Dual circulation" - Economic strategy emphasizing domestic consumption alongside international trade.
互利共赢 (hùlì gòng yíng): "Mutual benefit and win-win" - Rhetoric emphasizing cooperative economics.
经济霸凌 (jīngjì bàlíng): "Economic bullying" or "economic coercion" - Chinese term for perceived U.S. economic pressure.
核心利益 (héxīn lìyì): "Core interests" - Non-negotiable national interests including sovereignty, territorial integrity, and regime security.
卡脖子 (kǎ bózi): "Chokehold" - Vulnerabilities where foreign technology restrictions can constrain Chinese development.
综合国力 (zōnghé guólì): "Comprehensive national power" - Holistic measure of national strength across economic, military, technological, and soft power dimensions.
自力更生 (zìlì gēngshēng): "Self-reliance" or "regeneration through one's own efforts" - Principle emphasizing indigenous capabilities.
Data and Measurement Terms {-}
Basis Points (bps): One hundredth of a percentage point (0.01%), used in finance to describe interest rates or yields.
Foreign Exchange Reserves: Assets held by a central bank in foreign currencies, used to back liabilities and influence monetary policy.
Market Share: Percentage of total sales in an industry or market captured by a particular company or country.
Nodes (semiconductor): Measurement of transistor size in nanometers (nm); smaller nodes represent more advanced technology.
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP): Exchange rate that equalizes the purchasing power of different currencies.
Success Rate: Percentage of economic coercion cases that achieve stated objectives, as measured by various scholarly studies.
Trade Balance: Difference between a country's exports and imports of goods and services.
Total Factor Productivity (TFP): Measure of economic efficiency showing output relative to inputs of labor and capital.
Note: This glossary provides definitions as used in the context of economic coercion and geoeconomic competition. Some terms may have different meanings in other contexts.
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