Highlights
- Beijing faces a strategic contradiction in 2026: control measures that suppress the dynamism needed for growth, particularly visible in rare earth export controls and magnet supply chains.
- U.S.-China compete to eliminate vulnerabilities on an 18-24 month timeline; rare earths create leverage at the magnet stage, not mining, requiring systems-level industrial response.
- Best path forward:
- China should maintain credible but predictable leverage.
- U.S. must build a complete magnet stack with procurement pull, not just count press-release mines.
The Asia Society Policy Instituteโs Center for China Analysis frames 2026 as a year of strategic contradiction: Beijing wants control + growth at the same time, even though the tools that increase control often suppress dynamism.
Table of Contents
Key These Across the Report
The reportโs (opens in a new tab) cross-cutting themesโcontrol vs dynamism, security vs development, and enduring U.S.โChina competitionโmap cleanly onto rare earths and magnets, where โadministrative leverageโ can shut factories faster than tariffs ever could.
A second recurring idea is that the U.S.โChina relationship may sit in a tenuous truce while both sides race to eliminate vulnerabilities. The report explicitly notes Chinaโs use of rare earths and magnets as leverage and describes Washingtonโs push to reduce dependence on an 18โ24 month timelineโa timeline that should be treated as an aspiration, not a plan.
Opportunities for 2026
For the U.S. and allies
The opportunity is to treat rare earths like a systems problem, not a mining problem. The report highlights how โweaponized interdependenceโ can force leader-level negotiationโrare earths are a leverage node precisely because they sit at the magnet stage, not the deposit stage.
For China
The opportunity is to convert dominance into a durable advantage without triggering a full buyer revolt. The reportโs climate chapters suggest Beijing prefers โtalk less, do moreโ while exporting clean tech aggressivelyโyet also warn that backlash and trade barriers are rising as China floods markets.
Risks
Escalation spiral
The report warns that if either side reduces vulnerabilities faster, it erodes the โmutual disruptionโ equilibrium that is currently stabilizing relations.
Chinaโs internal constraints
local debt, weak consumption, demographics, and a risk-averse bureaucracy could push Beijing toward sharper controlโoften bad news for predictable export licensing.
Global backlash
clean-tech overcapacity and export surges are already prompting barriers; rare earth leverage may accelerate โChina-plusโ supply chains.
Best Course of Action
China
Keep leveraging credible but avoid maximalism. Use licensing predictably, offer stable commercial terms to non-sensitive end users, and prevent export controls from becoming a self-defeating accelerant of de-risking.
USA
Stop treating rare earths as a press-release mine count. Build a magnet-first industrial stack: separation + metal + alloy + magnet + qualification. Pair capex with long-term offtakes, defense procurement pull, and allied stockpilesโbecause the reportโs own logic suggests leverage persists until vulnerabilities are actually removed.
Source: China 2026: What to Watch, Asia Society Policy Institute, Center for China Analysis (Dec 2025).
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
0 Comments