Japan’s Semiconductor Wake-Up Call: New Research Links Chip Vulnerabilities to China’s Rare Earth Monopoly

Dec 5, 2025

Highlights

  • A peer-reviewed study reveals how Japan's dependence on Chinese rare earth processing and Taiwanese chips catalyzed the landmark 2022 Economic Security Promotion Act.
  • The research exposes China's rare earth processing monopoly as Japan's strategic chokepoint, forcing a pivot from open-market reliance to techno-nationalism.
  • ESPA marks Japan's historic shift toward technological sovereignty through:
    • Domestic reshoring
    • Critical material protection
    • Deeper Indo-Pacific security alignment

A new peer-reviewed study in Aliansi: Jurnal Politik, Keamanan dan Hubungan Internasional by Ardra Mahatma Pratama Sutardi (Universitas Indonesia) and co-author Julian Aldrin Pasha offers a timely, clear-eyed analysis of how Japanโ€™s semiconductor vulnerabilityโ€”and its reliance on Chinese rare earth processingโ€”helped catalyze the landmark 2022 Economic Security Promotion Act (ESPA).

The authors argue that Japanโ€™s dependence on Taiwanese advanced chips and Chinese-processed rare earth elements (REEs) exposed structural weaknesses in its postwar economic and security strategy. As pandemic-era supply shocks and U.S.โ€“China technological rivalry intensified, Japanโ€™s leaders were forced to confront a simple truth: the country could not remain a global manufacturing power while outsourcing the very materials and technologies its industries depend on.

The paperโ€™s central insight is direct and accessible even to non-specialists: modern national security is impossible without secure access to chips and the rare earth elements that enable them. ESPA, the authors contend, is Japanโ€™s answer to this new era of techno-nationalism.

How the Study Was Conducted

Sutardi and Pasha employ a qualitative analytical-descriptive methodology, synthesizing government reports, academic literature, trade data, and policy documents from 2019โ€“2024. Rather than relying on a single dataset, the study pieces together a mosaic of evidence: Japanese automotive production trends, Chinaโ€™s export-control moves, global semiconductor capacity maps, and Japanese white papers on economic security.

This qualitative strategy is appropriate given the subjectโ€™s complexity. Japanโ€™s technological vulnerabilities cannot be understood by numbers alone; they emerge from institutional choices, geopolitical shocks, and long-term industrial strategy.

Key Findings: A Semiconductor Crisis Anchored in Rare Earth Dependence

1. Chinaโ€™s Rare Earth Processing Monopoly Is Japanโ€™s Achilles Heel

While Japan does not lack access to REE ore globally, it overwhelmingly relies on Chinese separation, refining, and metal-making capacity. The study points out that this chokepoint is โ€œstrategically untenable,โ€ especially as China weaponizes export controls for materials such as Nd, Pr, Dy, and Tbโ€”critical for chipmaking equipment, robots, EV motors, and high-performance magnets.

Japan imported the majority of its REE compounds from China through 2023โ€“2024 (UN Comtrade). Any disruption, political or commercial, could paralyze downstream industries.

2. Semiconductor Shortages Exposed the Limits of Japanโ€™s โ€œGlobal Open Marketโ€ Model

For decades, Japan trusted global markets and U.S. security guarantees. But the pandemic and chip shortages revealed how dangerous it was to outsource critical functionsโ€”such as lithography-grade materials and magnet productionโ€”while rivals strengthened theirs.

3. ESPA Marks Japanโ€™s Pivot to Techno-National Security

The 2022 law marks a turning point. It:

  • protects critical infrastructure,
  • categorizes strategic materials (including rare earths),
  • funds for domestic reshoring of semiconductor and materials production,
  • strengthens IP protection,
  • and embeds economic security in the national defense doctrine.

The authors highlight that Japan is now embracing a security-oriented techno-nationalism, akin to a modern industrial policy, but calibrated through Japanese consensus politics.

Implications for the Global Rare Earth and Semiconductor Supply Chains

For Japan

  • Expect deeper investment in magnet metals, rare earth separation, and seabed mining projects.
  • More long-term offtakes from non-Chinese suppliersโ€”including U.S., Australian, and Southeast Asian sources.
  • Stronger alignment with U.S. economic-security strategy.

For the United States and Allies

Japanโ€™s shift reinforces a broader Indo-Pacific effort to counterbalance Chinaโ€™s dominance in both REEs and chipmaking materials. This study suggests Japan is now a co-equal partnerโ€”no longer a dependent actor.

For China

The findings underscore Chinaโ€™s leverage. Its control over magnet metals and chip-critical materials remains a powerful geopolitical tool. Japanโ€™s transition will be slow, expensive, and strategically fraught.

Limitations and Controversies

The study is thorough, though not without constraints:

  • Qualitative bias: Results depend on source interpretation; quantitative supply-chain modeling is limited.
  • Policy-forward lens: The authors emphasize Japanโ€™s strategic awakening but devote less attention to whether domestic industry can realistically achieve REE self-sufficiency.
  • Underexplored economics: ESPAโ€™s long-term cost burdenโ€”especially for re-shoring advanced chip capacityโ€”is only briefly mentioned.
  • Omission of private-sector counterexamples: Japanโ€™s industrial titans (e.g., Hitachi Metals, JX Nippon) are already pivoting, but the study largely frames state action as the driver.

Still, these gaps do not weaken the core conclusion: Japanโ€™s vulnerability to Chinaโ€™s rare earth chokehold reshaped its national security strategy.

Conclusion

This study provides valuable clarity for policymakers, investors, and the public. It argues convincingly that Japanโ€™s semiconductor and rare earth crisis was not merely a pandemic-era anomalyโ€”it was a structural failing decades in the making. ESPA represents Japanโ€™s attempt to reclaim technological sovereignty and reduce dependence on Chinaโ€™s rare earth processing monopolyโ€”a shift with deep implications for global supply chains and allied nations preparing for intensifying geopolitical competition.

Citations: Sutardi, A.M.P., & Pasha, J.A. (2025). Semiconductor Dependence as Catalyst for the Passage of Japanโ€™s 2022 Economic Security Promotion Act. Aliansi, Vol. 4, No. 3 (2025). DOI: https://doi.org/10.24198/aliansi.v4i3.63936 (opens in a new tab)

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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