Geopolitics and Business
In this episode, we step back from the headlines to offer a clear, big‑picture walkthrough of why AI chips matter geopolitically, how U.S. export controls are evolving, and what this means for global companies trying to build and operate across borders.In this episode of Geopolitics and Business Briefing, host Theresa Terzer is joined by Kevin Allison, President and Founder of Minerva Technology Futures (Washington, DC). Kevin explains the broader arc of U.S.–China technology competition and uses recent US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) signaling (including guidance tied to the so‑called “AI diffusion” framework) as an entry point to discuss where policy is heading.What you’ll take away: * Why advanced AI chips became a focal point in U.S.–China competition * The shift from controlling where compute goes to controlling who owns/controls/accesses it * Why export controls are a blunt tool, and how they can reshape innovation and supply chains * How China’s policy toolkit has expanded (and why risk is increasingly two‑way) * Practical implications for boards, executives, procurement, compliance, and government affairs Relevant for any sector running global operations that depend on AI infrastructure—cloud and data centers, electronics, automotive, industrial automation, and beyond.Learn more about Geolytics and Geolytics.Hub [https://sinolytics.de/geolytics.html] Minerva Technology Futures [https://minervapolicy.com/] Feedback & topic suggestions: podcast@geo-lytics.com [podcast@geo-lytics.com]
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