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China’s public policies toward rare earths, 1975–2018

Yuzhou Shen, Ruthann C. Moomy, Roderick G. Eggert

2020Mineral Economics118 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This paper summarizes and evaluates China’s policies toward the rare-earth industry from 1975 to 2018. We define five stages over this period and focus on China’s purpose, the underlying economic background in each stage, and the connections between stages. By reviewing a broad set of original policy documents, we find that the purpose of China’s policies has evolved, affected by the market players, the development of the mineral industry, and the state of the Chinese economy. Initially, the Chinese government encouraged the development of the upstream rare-earth sector. Since the early 1990s, China has focused on the development of downstream activities that use rare earths in the manufacture of intermediate and final products. Since the early 2000s, China has focused additionally on the problems of disorder in the rare-earth industry with particular reference to the environmental degradation caused by rare-earth production, as well as industrial reorganization to discourage unsanctioned production.

Topics & Concepts

ChinaDownstream (manufacturing)Production (economics)Government (linguistics)BusinessRare earthUpstream (networking)Economic policyEconomicsPolitical sciencePhilosophyMetallurgyMaterials scienceComputer networkMarketingLinguisticsMacroeconomicsComputer scienceLawExtraction and Separation ProcessesRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesMining and Resource Management