S-4281-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Pete Ricketts (R-NE)
What it does
The MATCH Act would require the Secretary of Commerce and Secretary of State to identify critical semiconductor manufacturing equipment and facilities linked to adversary nations, then impose export controls on that equipment within 150 days of enactment. It would simultaneously direct U.S. diplomats to negotiate matching export controls with allied countries that also produce such equipment (such as the Netherlands and Japan), and — if diplomacy fails — would authorize the U.S. to extend its export jurisdiction to cover equipment made in those allied countries that contains any U.S.-origin technology or components. The bill targets specific Chinese companies by name, including Huawei, SMIC, YMTC, and others, and covers a broad range of equipment including photolithography machines, etch tools, and deposition equipment.
Who benefits
U.S. semiconductor manufacturers and chip designers who compete with Chinese firms (e.g., Intel, Applied Materials, Lam Research). U.S. national security and defense establishments seeking to slow adversary military-AI development. Allied semiconductor equipment makers who would face a more level playing field if competitors in adversary nations are cut off. Workers in U.S. advanced manufacturing and defense-adjacent industries. Domestic AI and advanced computing companies that benefit from maintaining a technology lead. Congressional oversight committees that gain new reporting and briefing requirements.
Who is hurt
U.S. semiconductor equipment companies (e.g., Applied Materials, KLA, Lam Research) that currently sell to Chinese customers and would lose that revenue. Allied-country equipment makers (e.g., ASML in the Netherlands, Tokyo Electron in Japan) whose exports could be restricted under U.S. extraterritorial jurisdiction if diplomatic alignment fails. Chinese semiconductor manufacturers and their employees. U.S. companies with supply chains or joint ventures in China. Academic and research institutions with technology-transfer ties to Chinese entities. Consumers globally who could face higher chip prices if supply is constrained. Smaller U.S. component suppliers dependent on Chinese orders.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that semiconductor manufacturing equipment is the single most effective chokepoint for preventing adversary nations from developing the advanced chips that power military AI, hypersonic weapons guidance, and signals intelligence. They contend that existing controls have already been partially effective — citing China's difficulty replicating extreme ultraviolet lithography — but that gaps remain because allied countries like the Netherlands and Japan have not fully matched U.S. restrictions, allowing circumvention. They further argue the bill's diplomatic-first structure, with mandatory reporting and a 150-day deadline, creates accountability without immediately alienating allies, and that the named Chinese entities are already documented participants in China's Military-Civil Fusion program.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending U.S. export jurisdiction to equipment made in allied countries — the so-called "foreign direct product rule" expansion — risks serious diplomatic friction with close partners like the Netherlands and Japan, potentially undermining the very alliances the bill seeks to strengthen. They contend that aggressive unilateral controls may accelerate China's domestic semiconductor development by removing any incentive for Chinese firms to rely on foreign supply chains, ultimately producing a more self-sufficient adversary. Critics also argue that U.S. equipment companies would bear concentrated revenue losses — Applied Materials alone reported roughly $8 billion in China sales in fiscal year 2023 — while the national security benefit remains uncertain if allied countries resist alignment.