I will answer a major issue that others do not know, but for question 2: No.
For question 1, technically speaking, China can produce 'chips' whose devices are as small (nanometer) as what Taiwan, SKR, JPN, EUR, and US produces, even using domestic tools. The issue is
YIELD PER WAFER.
Semiconductor profitability is related to the percent of useful die per wafer. Learn how to monitor and optimize yield within and across all fab operations.
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Wafer yield, or the percentage of accepted die per wafer, is a critical metric for semiconductor operations. All fab processes must ramp to steadily create consistent wafers with profitable average yield. This yield is determined during wafer test and sort when each die is assigned to a specific scrap or product bin based on parametric data.
Let us say the market standard is 14 nm (nanometer) and everyone can achieve that scaling.
Company A has a per wafer yield of %95+. Company B has a per wafer yield of max %85. This means that A can sell more functional chips than B on a per wafer basis. Of those %95 and %85 chips, some are call 'Prime' and some are downgraded to Good.
But here is the real catch...That does not mean that B can sell those %85 chips. No one will buy them. That is, no Tier 1 or Tier 2 customers, and few Tier 3 will buy.
Who are Tier One customers? Sony, Apple, IBM, NASA, GM, and the likes. They will pay premium for the Prime chips that came off those %95+ wafers. They will not settle for less. They will sign contracts that lasts for several yrs.
Who are Tier Two customers? ADATA, Kingston, or Sandisk and the likes. They will also pay premium for the Prime chips if there are any leftover, and they will buy all the Good chips.
Who are Tier Three customers? Someone like Joe Schmoe Memory Emporium running out of a garage. The names are not known. They will buy all the lower grades chips wherever they can get them and install them into home appliances, talking toys, and so on. Tier Three customers will buy as much lower grades chips as they can from Company A, then if they have to, they go to B.
You cannot afford to lose Tier One/Two customers. You will do whatever you can to keep that %95+ per wafer yield.
As long as you produce only maximum of %85 per wafer yield, you
WILL lost money. You may have a lot of Prime chips in that %85 but because no Tier 1/2 will buy them, you have no choice but to sell them at cost or loss. Tier 3 customers know they have you by the balls. Either you sell whatever you have at cost or loss, or you stockpile your products for nothing.
The per-wafer-yield is the best indicator of technology sophistication and manufacturing refinement. The higher the yield, the more you can command premium prices in both contract and open (no contract) markets, and on the open market, there will be bidding wars for your %95+ Prime/Good chips.
Using these wafer maps below as example...
If a company consistently produced that inconsistent per wafer yield, that company will go out of business or be bought out by a competitor.
Now back to China...
If Chinese semicon companies produces lower per wafer yield using domestic tools, they will lose the international market. The Chinese government could force Chinese electronics companies to buy Chinese semicon products but that is not a viable marketing tool.
If industry standard moved to 10 nm but Chinese semicon companies are stuck at 14 nm, even with %95+ per wafer yield, they will lose money. Other companies make %95+ at 10 nm. Why should Tier 1 and 2 customers buy products made with 14 nm technology? This problem is where Chinese semicon companies are at right now. Before the US imposed tech ban, Chinese semicon companies were barely keeping up with the Taiwanese, SKReans, the JPNese, and US. Now with the tech ban, they are forced to regress to older tools that will give them %95+ per wafer yield at higher nanometer scales or lower than %90 at the same nanometer scale.
Chinese semicon companies are at:
10 nm = less than %90 per wafer yield
14 nm = %95+ per wafer yield
Except the market want 10 nm and everyone else are making %95+ per wafer yield. The numbers I used are only to give you a high level understanding of the issue.