China Daily (Hong Kong)

Smart tech will lead economic recovery

- Mei Xinyu The author is a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Given the huge pressure on the economy, Premier Li Keqiang emphasized the importance of technology in facilitati­ng economic recovery in the Government Work Report he delivered to the National People’s Congress on Friday.

To be sure, quite a few sectors have made a number of major achievemen­ts in scientific and technologi­cal innovation and emerged as new growth drivers over the past few months.

Since late January, when China began all-out efforts to contain the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, Chinese enterprise­s have come up with one innovation after another — from new products and new methods of production to new forms of enterprise organizati­on — in the economic and social fields. And some of these such as smart technology can be developed further to boost the Chinese economy.

Smart technology has played a particular­ly important role in leading a largely successful battle against the virus. Earlier, the pulse oximeter was needed to measure oxygen saturation in people’s arterial blood. But thanks to smart technology, many of the wearable devices, from smart watches to smart bracelets, popular among consumers now come equipped with the added function of measuring blood oxygen saturation. And with the pandemic raging across the world, the demand for hardware and software upgrades of such smart wearable devices will rise.

In fact, many intelligen­t technology­powered smart devices, such as “intelligen­t thermomete­rs” used in public places with a large flow of people, mobile phone positionin­g and tracking system, the personal health code system and community anti-epidemic management apps, have been developed at a rapid pace in China.

As such, smart technology is also expected to become a new “growth driver” for China’s export sector. In the fight against the epidemic, Chinese enterprise­s have shown rapid response capability, reflected among other things in the manufactur­ing of innovative products, including KN95 masks made with the help of nano technology.

Artificial intelligen­ce (AI) has become the most popular new technology, a field in which China enjoys an advantage, over the past two-odd years. Of the four biggest enterprise­s using AI to safeguard public health, three are Chinese, and all three have intensifie­d research and developmen­t to make new, smart products. For example, after lockdown was imposed on Wuhan, the then epicenter in China, on Jan 23, Uniview, a privately-owned Chinese enterprise, launched an intensive anti-epidemic R&D campaign.

Although the epidemic broke out just before the Chinese Lunar New Year, a time of travel for hundreds of millions of Chinese people, by the end of March, Uniview had launched a series of eight programs, and its innovative products and services including “intelligen­t thermomete­rs” with thermal imaging, and AI- and extrasenso­ry technology-based equipment and anti-epidemic community apps have been used in more than 1,000 projects in 100 cities in the Chinese mainland, and helped resume community life, school classes and factory production.

Besides, a quarter of the company’s intelligen­t manufactur­ing capacity is dedicated to making anti-epidemic equipment, and it reached peak operation in April with daily production of 5,000 sets of such equipment.

Chinese AI enterprise­s have rapidly grown to occupy an important position in the emerging intelligen­t anti-epidemic equipment market, and their products are in high demand. For example, Uniview’s thermal imaging products, and AIand extrasenso­ry technology-based devices hardly have any competitor­s.

Consumers at home and abroad ordered such products as soon as they saw their demonstrat­ion online but still had to wait for up to two months to get the delivery. After meeting the urgent domestic need for such products, Uniview began exporting them from mid-March. The annual sales of these products are expected to reach 1 billion yuan ($140.31 million) this year, equivalent to more than one-fifth of Uniview’s total revenue of 4.94 billion yuan. Besides, even after the pandemic is fully contained, the company is likely to find new uses for such devices.

In the field of service trade, too, China’s informatio­n technology and smart technology sector seems set to help develop new forms of e-commerce and become a new “growth engine” for service exports. For instance, some medical institutio­ns provided free consultati­on for COVID-19related symptoms using the internet in the initial stage of the outbreak. The scope of such free consultati­on has rapidly expanded to include all diseases, and the service is open 24x7 after government­s at different levels launched different initiative­s.

If China’s medical team cooperates with such online medical institutio­ns to provide online medical services for overseas clients, they, too, can possibly become a new growth driver for China’s service export sector. But, as the Government Work Report said, in order to unleash the potential of all types of production factors, it is important to increase the flow of human resources, and foster technology and data markets.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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