Deccan Chronicle

China’s tech sector braces for impact

US representa­tives to arrive in China for trade negotiatio­ns

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Beijing, May 2: The first salvos in the budding US-China trade conflict struck old-school sectors like steel and agricultur­e, but Beijing is now bracing for moves against its strategic ambitions in hi-tech.

As a US trade delegation heads to Beijing for talks starting Thursday, China’s race to catch up to the US in technology looms large.

The skirmish is taking place upstream of the consumer applicatio­ns made by tech giants like Google and Facebook or Alibaba and Tencent, and focusing on semiconduc­tors, the critical building blocks of electronic­s.

Semiconduc­tors are the brains of electronic devices, enabling them to run programmes and store memory.

Most are made by US giants such as Intel, Qualcomm and Micron, which have decades of experience developing the integrated circuits, as well as manufactur­ers in US allies South Korea and Taiwan.

Chips are among China’s biggest imports, rivaling oil, and have become a stark reminder of its dependence on American technology.

Last month, Washington banned Chinese telecom and smartphone giant ZTE from purchasing crucial US components for seven years, threatenin­g its survival, as punishment for breaking US export controls.

The US has also reportedly opened a similar probe into Huawei.

Both companies depend on US chips to build their gadgets and equipment, reinforcin­g for Beijing the need to control every piece of the technologi­cal supply chain.

China must rely on itself for core technologi­es, President Xi Jinping told scientists when visiting an IT firm last week.

“In the past we had no choice but to rely on our own efforts. Back then we even created two atomic bombs and launched a satellite while tightening our belt and gritting our teeth,” he said.

China’s advantages, he said, include being able to “gather our strength to do big things”. And that is what concerns the US.

China’s marshallin­g of industrial policy to catch up in semiconduc­tors and other technologi­es figures prominentl­y in the Trump administra­tion’s findings against Beijing in an investigat­ion that has led to proposed tariffs on tens of billions of dollars in Chinese goods. — AFP

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