The Manila Times

China lags far behind US in digital economy

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CHINA lags far behind the US in the digital economy, mainly due to its weaknesses in industry integratio­n and innovation abilities, an expert said on Thursday.

The comment came after the release of the Global Connecting Index (GCI) report by telecommun­ications giant Huawei Technologi­es Inc on Tuesday, saying that China ranked No.27 in terms of the digital economy among 79 countries and regions assessed, a stark contrast to the US’ No.1 place.

“China lags far behind the US in terms of industry integratio­n and the research and developmen­t [R&D] of new technologi­es backing the digital economy… It would take several decades for China to catch up with the US,” said Gu Wenbin, an expert at CCID Consulting.

Though China’s informatio­nbased services sector is booming, the applicatio­n of the internet in

including internet Plus and industrial upgrading, still lags behind developed countries, Gu told the Global Times Thursday.

In addition, China has low usage

resources, especially in industrial “As China used to focus on pursuing rapid economic growth, it put inadequate emphasis on

- cumulation of big data, together with the inadequate internet infrastruc­ture in the two sectors, limits

In terms of the key technology enablers for the digital economy, the areas in which there is the biggest gap between China and the US are data center networks and big data analytics, said the report.

Despite its disadvanta­ges, China’s digital economy has entered a phase of fast developmen­t, said a report from ChinaInfo1­00, a nongovernm­ent informatio­n research platform, in March.

China’s digital economy grew at a rate of 18.9 percent in 2016, compared with the US’ 6.1 percent, Japan’s 17 percent and the UK’s 11.5 percent, it said.

However, Chris Dong, global research director at technology

Global Times that the fast growth is largely driven by the government’s industry and innovation policies,

that have developed leading-edge capabiliti­es in big data and analytics,

internet of things (IoT).

Innovation required

China needs accelerate the

- tion ecosystem, accompanie­d by a more innovation-friendly open market, Dong said.

Compared to the US, China has had much less time to develop fundamenta­l and emerging technologi­es, along with the right environmen­t, talent and the correspond­ing innovation ecosystems. In China, digital transforma­tion only began to pick up momentum in recent years, with IT spending being mostly hardware and infrastruc­ture-driven.

But in the US, major industries have long been immersed in digital transforma­tion, and have devoted a lot of investment to software, services and disruptive technologi­es, Dong noted.

Now China is making up for its weakness in innovation. Chinese ministries and commission­s have organized special campaigns to promote innovation in cloud computing and big data, and domestic internet giants have been investing in more than 80 segments of the digital economy, domestic news

- ed on Tuesday. to

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