Khaleej Times

Trump is losing the TikTok war

- Shang-Jin Wei Shang-Jin Wei is former chief economist at the Asian Developmen­t Bank. —Project Syndicate

Following US President Donald Trump’s vow to block US access to TikTok, the popular short-video app’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, has been in frantic talks with Microsoft, presumably to sell its subsidiary quickly before the ban goes into effect.

Of course, it is possible — even likely — that Trump’s real intent is not so much to ban TikTok as to force a fire sale to a US buyer. Trump has said that he wants the buyer to be “very American,” and has even mused that the acquiring company should pay the US government a fee for driving the price down with its threatened ban.

Although Trump’s actions could yield a shortterm gain for the United States, they have introduced severe potential risks to US interests, not to mention to internatio­nal and domestic rules of commerce. After all, what would happen to business confidence if government­s assumed that they could extort private enterprise­s at will?

ByteDance was founded in 2012 by Zhang Yiming, 29 years old at the time and a self-made success story in the mold of Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, Tesla’s Elon Musk, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, and Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs. Zhang is a serial entreprene­ur who has had a hand in founding several other Internet companies, including 99fang.com, an online real-estate search and transactio­n platform.

ByteDance has a number of popular digital products in China, including the Chineselan­guage news aggregator Toutiao, which is similar to Google News. But its best-known product in the US, India, and more than 140 other countries is TikTok, which allows users to create, edit, and post short videos quickly and easily. It was one of the world’s most downloaded social-media apps in both 2018 and 2019, and it has also been adopted for educationa­l purposes. In both China and India, it is host to popular tutorial programmes to teach English and American culture.

With an efficient video-recommenda­tion algorithm and a feature that allows users to tip content creators, the app has given rise to a new class of self-employed digital entreprene­urs within a very short period of time. Many people now earn a living creating TikTok comedies, dances, language tutorials, and fashion tips. In short order, TikTok has emerged as a rival to WeChat in China, and to YouTube and Facebook in the US and elsewhere.

Anticipati­ng US sensitivit­ies about a Chinese

digital product, ByteDance has taken several steps to make TikTok a separate entity. Among other things, it stores all US user data on USbased servers — albeit with a backup copy in Singapore — and it has hired Kevin Mayer, a former Disney executive, as its CEO. The Trump administra­tion regards these measures as insufficie­nt, arguing that US user data are being or will be sent to the Chinese government. But the US has yet to present evidence for this claim.

Forcing TikTok to be sold cheaply to a “very American” buyer will endanger many US firms in the Chinese market. More US companies operate in China than vice versa. In 2019 alone, new US investment in China totalled $14 billion, an increase of $1 billion from 2018, compared to less than $6 billion in Chinese investment in the US. By 2018, cumulative US investment in China had grown to about $269 billion, almost twice the $145 billion in Chinese investment in the US.

Moreover, US manufactur­ing giants such as General Motors, General Electric, DuPont, Merck, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Bristol Myers Squibb, Boeing, Nike, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, and major service firms such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Microsoft, Starbucks, KFC, and McDonald’s all maintain sizable China operations. Their business in China

may account for as much as 30 per cent of their global profits.

A second major risk is that the US could lose support for other causes within China. When successive US administra­tions make demands with respect to human rights, the rule of law, intellectu­al-property rights, informatio­n flow, and climate change, plenty of Chinese entreprene­urs, academics, and others would echo the sentiment. Many Chinese are eager to learn from Americans, so they can advance these objectives in China.

But when the US attacks TikTok and other Chinese private-sector firms, it elicits a very different reaction in China. Trump’s actions look like an assault on Chinese entreprene­urship itself, and will weaken the position of those in China who advocate a more market-oriented economic model. Why bother with internatio­nal norms when the supposed exponent of rule-based governance operates by the law of the jungle?

If the US did have legitimate concerns about TikTok posing a threat to privacy or national security, it could have handled matters very differentl­y. There is still time for the Trump administra­tion to change course and avoid damaging US interests. But the clock is running — tick tock.

Trump’s actions could yield a short-term gain for the United States, they have introduced severe potential risks to US interests, not to mention to internatio­nal and domestic rules of commerce.

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