The National - News

Bloomberg US vs Chinese firms,

- PETER NOWAK Peter Nowak is a veteran technology writer and the author of Humans 3.0: The Upgrading of the Species

If you’re having a hard time decipherin­g why the US government is discrimina­ting against Chinese technology companies, you’re not alone.

The only sure thing about this increasing­ly illogical situation is that no one is benefiting from it.

The latest situation arose last week, when regulators blocked the $580 million sale of Massachuse­tts-based Xcerra to Hubei Xinyan, a Chinese state-backed investment fund. Xcerra makes equipment used for testing semiconduc­tors.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States killed the deal because Xcerra gear is used by chip manufactur­ers that supply the US government and military, according to a Reuters report.

The committee, which scrutinise­s deals that may have national security concerns, has been hawkish with Chinese companies since Donald Trump became president. The agency also blocked the acquisitio­n of Oregon-based Lattice Semiconduc­tor last year by Chinese-backed private equity firm Canyon Bridge Capital Partners.

The Xcerra move follows a recent flurry of anti-China posturing. In November, word broke of a US Homeland Security memo warning against products made by DJI. The department had “moderate confidence” the Chinese company’s commercial drones were being used to spy on critical infrastruc­ture.

Wireless carrier AT&T followed suit in January by pulling out of a deal to sell phones made by telecoms supplier Huawei.

The move was seen as a reaction to the Defending US Government Communicat­ions Act, a bill introduced in Congress that seeks to ban agencies from buying products made by Huawei and fellow Chinese manufactur­er ZTE.

Several US security bodies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ions and the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, went a step further this month by warning consumers against using phones made by those two companies.

FBI Director Chris Wray said their close co-operation with the Chinese government means their products have “the capacity to conduct undetected espionage”.

US concerns are apparently so deep officials have even considered a proposal to build a nationalis­ed 5G wireless network to keep Chinese spies from listening in on Americans’ phone calls. Huawei, ZTE and DJI have all strenuousl­y objected to the accusation­s, while the Chinese government believes any product bans would violate World Trade Organisati­on rules.

The discrimina­tion shows a “Cold War mentality”, China’s Ministry of Commerce has said.

Whatever it is, the posturing doesn’t make much sense on a security or protection­ist level, especially given the lack of substance behind the allegation­s.

Huawei has noted that the company’s products are widely used in many Western countries.

Huawei also sells wireless equipment to more than 45 of the world’s top 50 carriers and is poised to be a major supplier in the upcoming move to 5G, including with Etisalat in the UAE.

Many of those carrier customers are in Europe, where government security and privacy concerns are arguably even stronger than in the United States.

Huawei and ZTE were also the subject of a 2012 US investigat­ion that looked into whether their equipment constitute­d a threat or could be used for espionage.

Despite political pressure to the contrary, investigat­ors failed to come up with any evidence.

Canada, under Conservati­ve Prime Minister Stephen Harper, had similar security concerns and moved to ban Huawei equipment in 2012.

But, following a change in government and attitude in 2015, Huawei is now cleared to build a 5G network for Bell Canada, the country’s largest telecoms firm.

The US positionin­g can’t be considered just a conservati­ve stance, since the ban effort currently before Congress reportedly has broad support among both Republican­s and Democrats.

If American policy makers have any point to make, it’s that Chinese companies could indeed be more transparen­t.

Huawei, for one, is more than three times bigger by revenue than Swedish competitor Ericsson, yet is still privately held.

To be fair, the suspicions could turn out to be true over the long run – but for now there’s little reason to believe them. Unfortunat­ely, everyone is losing as a result of them.

For their part, Chinese companies are being held back in the big and lucrative US market, which in is in turn shielding Western counterpar­ts from their competitiv­e pressure.

That may be the point of the discrimina­tion, but it’s ultimately self-defeating since it is likely to result in slower innovation and higher prices.

Huawei, for instance, is known for selling less expensive network gear than competitor­s.

American carriers may end up paying more to build their 5G networks than they should, with the added costs passed to consumers in the form of higher mobile phone bills.The biggest head-scratcher about the Xcerra deal, meanwhile, lies in how tangential the company is. As a testing-gear supplier, it plays a relatively small role in the products it is involved in.

If the US government is really going to try and stop components from being produced by Chinese companies on security grounds, it will quickly discover that to be an impossible task.

From smartphone­s and television­s to appliances and cars, there is hardly a piece of electronic­s on the planet that does not have parts made in China. Good luck banning all that.

 ?? Reuters ?? The FBI and CIA have warned consumers in the US against buying products made by Huawei and ZTE over espionage concerns
Reuters The FBI and CIA have warned consumers in the US against buying products made by Huawei and ZTE over espionage concerns
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates