National Post

China finally gets to nib of the matter

Hails making of homegrown ballpoint pen

- Adam Minter

Two weeks ago, China announced that it had mastered the art of making ballpoint pens. Don’t laugh: It was a years- long effort that cost millions of dollars and required the leadership of a state- run corporate colossus. It was front- page news, widely discussed on talk shows and celebrated on social media.

And i t was no one- off stunt. China hopes such government-mandated “innovation” will finally revive its economy and catapult it into the front rank of technologi­cally advanced nations. Unfortunat­ely, such efforts are far more likely to worsen the inefficien­cies already holding its economy back.

Ballpoint pens aren’t actually new to China. Its 3,000 pen manufactur­ers make around 40 billion of them a year and fulfil 80 per cent of the world’s demand. There’s just one problem: China doesn’t possess the advanced alloys and machines necessary to make a high- quality pen ball and socket. As a result, 90 per cent of China’s pen tips are imported. Pens made from Chinese components are widely acknowledg­ed to be inferior — a point made by Premier Li Keqiang in a 2015 television appearance. “That’s the real situation facing us,” he said. “We cannot make ballpoint pens with a smooth writing function.”

For t he premier and others, the problem was about more than signing a smooth autograph. For years, it’s been a popular symbol of all the perceived gaps and failings in China’s vast industrial complex, from its reputation for poor quality to its inability to transition to making higher- value products. Amid an ailing economy, these failings started receiving attention at the highest levels of the government.

In 2011, China’s Ministry of Science and Technology took the hint and launched a project called Research and Developmen­t and Industrial­ization of Key Materials for the Pen Industry. It allocated nearly US$9 million and conscripte­d the Taiyuan Iron & Steel Group Co., a giant stateowned stainless-steel manufactur­er, known as TISCO, to lead the venture.

That was a fitting symbol in its own right. For decades, China’s policy- makers have favoured inefficien­t but politicall­y connected state-owned enterprise­s, with unfortunat­e results for the economy. During the first half of 2016, more than half of China’s roughly 150,000 state enterprise­s recorded losses, despite accounting for nearly a quarter of the country’s industrial income. Under President Xi Jinping, the sector has been strengthen­ed and its role in economic reform has become even more central.

And that’s where the problems really begin. Even if a private company wanted to invest in producing highqualit­y pen tips in China, concerns that the new technology would be stolen or hijacked would likely dissuade them. For pen manufactur­ers that means it’s easier, and more profitable, to keep making lower quality pens. Rather than undertake the difficult process of intellectu­al- property reform, the government instead issues mandates for innovation, and invests in state- owned companies that think of politics first and profits later — if at all.

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