China Daily (Hong Kong)

Friendly foreign firms not targeted by ‘list’

- The author is deputy director of and a research fellow at the Institute of European and American Studies, China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The Chinese government is preparing an “Unreliable Entities List” to counter the unilateral and trade protection­ist moves of the United States and safeguard China’s economic security, which is an integral part of its national security. China’s blacklist, however, will be vastly different from the gratuitous Entity List issued by the US Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security.

To a large extent, the Unreliable Entities List reflects China’s stance against US protection­ism, that is, China will never compromise its key interests and, instead, take appropriat­e countermea­sures to protect them.

The Unreliable Entities List can also be seen as a warning to Chinese enterprise­s to avoid risks and refrain from cooperatin­g with the blackliste­d enterprise­s, in order to safeguard their own security. Besides, China is determined to take countermea­sures against those enterprise­s which have adopted the same stance as the US administra­tion regardless of all business ethics and support the US’ China-containmen­t strategy.

Yet it should be noted that Chinese telecommun­ications equipment maker Huawei and 68 enterprise­s connected to it that figure on the US Entity List have a rather extensive network of partners, and not all their partners and internatio­nal organizati­ons will bow to US dictates. For those parties that have made a distinct choice out of respect for fair play and justice, China should forge close and firm ties with them.

In the long run, what China should focus on is to build a solid and more extensive network of friends. And while building such a network, it should use the Unreliable Entities List with caution, so as to minimize the scale of possible counterstr­ikes. It should also act with restraint so it can win more support from the internatio­nal community for the measures it takes against some economies’ unilateral and protection­ist moves.

More important, since the US intends to segregate and isolate China with its Entity List, China should do its utmost to avoid falling into the US trap.

In the most ideal scenario, the Unreliable Entities List should be best left unused and, instead, made to hang like the sword of Damocles over the entities which violate global business rules or harm China’s key interests. This will help China to win a war without firing a shot.

The US has not provided any evidence for putting global 5G technology leader Huawei on the Entity List, which is increasing­ly obscure and generalize­d and therefore a presumptio­n of guilt. It has not accorded any chance to Huawei to

defend itself either. Which means the US is hell-bent on targeting one particular company. So adopting a laissez-faire attitude toward the US’ move to sanction and cut the supplies to Huawei will have the worst possible impact on the global supply chain.

China’s Unreliable Entities List is designed to respond to attacks, and its aim is to safeguard the stability of the supply and industry chains by neutralizi­ng US actions that are causing harm to not only China’s trade but also the global business environmen­t. The Unreliable Entities List, therefore, is fundamenta­lly different from the US’ Entity

List which focuses on constraini­ng the exports of key technologi­es and products by abusing its market monopoly power.

As the White House’s China policy is undergoing fundamenta­l changes, with the US taking desperate measures to contain China, the competitiv­e cooperatio­n between the two sides over the past decades is fast turning into a confrontat­ion.

As a matter of fact, the US has accelerate­d the constructi­on of a strategic system to contain China’s developmen­t. Worse, the Republican­s as well as Democrats, the US Congress, and even some enterprise­s and think tanks are adopting a more aggressive stance toward China.

Facing such a situation, China should further open up its economy to the outside world to win more internatio­nal support against the US’ Entity List, so that the economic interests of not only China but also the rest of the world can be protected.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China