China Daily

Investment review powers seen backfiring on UK

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@ mail. chinadaily­uk. com

Britain’s plan to introduce national security legislatio­n that proposes stricter screening of foreign investment could diminish the country’s appeal as an open economy and hurt British companies, says a researcher who participat­ed in a parliament­ary inquiry into the proposed bill.

He Shaowei, an associate professor at the University of Northampto­n whose research focuses on the rise of Chinese enterprise­s and the associated impact on global business, said the move is a “worrying” sign that the United Kingdom is slipping into a protection­ism that will hasten the country’s declining global influence.

He argued that foreign investors are important elements of the UK’s business ecosystem that help drive the country’s productivi­ty.

“For example, in the emerging technology areas, such as AI ( artificial intelligen­ce) and robotics, foreign investors usually come with different perspectiv­es ( that) are important to help understand the enabling power of these technologi­es,” he said.

The National Security and Investment Bill aims to empower the government to scrutinize transactio­ns on national security grounds. He contended that such a government­led top- down approach may not work well in reality as “technologi­es are increasing­ly overlappin­g each other with fuzzy boundaries”.

He said there could be “difficulti­es in assessing foreign control of British firms” that could be met with technical challenges.

He said: “There is the difficulty in defining the key areas that are deemed critical to national security. Take the popular AI for example. So, if a British farming business uses AI to boost its productivi­ty and then a foreign company wants to invest in it, would that trigger an investigat­ion?

“While the government is worrying ( that) British firms ( could) fall into the control of foreign hands as a result of inward investment or acquisitio­n, it would struggle to assess to what extent a UK company is under control of a foreign company due to the investment.”

While the UK is strong in scientific discovery, He said the country often neglects the complement­ary capabiliti­es that foreign investors bring to help British companies that already own advanced technologi­es to further learn and upgrade.

Chinese acquisitio­n

While undertakin­g research into a Chinese acquisitio­n of a British semiconduc­tor company in Lincolnshi­re, He noted that the Chinese company wanted to learn advanced technologi­es from the UK enterprise, but also taught the business how to design and manufactur­e power electronic­s for the railway industry.

“Within a few years, the Chinese firm helped its British subsidiary upgrade production lines, establishe­d a new R& D center and significan­tly expanded the R& D personnel and budget,” He said. “This enabled the British firm to continue developing its technologi­es and capacity.”

This relationsh­ip allowed authoritie­s in Lincolnshi­re and Hunan province — where the Chinese enterprise­s is based — to further enhance business exchanges between the two regions. Among other benefits, this resulted in a 112 percent increase in Hunan’s trade with the UK in 2019, amounting to $ 1.4 billion, He said.

In recent months, the UK has increased its scrutiny over Chinese investment and acquisitio­ns. In July, the government said it would remove Huawei from the UK’s 5G infrastruc­ture over national security concerns. That marked a U- turn on its own earlier decision to allow the company a limited role.

Based on his research on Chinese acquisitio­ns of British companies that already owned advanced technologi­es, He said there was “convincing evidence showing that the Chinese acquiring firm, despite its primary knowledge- seeking motivation, brought new knowledge into the British firm and helped the latter further upgrade their technologi­es and competitiv­eness”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong