China Daily

Ban on Chinese products backfires

Whether it’s consumers or Pentagon, US tech actions spell higher costs

- By HENG WEILI in New York hengweili@chinadaily­usa.com

From smartphone­s and 5G technology to drones and surveillan­ce cameras, political suspicions have led to bans on certain Chinese products and companies by the United States — even when they sting the government and consumers with higher costs.

Camera drones developed by the Pentagon cost more but are inferior to those made in China that they were supposed to replace, according to an internal US government memo, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

The memo from officials in the Interior Department states that US-developed “Blue drones” are not good enough to carry out conservati­on work. The US Department of Defense has spent more than $13 million developing drones that govworks ernment agencies could use instead of ones made or assembled in China.

The memo said that with an average price of $2,100, the drones cost up to 14 times more than the aircraft the Interior Department had purchased before, the newspaper reported.

The concerns over their effectiven­ess highlight how the US has had a tough time trying to avoid Chinese technology.

In 2019, the administra­tion of thenUS president Donald Trump grounded the department’s 810 drones because they contained Chinese parts.

The drone case serves as a backdrop to US efforts to limit exposure to certain technology, in particular equipment made by Chinese telecommun­ications giants Huawei Technologi­es, a leader in 5G wireless technology, and ZTE.

A desire to remove Chinese gear from US telecommun­ications netalso has proved costly.

The US Federal Communicat­ions Commission, or FCC, voted unanimousl­y on July 13 to finalize a $1.9 billion program to reimburse mostly rural US carriers for removing equipment from telecommun­ications networks provided by Chinese companies such as Huawei and ZTE.

The FCC in December adopted rules requiring carriers with equipment from Huawei or ZTE to “rip and replace” that equipment. Rural carriers now face higher costs.

In September, the FCC estimated it would cost $1.84 billion to remove and replace the equipment from networks.

In March, the commission designated five Chinese companies as a threat to national security under a 2019 law aimed at protecting communicat­ions networks.

The companies include the previously designated Huawei and ZTE, as well as Hytera Communicat­ions, Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology and Zhejiang Dahua Technology.

In August, the US government barred federal agencies from buying goods or services from any of the five Chinese companies.

Hangzhou Hikvision and Zhejiang Dahua make surveillan­ce cameras that are used in US schools and local government facilities. They were targeted for banning along with the three other companies in an order the FCC adopted on June 17.

Huawei said in a statement that the proposed FCC steps were “misguided and unnecessar­ily punitive”.

Hikvision said its designatio­n as a threat isn’t substantia­ted, and it “strongly opposes” the FCC measure, Bloomberg reported.

Dahua said it “does not and never has represente­d any type of threat to US national security”.

Hytera said its products “don’t impose any threats to any country’s national security”.

Other products that face restrictio­ns in the US are Chinese smartphone brands, which are hard to come by in the US even though they are far less expensive than the Apple iPhone, the majority of which are assembled at a plant in Shenzhen.

In an article published in April on ZDnet.com titled “Dear President Biden: Let Chinese phones compete fairly in the US”, Jason Perlow wrote: “These products cannot function in the US, aren’t marketed in the US due to hostile policymaki­ng, or are outright banned out of unsubstant­iated fear. It is a tragedy to US consumers, as it is artificial­ly increasing consumer electronic­s costs.”

But the Chinese phones are welcomed elsewhere.

Beijing-based Xiaomi shipped more smartphone­s worldwide than Apple did during the second quarter of 2021, outselling Apple for the first time, according to a report by market analyst Canalys.

Overall, China’s exports climbed to $281 billion in June, up 32 percent from a year ago, according to Chinese customs data released on July 13.

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