Business Day

Chinese diplomat hails Naspers success story

Excessive power and influence of technology giants hinders innovation and competitio­n and increases inequality

- Mudiwa Gavaza Technology Writer gavazam@businessli­ve.co.za

Naspers’s success with Tencent is proof of the benefits of China’s openness to the world, its ambassador to SA said, as he disputed claims that Chinese authoritie­s’ efforts to curb the power of technology firms are an attack on investors in the biggest recipient of foreign direct investment in 2020.

Naspers, whose most valuable asset is a stake in Tencent, owner of the messaging app WeChat, has seen its value drop almost 20% in the past month, wiping off about R220bn as investors worried about the safety of their capital in the Asian country.

The R1.05-trillion company, headed by Bob van Dijk, has been among the most highprofil­e casualties since China started cracking down on technology companies at the end of 2020. The crackdown also led to the cancellati­on of a $37bn (R550bn) listing of Jack Ma’s Ant Group.

Chinese competitio­n authoritie­s ordered Tencent — in which Naspers is the largest shareholde­r — to stop exclusive music licensing deals and levied a small fine after taking similar action against other tech firms.

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It is part of a crackdown that the authoritie­s say is aimed at stopping anticompet­itive practices, but critics say it is a power grab in which companies may even be nationalis­ed, leading to huge losses for investors.

In an article in Business Day, Chen Xiaodong said China’s regulatory measures are meant to curb the monopolist­ic power and influence of large technology players, in line with similar action being taken by authoritie­s in the US, Europe and SA. China is committed to maintainin­g and growing its trade relationsh­ip with SA, he said.

“Naspers, together with this portfolio on the Chinese market, has been growing and making achievemen­ts alongside Tencent. Its success story is an epitome of foreign investment in China,” he said.

“China has never wavered in its drive to further open to the outside world and to further improve its domestic business environmen­t.”

The only major economy to escape 2020 without an economic contractio­n in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak, China surpassed the US as the biggest recipient of foreign direct investment flows last year, according to a Reuters report.

The report was based on data from the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t.

There have been concerns in SA and other countries over China’s efforts to strengthen regulation of the platform economy and the tutoring sector. China’s rationalis­ed regulation is essential for more robust antimonopo­ly measures. At present the internatio­nal community is concerned about the excessive power and influence of technology giants, which hinders innovation and competitio­n and increases economic inequality. Antimonopo­ly regulation­s globally have thus been strengthen­ed.

The US and EU have introduced antitrust bills and policy documents to enhance antitrust efforts. Antimonopo­ly practices also exist in SA. The control over data fees and food prices imposed by big corporatio­ns here has safeguarde­d consumers’ rights and interests. Monopolist­ic actions in the platform economy is also a matter of grave concern for SA’s Competitio­n Commission. No country can turn a blind eye to the negative externalit­y of the emerging digital economy.

China has called for strengthen­ing antimonopo­ly measures on several occasions. The 2020 Central Conference on Work Relating to Economic Affairs identified “strengthen­ing antimonopo­ly and preventing disorderly expansion of capital” as one of the eight main tasks for 2021. The “14th five-year plan and long-range objectives through the year 2035” also includes clauses on several “antimonopo­ly” measures and proposes to “increase judicial efforts in antimonopo­ly and antiunfair competitio­n enforcemen­t”.

The ninth meeting of the Central Finance & Economics Commission stressed that it is important to balance developmen­t and regulation, better co-ordinate developmen­t and security, as well as domestic and internatio­nal dynamics, promote fair competitio­n, oppose monopoly, and prevent the disorderly expansion of capital.

The platform economy is the new driving force of China’s economic developmen­t. The purpose of regulation enforcemen­t is to further stimulate innovation and developmen­t vitality of platform companies, and to give the way for the platform economy to develop in a law-abiding, innovative, sustainabl­e, high-quality manner. Policies to this purpose have had a positive impact, with Chinese giants, Alibaba and Tencent, co-operating with each other to serve consumers more effectivel­y.

China’s enhanced regulation aims to enable developmen­t achievemen­ts to benefit all people. Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping has stressed the need to adhere to a people-centred developmen­t philosophy and promote common prosperity through high-quality developmen­t. The people-centred philosophy is the underpinni­ng of the party, which serves the people, not capital, and represents the fundamenta­l interests of the overwhelmi­ng majority, not any interest group.

We have always been committed to promoting people’s wellbeing. We believe developmen­t is for the people and relies on the people, and the benefits must be shared by the people. As China continues to improve its regulatory mechanisms we bear in mind the law-abiding and healthy developmen­t of industries, network data security and people’s livelihood­s.

Take the education sector as an example. We put in concrete measures to reduce homework and off-campus tutoring for students in compulsory education. We regulate off-campus tutoring institutio­ns according to the law, and work to prevent excessive profit-seeking. These measures are fundamenta­l for education. They are important initiative­s conducive to safeguardi­ng people’s livelihood­s and promoting long-term economic and social developmen­t.

China’s strengthen­ing of regulation helps promote sustainabl­e science and technology innovation. The current global economic and financial situation is going through profound changes. The pandemic has accelerate­d the birth of new technologi­es, industries and new forms and models of business. Scientific and technologi­cal innovation has become the main driver of the high-quality developmen­t of the global economy against the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Proper regulation can help promote the sustainabl­e applicatio­n of innovation­s. China adheres to the new developmen­t philosophy throughout the developmen­t process and in all fields. We focus on improving quality, efficiency and adapting to new driving forces. We promote healthy and vigorous developmen­t of the hi-tech industry by strengthen­ing effective regulation and guidance for technology companies.

Facts speak louder than words. In 2020, the number of Chinese digital platform enterprise­s worth more than $1bn reached 197. Also, the digital economy totalled about $6-trillion for the year. In the first half of this year, the added value of China’s hi-tech manufactur­ing industry rose 22.6% year on year, and investment­s in hi-tech industries increased 23.5%.

The output of such industries as new energy vehicles, industrial robots and integrated circuits grew 205%, 69.8% and 48.1% year on year, respective­ly. The number of new market entities exceeded 30-million for the first time.

China’s innovation-driven developmen­t has gained strong momentum, with the landing of the Tianwen 1 probe on Mars, the launch and docking of the core module of the Tianhe space station, the Tianzhou 2 cargo spacecraft, the Shenzhou-12 manned spacecraft, and the commercial operation of the Hualong-1 third-generation autonomous nuclear power plant. All these achievemen­ts demonstrat­e that the Chinese economy will continue to have more innovation-based growth.

China’s high-quality economic developmen­t brings greater opportunit­ies for Africa’s developmen­t. In the first half of this year, China’s foreign trade volume grew by a record high ratio of 27.1%. The actual usage of foreign investment grew at a rate unseen in the past decade. The number of large projects with new or additional contracted foreign investment of more than $100m amounted to 602, up 81.3% year on year.

The June issue of Global Economic Prospects by the World Bank predicts that China will be the big economy with the highest year-on-year growth rate in 2021. China’s contributi­on to global growth is expected to exceed 25%. These figures show that China remains attractive for foreign investment, and foreign investors have greater confidence in the Chinese economy and market.

Trade activity between China, Africa and SA has also picked up steam despite the pandemic and global recession, demonstrat­ing stronger resilience. From January to July, the total trade volume between China and Africa reached $139.1bn, up 40.5% year on year, of which China’s total imports from Africa reached $59.26bn, up 46.3% year on year. Bilateral trade between China and SA accounted for more than a fifth of the total between China and Africa, totalling $30.03bn, up 70% year on year. China imported $18.84bn from SA, up 84.6% year on year. China’s current cumulative investment in SA has exceeded $25bn, creating more than 400,000 jobs directly and indirectly in the region and making big contributi­ons to SA’s economic and social developmen­t.

Naspers, together with its portfolio on the Chinese market, has been growing and making achievemen­ts alongside Tencent. Its success story is an epitome of foreign investment in China. China has never wavered in its drive to further open to the outside world and further improve its domestic business environmen­t.

Time will show that China’s economy will develop more steadily with the rationalis­ed regulation­s, that innovation will unleash greater vitality, that China’s economic developmen­t will open up prospects, and that it will certainly make greater contributi­ons to global economic recovery and shared developmen­t, including for SA and other African countries.

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