China Daily Global Weekly

Sharper focus on innovation

Policy support expected to encourage more businesses to pursue advanced technologi­es and digitaliza­tion

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

As China’s two sessions — the annual meetings of the national legislatur­e and the top political advisory body — ended on March 11, they showed the world how in the world’s secondlarg­est economy, the intersecti­on of democracy, policymaki­ng and lawmaking contribute­s to high-quality developmen­t, the dream of almost every country these days.

Premier Li Keqiang highlighte­d the need for China to further implement the innovation-driven developmen­t strategy and strengthen the foundation of the real economy at the opening of the fifth session of the 13th National People’s Congress earlier this month.

Delivering this year’s Government Work Report, Li said China will promote scientific and technologi­cal innovation for industrial upgrading, eliminate the bottleneck­s in supply chains and realize high-quality developmen­t through innovation.

The remarks came at a time when the global economy went into a recession amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Changing geopolitic­al environmen­t and growing trade protection­ism added complexiti­es to the economic developmen­t of countries globally.

“To achieve innovation, core technology is a key,” said Ni Guangnan, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

Ni said that over the past year, China has made new breakthrou­ghs in core technologi­es, including informatio­n technology. Domestic central processing unit chips, operating systems and other basic digital technologi­es have been put into wide use.

“Although the overall market share (of these domestic basic digital technologi­es) is small, the absolute number of such products has reached 10 million,” he said.

“It fully demonstrat­ed that China, as a super large market, has great advantages in driving innovation. The country’s scientific and technologi­cal innovation capabiliti­es have also been significan­tly improved.”

For instance, in terms of innovation in semiconduc­tors, the government has intensifie­d efforts to develop chips at home so as to reduce reliance on the foreign semiconduc­tor industry. This generated unpreceden­ted levels of enthusiasm and funneled capital from Chinese entreprene­urs into the domestic semiconduc­tor industry, with even carmakers jumping on the auto chip bandwagon.

According to market consultanc­y Preqin, China surpassed the United States in terms of semiconduc­tor financing last year. Chinese chipmakers, integrated circuit designers and other semiconduc­tor startups received $8.8 billion in funding last year, more than six times the $1.3 billion invested in comparable US companies.

Ding Wenwu, president of China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund Co Ltd, said although investment­s in the chip design segment increased over the past decade, more efforts are needed in the fields of chip materials, equipment and manufactur­ing.

“Chip design has a lower technologi­cal threshold and quick investment returns. But chip materials, equipment and manufactur­ing are the areas where China lags developed countries such as the US,” Ding said.

More innovation­s will spring forth in the near future as during the two sessions the government said the country will “roll out more policy support to encourage businesses to make innovation­s and focus on tackling bottleneck technologi­es”.

China will work to raise the proportion of weighted pretax deduction of the research and developmen­t expenses of small and medium-sized sci-tech enterprise­s from 75 percent to 100 percent, grant tax breaks to enterprise­s that invest in basic research, and improve policies on accelerate­d depreciati­on of equipment and tools and on preferenti­al corporate income tax for new and high-tech enterprise­s.

“Our policy of tax and fee reductions is like applying fertilizer and water, and the initiative for mass entreprene­urship and innovation aims to help more market entities take root and grow,” said Premier Li at a news conference after the closing of the fifth session of the 13th NPC on March 11.

“When public creativity is leveraged, and the vitality of market entities unleashed, one could well anticipate vibrant economic growth,” he said.

The 2022 draft plan for national economic and social developmen­t, released by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, specified that faster breakthrou­ghs in core technologi­es such as biomedicin­es, high-end instrument­s, green and low carbon energy transforma­tion and basic software will be a priority.

China will also intensify efforts to develop national laboratori­es, major research projects and innovation centers in Beijing, Shanghai and the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, the plan said.

Liu Qingfeng, a deputy to the 13th NPC and chairman of iFlytek, a smart translatio­n company, said such policy support has stimulated the vitality of high-tech companies and inspired more entreprene­urs to pursue innovation­s.

“Companies should promote systematic innovation based on original innovation­s and continuous­ly improve the ability of integratin­g key technologi­es into industries. More efforts are also expected to be made to guide tech and market talent to join in,” Liu said.

This year’s Government Work Report also highlighte­d the efforts of developing digital economy, building more digital informatio­n infrastruc­ture, applying 5G technology on a larger scale and advancing digitaliza­tion of industries. Accelerate­d efforts will also be made for the developmen­t of fields like the industrial internet, artificial intelligen­ce, key software and critical hardware, the report said.

As digital technology has become a focus area, Lu Jin, chairman of China National Gold Group Co, said in an interview with China Media Group that the company will beef up technology developmen­t and plans to invest about 300 million yuan ($47.24 million) this year to build “digital mines” to promote the digital management and control of mining, so as to further improve mining quality and efficiency.

In one of the companies’ gold mines in China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region, unmanned vehicles and drones, rather than human workers, did all transporta­tion and inspection work, which greatly improved mining efficiency and production safety.

“It is the continuous research and developmen­t on forefront digital technologi­es that brought about 1.4 billion yuan to 1.5 billion yuan of profit from this mining area alone last year,” Lu said.

According to the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, a government think tank, China’s digital economy reached $5.4 trillion in 2020 in terms of market size, rising 9.6 percent year-on-year, the fastest worldwide.

“China’s digital economy, which is indeed in the fast lane, has become a new driver of the country’s economic growth amid the COVID-19 pandemic. It has and will play an important role in driving economic recovery globally,” said Gong Ke, former president of the World Federation of Engineerin­g Organizati­ons and executive director of the Chinese Institute of New Generation Artificial Intelligen­ce Developmen­t Strategies.

According to China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), the country will scale up spending on research and developmen­t by more than 7 percent annually during the period to drive more technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs.

Consulting firm McKinsey & Company said in a report that 7 percent annual growth in R&D spending will set the country on the path to becoming the world’s largest spender on R&D.

Peng Wensheng, chief economist and head of research at China Internatio­nal Capital Corp, said: “As demographi­c dividends gradually decrease, China’s economy will rely more on technologi­cal innovation­s in the future. To achieve such technologi­cal progress, continuous R&D investment is the key.”

However, he said that China still has a long way to go to bridge the gap with developed countries like the US, both in R&D investment in basic research and R&D investment as a proportion of GDP.

“China’s R&D investment must be increased ‘substantia­lly’ in the coming decades to get rid of what we call the late-mover disadvanta­ge,” Peng said.

 ?? XU CHANGLIANG / XINHUA ?? Workers produce chips for export at an electronic enterprise in the Sihong Economic Developmen­t Zone in Sihong county, Jiangsu province, on Feb 23. China will pursue an innovation-driven developmen­t strategy and strengthen the foundation of the real economy amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
XU CHANGLIANG / XINHUA Workers produce chips for export at an electronic enterprise in the Sihong Economic Developmen­t Zone in Sihong county, Jiangsu province, on Feb 23. China will pursue an innovation-driven developmen­t strategy and strengthen the foundation of the real economy amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
 ?? WANG PENG / XINHUA ?? An employee checks equipment at the data center of China Unicom in Zhongwei, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, on March 1. China made fresh digital breakthrou­ghs last year.
WANG PENG / XINHUA An employee checks equipment at the data center of China Unicom in Zhongwei, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, on March 1. China made fresh digital breakthrou­ghs last year.
 ?? SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A 5G smart robot and maintenanc­e engineers inspect power supply equipment of the BeijingSha­nghai high-speed railway in Chuzhou, Anhui province, on Jan 17.
SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY A 5G smart robot and maintenanc­e engineers inspect power supply equipment of the BeijingSha­nghai high-speed railway in Chuzhou, Anhui province, on Jan 17.

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