By Dilip Hiro
August 19, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - For the Trump
administration’s senior officials, it’s been open
season on bashing China. If you need an example,
think of the president’s blame game about “the
invisible Chinese virus” as it spreads wildly
across the U.S.
When it comes to China, in fact, the ever more
virulent criticism never seems to stop.
Between the end of June and the end of July, four
members of his cabinet vied with each other in
spewing anti-Chinese rhetoric. That particular spate
of China bashing started when FBI Director
Christopher Wray
described Chinese President Xi Jinping as the
successor to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. It was
capped by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s
clarion call to U.S. allies to note the
“bankrupt” Marxist-Leninist ideology of China’s
leader and the urge to “global hegemony” that goes
with it, insisting that they would have to choose
“between freedom and tyranny.” (Forget which country
on this planet
actually claims global hegemony as its right.)
At the same time, the Pentagon deployed its
aircraft carriers and other weaponry
ever more threateningly in the South China Sea
and elsewhere in the Pacific. The question is: What
lies behind this upsurge in Trump administration
China baiting? A likely answer can be found in the
president’s blunt statement in a
July interview with Chris Wallace of Fox News
that “I’m not a good loser. I don’t like to lose.”
The reality is that, under Donald Trump, the
United States is indeed losing to China in two
important spheres. As the FBI’s Wray
put it, “In economic and technical terms [China]
is already a peer competitor of the United States...
in a very different kind of [globalized] world.” In
other words, China is rising and the U.S. is
falling. Don’t just blame Trump and his cronies for
that, however, as this moment has been a long time
coming.
Facts speak for themselves. Nearly unscathed by
the 2008-2009 global recession, China displaced
Japan as the world’s second largest economy in
August 2010. In 2012, with $3.87 trillion worth of
imports and exports, it
overtook the U.S. total of $3.82 trillion,
elbowing it out of a position it had held for 60
years as the number one cross-border trading nation
worldwide. By the end of 2014, China’s gross
domestic product, as
measured by purchasing power parity, was $17.6
trillion, slightly exceeding the $17.4 trillion of
the United States, which had been the globe’s
largest economy since 1872.
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In May 2015, the Chinese government released a Made in China 2025 plan aimed at rapidly developing 10 high-tech industries, including electric cars, next-generation information technology, telecommunications, advanced robotics, and artificial intelligence. Other major sectors covered in the plan included agricultural technology, aerospace engineering, the development of new synthetic materials, the emerging field of biomedicine, and high-speed rail infrastructure. The plan was aimed at achieving 70% self-sufficiency in high-tech industries and a dominant position in such global markets by 2049, a century after the founding of the People’s Republic of China
Semiconductors are crucial to all electronic
products and, in 2014, the government’s national
integrated circuit industry development guidelines
set a target: China was to become a global leader in
semiconductors by 2030. In 2018, the local chip
industry moved up from basic silicon packing and
testing to higher value chip design and
manufacturing. The following year, the U.S.
Semiconductor Industry Association
noted that, while America led the world with
nearly half of global market share, China was the
main threat to its position because of huge state
investments in commercial manufacturing and
scientific research.
By then, the U.S. had already fallen behind China
in just such scientific and technological research.
A
study by Nanjing University’s Qingnan Xie and
Harvard University’s Richard Freeman noted that
between 2000 and 2016, China’s share of global
publications in the physical sciences, engineering,
and math quadrupled, exceeding that of the U.S.
In 2019, for the first time since figures for
patents were compiled in 1978, the U.S. failed to
file for the largest number of them.
According to the World Intellectual Property
Organization, China filed applications for 58,990
patents and the United States 57,840. In addition,
for the third year in a row, the Chinese high-tech
corporation Huawei Technologies Company, with 4,144
patents, was well ahead of U.S.-based Qualcomm
(2,127). Among educational institutions, the
University of California maintained its top rank
with 470 published applications, but Tsinghua
University ranked second with 265. Of the top five
universities in the world, three were Chinese.
The Neck-and-Neck Race in Consumer
Electronics
By 2019, the leaders in consumer technology in
America included Google, Apple, Amazon, and
Microsoft; in China, the leaders were Alibaba
(founded by Jack Ma), Tencent (Tengxun in Chinese),
Xiaomi, and Baidu. All had been launched by private
citizens. Among the US companies, Microsoft was
established in 1975, Apple in 1976, Amazon in 1994,
and Google in September 1998. The earliest Chinese
tech giant, Tencent, was established two months
after Google, followed by Alibaba in 1999, Baidu in
2000, and Xiaomi, a hardware producer, in 2010. When
China first entered cyberspace in 1994, its
government left intact its policy of controlling
information through censorship by the Ministry of
Public Security.
In 1996, the country established a high-tech
industrial development zone in Shenzhen, just across
the Pearl River from Hong Kong, the first of what
would be a number of special economic zones. From
2002 on, they would begin attracting Western
multinational corporations keen to take advantage of
their tax-free provisions and low-wage skilled
workers. By 2008, such foreign companies
accounted for 85% of China’s high-tech exports.
Shaken by an official 2005 report that found
serious flaws in the country’s innovation system,
the government issued a policy paper the following
year listing
20 mega-projects in nanotechnology, high-end
generic microchips, aircraft, biotechnology, and new
drugs. It then focused on a bottom-up approach to
innovation, involving small start-ups, venture
capital, and cooperation between industry and
universities, a strategy that would take a few years
to yield positive results.
In January 2000, less than 2% of Chinese used the
Internet. To cater to that market, Robin Li and Eric
Xu set up Baidu in Beijing as a Chinese search
engine. By 2009, in its competition with Google
China, a subsidiary of Google
operating under government censorship, Baidu
garnered twice the market share of its American
rival as Internet penetration leapt to 29%.
In the aftermath of the 2008-2009 global
financial meltdown, significant numbers of Chinese
engineers and entrepreneurs returned from Silicon
Valley to play an important role in the mushrooming
of high-tech firms in a vast Chinese market
increasingly walled off from U.S. and other Western
corporations because of their unwillingness to
operate under government censorship.
Soon after Xi Jinping became president in March
2013, his government
launched a campaign to promote “mass
entrepreneurship and mass innovation” using
state-backed venture capital. That was when Tencent
came up with its super app WeChat, a multi-purpose
platform for socializing, playing games, paying
bills, booking train tickets, and so on.
Jack Ma’s e-commerce behemoth Alibaba went public
on the New York Stock Exchange in September 2014,
raising a record $25 billion with its initial public
offering. By the end of the decade, Baidu had
diversified into the field of artificial
intelligence, while expanding its multiple
Internet-related services and products. As the
search engine of choice for 90% of Chinese Internet
users, more than 700 million people, the company
became the fifth most visited website in cyberspace,
its mobile users exceeding 1.1 billion.
Xiaomi Corporation would
release its first smartphone in August 2011. By
2014, it had forged ahead of its Chinese rivals in
the domestic market and developed its own mobile
phone chip capabilities. In 2019, it sold 125
million mobile phones, ranking fourth globally. By
the middle of 2019, China had
206 privately held start-ups valued at more than
$1 billion, besting the U.S. with 203.
Among the country’s many successful
entrepreneurs, the one who particularly stood out
was Jack Ma,
born Ma Yun in 1964. Though he failed to get a
job at a newly opened Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet
in his home city of Hangzhou, he did finally gain
entry to a local college after his third attempt,
buying his first computer at the age of 31. In 1999,
he founded Alibaba with a group of friends. It would
become one of the most valuable tech companies in
the world. On his 55th birthday, he was the second
richest man in China with a net worth of $42.1
billion.
Born in the same year as Ma, his American
counterpart,
Jeff Bezos, gained a degree in electrical
engineering and computer science from Princeton
University. He would found Amazon.com in 1994 to
sell books online, before entering e-commerce and
other fields. Amazon Web Services, a cloud computing
company, would become the globe’s largest. In 2007,
Amazon released a handheld reading device called the
Kindle. Three years later, it ventured into making
its own television shows and movies. In 2014, it
launched Amazon Echo, a smart speaker with a voice
assistant named Alexa that let its owner instantly
play music, control a Smart home, get information,
news, weather, and more. With a net worth of $145.4
billion in 2019, Bezos became the richest person on
the planet.
Deploying an artificial intelligence inference
chip to power features on its e-commerce sites,
Alibaba
categorized a billion product images uploaded by
vendors to its e-commerce platform daily and
prepared them for search and personalized
recommendations to its customer base of 500 million.
By allowing outside vendors to use its platform for
a fee, Amazon
increased its items for sale to 350 million --
with 197 million people accessing Amazon.com each
month.
China also led the world in mobile payments with
America in sixth place. In 2019, such transactions
in China amounted to $80.5 trillion. Because of the
Covid-19 pandemic, the authorities
encouraged customers to use mobile payment,
online payment, and barcode payment to avoid the
risk of infection. The
projected total for mobile payments: $111.1
trillion. The
corresponding figures for the United States at
$130 billion look puny by comparison.
In August 2012, the founder of the Beijing-based
ByteDance, 29-year-old Zhang Yiming,
broke new ground in aggregating news for its
users. His product, Toutiao (Today's Headlines)
tracked users’ behavior across thousands of sites to
form an opinion of what would interest them most,
and then recommended stories.
By 2016, it had already acquired 78 million
users, 90% of them under 30.
In September 2016, ByteDance launched a
short-video app in China called Douyin that gained
100 million users within a year. It would soon enter
a few Asian markets as
TikTok. In November 2017, for $1 billion,
ByteDance would purchase Musical.ly, a
Shanghai-based Chinese social network app for video
creation, messaging, and live broadcasting, and set
up an office in California.
Zhang merged it into TikTok in August 2018 to
give his company a larger footprint in the U.S. and
then spent nearly $1 billion to promote TikTok as
the platform for sharing short-dance, lip-sync,
comedy, and talent videos. It has been downloaded by
165 million Americans and driven the Trump
administration to distraction. A Generation Z craze,
in April 2020 it surpassed two billion downloads
globally, eclipsing U.S. tech giants. That led
President Trump (no loser he!) and his top officials
to attack it and he would sign executive orders
attempting to ban both TikTok and WeChat from
operating in the U.S. or being used by Americans
(unless sold to a U.S. tech giant). Stay tuned.
Huawei’s Octane-Powered Rise
But the biggest Chinese winner in consumer
electronics and telecommunications has been
Shenzhen-based Huawei Technologies Company, the
country’s first global multinational. It has become
a pivot point in the geopolitical battle between
Beijing and Washington.
Huawei (in Chinese, it means “splendid
achievement”)
makes phones and the routers that facilitate
communications around the world. Established in
1987, its current workforce of 194,000 operates in
170 countries. In 2019, its annual turn-over was
$122.5 billion. In 2012, it outstripped its nearest
rival, the 136-year-old Ericsson Telephone
Corporation of Sweden, to become the world’s largest
supplier of telecommunications equipment with 28% of
market share globally. In 2019, it forged ahead of
Apple to become the second largest phone maker after
Samsung.
Several factors have contributed to Huawei’s
stratospheric rise: its business model, the
personality and decision-making mode of its founder
Ren Zhengfei, state policies on high-tech industry,
and the firm’s exclusive ownership by its employees.
Born in 1944 in Guizhou Province, Ren Zhengfei
went to Chongqing University and then joined a
military research institute during Mao Zedong’s
chaotic Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). He was
demobilized in 1983 when China cut back on its
engineering corps. But the army’s slogan, “fight and
survive,” stayed with him. He moved to the city of
Shenzhen and worked in the country's infant
electronics sector for four years, saving enough to
co-found what would become the tech giant Huawei. He
focused on research and development, adapting
technologies from Western firms, while his
new company received small orders from the
military and later substantial R&D (research and
development) grants from the state to develop GSM
(Global System for Mobile Communication) phones and
other products. Over the years, the company produced
telecommunications infrastructure and commercial
products for third generation (3G) and fourth
generation (4G) smartphones.
As China’s high-tech industry surged, Huawei’s
fortunes rose. In 2010, it
hired IBM and Accenture PLC to design the means
of managing networks for telecom providers. In 2011,
the company hired the Boston Consulting Group to
advise it on foreign acquisitions and investments.
Like many successful American entrepreneurs, Ren
has
given top priority to the customer and, in the
absence of the usual near-term pressure to raise
income and profits, his management team has invested
$15 to 20 billion annually in research and
development work. That helps explain how Huawei
became one of the globe’s five companies in the
fifth generation (5G) smartphone business,
topping the list by shipping out 6.9 million
phones in 2019 and capturing 36.9% of the market. On
the eve of the release of 5G phones, Ren
revealed that Huawei had a staggering 2,570 5G
patents.
So it was unsurprising that in the global race
for 5G, Huawei was the first to roll out commercial
products in February 2019. One hundred times faster
than its 4G predecessors, 5G
tops out at 10 gigabits per second and future 5G
networks are expected to link a huge array of
devices from cars to washing machines to door bells.
Huawei’s exponential success has increasingly
alarmed a Trump administration edging ever closer to
conflict with China. Last month, Secretary of State
Pompeo
described Huawei as “an arm of the Chinese
Communist Party’s surveillance state that censors
political dissidents and enables mass internment
camps in Xinjiang.”
In May 2019, the U.S. Commerce Department
banned American firms from supplying components
and software to Huawei on national security grounds.
A year later, it
imposed a ban on Huawei buying microchips from
American companies or using U.S.-designed software.
The White House also launched a
global campaign against the installation of the
company’s 5G systems in allied nations, with mixed
success.
Ren continued to deny such charges and to oppose
Washington’s moves, which have so far
failed to slow his company’s commercial advance.
Its revenue for the first half of 2020, $65 billion,
was up by 13.1% over the previous year.
From tariffs on Chinese products and that recent
TikTok ban to slurs about the “kung
flu” as the Covid-19 pandemic swept America,
President Trump and his team have been expressing
their mounting frustration over China and ramping up
attacks on an inexorably rising power on the global
stage. Whether they know it or not, the American
century is over, which doesn’t mean that nothing can
be done to improve the U.S. position in the years to
come.
Setting aside Washington’s belief in the inherent
superiority of America, a future administration
could stop hurling insults or trying to ban enviably
successful Chinese tech firms and instead emulate
the Chinese example by formulating and implementing
a well-planned, long-term high-tech strategy. But as
the Covid-19 pandemic has made abundantly clear, the
very idea of planning is not a concept available to
the “very
stable genius” presently in the White House.
Dilip Hiro, a
TomDispatch regular, is the author,
among many other works, of
After Empire: The Birth of a Multipolar World.
He is currently researching a sequel to that book,
which would cover several interlinked subjects,
including the Covid-19 pandemic.
Follow TomDispatch on
Twitter and join us on
Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books,
John Feffer’s new dystopian novel (the second in the
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Frostlands, Beverly Gologorsky's novel
Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt's
A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred
McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and
Decline of U.S. Global Power and John
Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since
World War II.
Copyright 2020 Dilip Hiro