Advertisement

My Take | China’s preparation for a tech decoupling needs to go beyond immediate choke points

  • China needs to encourage new ideas and innovation if it is to chart a long term path through tech decoupling
  • Tech decoupling risks will come in many forms, including no access to supplies of critical components and an end to Wall Street funding

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
12
China needs to encourage innovation and new ideas if it is to chart a path through tech decoupling. Photo: Shutterstock
A technology decoupling between China and the United States is becoming a reality, and although China has been taking steps to prepare, these remain far from sufficient.
Advertisement

A key part of Beijing’s strategy to deal with technology rivalry is to identify and fix the country’s choke points, namely critical components or technologies where China does not have a grip on the supply chain.

Washington’s decision to deny advanced chips to Huawei Technologies Co, which hobbled the tech giant’s leading smartphone business, is an object lesson for China about the costs of not keeping core supplies in its own hands.
While this approach makes sense, it should be noted that choke points are often the symptoms of deeper vulnerabilities. Even if China could make all the things that it deems necessary for technological self-sufficiency, from extreme ultraviolet lithography machines to big aeroplane engines, this would only be a temporary reprieve since technological progress is never-ending.

A global tech decoupling will lead to long-term rivalry between two competing systems, not minor skirmishes over a few specific projects. If China is to have a chance in this long-term battle, it must allow new ideas and innovation to flourish so that it can gain an edge and make a change.

Advertisement

The US Congress and the White House are working hand in hand to target China when it comes to the battle over strategic technologies. As such, there is a growing awareness in Beijing that a tech decoupling will involve much more than the current flow of targeted sanctions and trade blacklists.

loading
Advertisement