Apple
recently agreed to abide by Chinese cloud data regulations despite concerns
over surveillance of the population
|
AFP
report continues:
The
tech industry is not directly affected by the new tariffs unveiled by the Trump
administration which aim to target Beijing for unfair trade practices failure
to protect intellectual property.
But
some industry leaders fear tech will be dragged into the dispute, with the
potential to impact the estimated US$3 trillion industry in which the US and
China are key players.
"As
trade wars escalate, they are not controllable, they are not predictable,"
said Ed Black, president and chief executive of the Computer &
Communications Industry Association, which represents major tech firms such as
Amazon, Facebook, Google and Netflix.
"There
is always collateral damage."
Black
said the US administration "correctly identified some of the
problems" with trade involving China but "missed all the problems of
internet companies doing business in China."
Black
said the tech industry understands the need to confront China over trade
barriers and other practices, but that Washington's efforts to go alone could
"weaken the international trading system."
The
relationship of US tech firms with China has long been complicated by concerns
about censorship, labor and human rights and the potential for stealing trade
secrets.
Google
shut down its search engine for China in 2010 after it found accounts of
Chinese human rights activists hacked and some US-based online platforms are
banned by Beijing.
But
Apple recently agreed to base its cloud storage for Chinese users in the
country, saying it had to comply despite concerns over Beijing's surveillance
of citizens. And Airbnb said it would share customer data with the Chinese
government as well.
- Data as fuel -
Susan
Aaronson, a George Washington University professor of international affairs who
specializes in digital trade, said that as American firms battle for supremacy
in artificial intelligence, they are hungry for sources of data, including from
China.
"In
almost everything the US produces the key source of value is data,"
Aaronson said.
She
wrote in a recent research paper that China "uses the lure of its large
population, relatively low and poorly enforced privacy regulations, and
subsidies to encourage foreign companies to carry out AI research in
China."
Her
paper argued that American trading partners "need to encourage the data
flows that power AI while simultaneously protecting citizens from misuse or
unethical use of algorithms."
Some
analysts say the Trump administration has correctly identified some of
Beijing's unfair trade policies but that tariffs may be counterproductive.
"China
uses mercantile practices and the Trump administration is right to contest
those actions, but there are many reasons the tariff approach is not the right
one," said Stephen Ezell, vice president for global innovation policy at
the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a technology-focused
think tank.
With
tariffs, he said, "US consumers and businesses will pay more in the long
term. We need to take on China but we shouldn't be penalizing ourselves in the
process."
Aaronson
agreed that China has disadvantaged foreign firms but argued for a multilateral
approach involving allies and global institutions "to move China toward
more openness and the rule of law."
- Secretly applauding? -
Tech
industry analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy said that
some in Silicon Valley "are secretly applauding" the move to shake up
trade relations with China after years of frustrations.
"Americans
can't own businesses in China, they have to set up a joint venture, which
sometimes means you have to share intellectual property," Moorhead said.
"If
you sell software, the Chinese government has to bless the source code. For hardware,
you have to give very detailed schematic drawings. Some things have changed but
some haven't."
Moorhead
noted that some Chinese firms such as computer giant Lenovo are expanding in
the US, but that American firms are having a harder time in China.
Still,
Moorhead said he sees trade frictions increasing with some negative effects in
the short run.
"I
see (tariff actions) moving to electronics and I see it tit-for-tat until it
starts to get painful," he said.
"I
could see a tariffs on (US imports of) iPhones, and China could put tariffs on
components going into the iPhone. I think it's going to get worse before it
gets better."
No comments:
Post a Comment