Xi Jinping rallies China’s tech champions as rivalry with US intensifies

Xi Jinping has called on Chinese entrepreneurs to align their business 
strategies with national needs, while promising continued support for their 
operations

Speech comes amid rising China-US tension and a desire by some foreign firms to 
reduce supply chain dependence on the country

Frank Tang in Beijing  Published: 7:30pm, 22 Jul, 2020
https://www.scmp.com/economy/global-economy/article/3094247/xi-jinping-rallies-chinas-tech-champions-rivalry-us

A leaked list of entrepreneurs who attended a symposium with President Xi 
Jinping on Tuesday underscores the Chinese leader’s intention to groom 
home-grown technology champions to better compete with the United States as a 
trans-Pacific tech rivalry heats up.

The list included a who's who of Chinese hi-tech power, including Chen 
Zongnian, chairman of Hikvision, a state-owned video surveillance manufacturer 
on the US entity list, manufacturing titans like Wang Min, the chairman of XCMG 
Group, and representatives from China’s largest state-owned industrial 
conglomerates, including Sinochem Group, which trades in energy and chemicals.

The South China Morning Post confirmed the list of delegates with two separate 
sources after it was posted to Twitter

Among the 25 business leaders at the conference, more than half were emerging 
industry leaders in the fields of chip making, artificial intelligence and 
smart manufacturing.

Xi called on them to be patriotic and innovative, as the threat of decoupling 
from the US grows and foreign manufacturers seek to reduce reliance on the 
country for strategic goods.

The president also asked them to align their business strategies with China’s 
needs, reminding them that “patriotism is the glorious tradition of our 
country’s outstanding entrepreneurs in modern times”
.
“Marketing knows no borders, but entrepreneurs have a motherland,” Xi said, 
according to a transcript of his speech published by the official Xinhua News 
Agency.

The symposium was held amid an increasingly fraught China-US relationship and 
the threat of a bitter superpower tech war. The Trump administration has 
already banned the sale of American technology to Chinese firms on the entity 
list, and lobbied Western allies to prevent telecoms giant Huawei from building 
5G infrastructure over security concerns.

Among the representatives from China’s hi-tech world were Zhou Zixue, the 
chairman of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), which 
Beijing hopes will help cut the country’s reliance on imported semiconductors.

He was joined by Chen Tianshi, the chairman of Cambricon Technologies, China’s 
leading developer of artificial intelligence chips; Yin Zhiyao, the chairman of 
Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment, which produces equipment to make 
microchips; and leaders from hi-tech firms including Guide Infrared and Goertek.

Manufacturers of home appliances, cars, robots and heavy machinery were also 
present, along with select representatives from the export and commodities 
sectors.

It is not the first time that Xi has gathered such an audience to deliver a 
message from Beijing. Amid ideological chaos over the role of China’s private 
economy in late 2018 – with extreme voices saying private business had 
completed their historical mission and should be phased out – Xi brought 
together private entrepreneurs to assure them they were still an important 
component of the socialist economy.

He has also tried a similar approach with foreign business executives. In the 
summer of 2018, after US President Donald Trump started a trade war against 
China, Xi asked American and European businesspeople to help fight 
“protectionism”. And last week, he wrote to a group of multinational executives 
promising that China would open its market wider.

China has emerged as the first major economy to rebound from the coronavirus 
shock, posting 3.2 per cent growth in the second quarter of 2020 after a 6.8 
per cent contraction in the first three months of the year.

But questions remain about whether momentum can be maintained in the second 
half, especially with the pandemic still spreading around the world and 
relations with the US at all time lows.

Tang Dajie, a senior researcher with the Beijing-based think tank China 
Enterprise Institute, said many manufacturers were still worried about future 
orders.

“It remains unclear if export orders can return in a persistent manner,” said 
Tang, who recently visited the Yangtze River Delta, a major economic engine of 
China. “Also, the services sector is finding it especially hard to recover to 
pre-pandemic levels.”

Delegates from China’s financial and property sector were suspiciously absent 
from Xi’s talks, but foreign executives from Microsoft, Panasonic and Samsung 
attended.

Xi thanked the business leaders for their contribution to pandemic control and 
economic development, saying China was leading the world with “better than 
expected” second-quarter growth. While Xi acknowledged the “unprecedented 
pressure” caused by the pandemic on China’s economy, he sought to soothe 
worries.

“As long as there are green hills, we don’t have to worry about the lack of 
firewood,” he said.

“In recent years, economic globalisation has encountered counter currents and 
trade frictions have intensified. Some companies have adjusted their industrial 
layout to move … this is a normal adjustment of production.

“At the same time, China is the world’s largest market with the most potential 
and has the most complete industrial supporting conditions.”
–

Frank Tang joined the SCMP in 2016 after a decade of China economy coverage and 
government policy analysis.



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