US ‘blockades’ won’t hurt the fundamentals of China’s science and technology development, says MIIT
- The blacklist decision, which immediately drew a rebuke from Beijing, targeted 20 Chinese public security bureaus and eight companies
US efforts to sanction some of China’s biggest and most successful companies in telecommunication and artificial intelligence (AI) will not hurt “the fundamentals” of the country’s science and technology development, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said.
MIIT spokesman Huang Libin said on Tuesday that while some industries and exports have seen an impact from a decision by Washington to ban the sale of US technology to some companies, these short-term fluctuations won’t affect the long-term development of Chinese science and technology.
“Facing the hi-tech blockades brought about by the US, we have confidence that China’s science and technology can overcome the difficulties and break the bottleneck to achieve breakthroughs,” Huang told reporters at a regular briefing in Beijing.
Technology competition has become the crux of the US-China relationship. In early October, Washington expanded its trade blacklist, or Entity List, to include some of China’s top AI companies, which were accused of helping the ruling Communist Party mistreat Uygur Muslims and other predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities.
The blacklist decision, which immediately drew a rebuke from Beijing, targets 20 Chinese public security bureaus and eight companies, including video surveillance giant Hikvision as well as facial recognition start-ups SenseTime and Megvii Technology, many of which have gained prominence as they expand outside their domestic market. It followed a similar move by Washington in May against Huawei Technologies as part of ongoing US efforts to limit the influence of the Chinese telecoms leader over national security concerns.
The knock-on effect of the growing entity list has fuelled concerns of a decoupling in the global tech supply chain, creating two separate tech ecosystems with different standards and systems. Many Chinese technology providers depend on US chips and software for products used by domestic and international customers. If blocked from using US technology, they will have to find alternatives.