The China Model: What the Country’s Tech Crackdown Is Really About
Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Book Review
    • Brands
    • Earth
    • Explorer
    • Fact Check
    • Family
    • Food
    • Game Reviews
    • Good Practices
    • Habitat
    • Humour
    • In Focus
    • Luxury
    • Mode
    • Panorama
    • Pursuit
    • Wealth
    • Wellbeing
    • Wheels
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • Videos
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • COVID-19
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Friday
February 03, 2023

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Economy
    • Aviation
    • Bazaar
    • Budget
    • Industry
    • NBR
    • RMG
    • Corporates
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Book Review
    • Brands
    • Earth
    • Explorer
    • Fact Check
    • Family
    • Food
    • Game Reviews
    • Good Practices
    • Habitat
    • Humour
    • In Focus
    • Luxury
    • Mode
    • Panorama
    • Pursuit
    • Wealth
    • Wellbeing
    • Wheels
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • Videos
    • Thoughts
    • Splash
    • Bangladesh
    • Supplement
    • Infograph
    • Archive
    • COVID-19
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
  • বাংলা
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 03, 2023
The China Model: What the Country’s Tech Crackdown Is Really About

Analysis

Austin Carr & Coco Liu; Bloomberg
12 August, 2021, 10:50 am
Last modified: 12 August, 2021, 10:59 am

Related News

  • China to fully resume travel with Hong Kong, Macau on 6 Feb
  • Oil heads for weekly loss awaiting China recovery signs
  • China, Japan discuss concerns over disputed East China Sea islands
  • With rare China trip, Blinken aims to steady rocky relationship
  • Chinese spy balloon spotted flying over the United States, Pentagon says

The China Model: What the Country’s Tech Crackdown Is Really About

After spending years emulating Silicon Valley, the world’s second-biggest economy is now officially charting its own course

Austin Carr & Coco Liu; Bloomberg
12 August, 2021, 10:50 am
Last modified: 12 August, 2021, 10:59 am
Employees at Hello Inc. headquarters in Shanghai on April 26, shortly after the company confidentially filed for a U.S. initial public offering. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: 731: PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
Employees at Hello Inc. headquarters in Shanghai on April 26, shortly after the company confidentially filed for a U.S. initial public offering. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: 731: PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

On the fourth floor of a harborside mall on Grand Cayman, not far from touristy scuba-diving outlets and a jerk-chicken shack, is the offshored home of ride-hailing company DiDi Global Inc, one of China's biggest technology firms. A few doors down are the internet companies Baidu Inc. and Meituan; Alibaba Group Holding Ltd is registered at a PO box up the street, right across from Singh's Roti Shop & Bar.

The Caribbean footholds, essentially leased mailing addresses, have no operational value but have made it easier for Chinese unicorns to attract European and American investors. They've been a bridge between East and West, a sunny symbol of the freewheeling capitalism tolerated by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) as the cost of allowing its homegrown juggernauts to compete with their US counterparts. DiDi's presence there was needed for it to go public on the New York Stock Exchange on June 30. Chinese companies saw multiple benefits to gaining access to the US When DiDi opened a research campus in California in 2017, founder and Chief Executive Officer Cheng Wei gushed about the company's "new home ... alongside the greatest technology companies in the world." Together, they were embarking on a "great journey."

But this journey started veering off course in October when Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma, one of the country's most visible billionaires, blasted Chinese regulators for stifling innovation. President Xi Jinping's government responded by squashing Ma's plan to take Alibaba's fintech offshoot, Ant Group Co, public and initiating an antitrust case against Alibaba. Ma disappeared from public view, his fortune dwindled, and murmurs began about a broader realignment in the relationship between China's government and its biggest companies.

DiDi's turn came on July 2, just days after its $4.4 billion initial public offerings in the US Regulators ordered a security review, then demanded mobile stores remove DiDi's apps. "Just because you are a highly successful tech company does not mean you are above the CCP," says Michael Witt, a senior affiliate professor of strategy and international business at Insead in Singapore. "Ant Group and Jack Ma found that out for themselves last year, and it is surprising DiDi did not get the message."

Later in the month, the Chinese government announced a sweeping new regulatory framework for the online education industry, which it said had been "hijacked by capital," then said online food platforms must ensure workers make at least the local minimum income. This gutted share prices of delivery giant Meituan, which was already facing an investigation into alleged monopolistic behaviour. In separate statements in recent months, Alibaba, Didi, and Meituan have said they'd cooperate with authorities and work to enhance their compliance systems.

The government's clampdown signals a new era of harsher oversight that companies won't be able to avoid by registering in the Caymans or hiring in California. The world's two largest economies seem headed down different paths as they grapple with the sprawling power that private tech companies have amassed. The authoritarian tinge is a risky pivot to some in and around the Chinese tech industry—and others see a chance for the country to gain an edge against its main geopolitical rival. "China is actually taking the lead in setting some boundaries around the power of Big Tech," says Thomas Tsao, co-founder of Gobi Partners, a venture capital firm based in Shanghai. "People are missing the bigger picture. They're trying a new model."

Since the late 1990s, China has emulated Silicon Valley's approach to innovation. Aided by Western capital and a generation of Elon Musk-like entrepreneurs—many educated overseas—the country saw Chinese versions of eBay and Amazon (Alibaba), AOL and Facebook (Tencent), and Google (Baidu) rocket to success while the government took a permissive approach to their behaviour and largely protected them from US competitors. At first, Chinese companies replicated services that were unavailable in or not tailored to the country, but they've long ceased to be mere copycats of Valley rivals and now frequently outmanoeuvre the global competition. So-called super apps, including Tencent Holdings Ltd.'s WeChat and Alibaba's Alipay, also created by Ma and team, handle everything from on-demand transportation to food delivery to paying utility bills—there's nothing comparable in the US These days, Apple, Facebook, and Snapchat are racing to mimic features of these and other Chinese apps, instead of the other way around.

Just as in the US, unfettered growth led to increasingly powerful tech companies and CEOs who, operating with surprising independence, weren't afraid to flex their power. China's biggest tech companies periodically forced smaller competitors to integrate with their platforms or pressured them to sell out. Ma and other titans became cultural rock stars. He even started dressing like a rock star at raucous Alibaba events, complete with a mohawk wig and leather jacket and guitar, and became vocal about societal issues.

Some see the crackdown on Alibaba and DiDi—along with actions against dozens of other tech companies—as long overdue. Andy Tian, who led Google China's mobile strategy in the 2000s and is now CEO at Beijing social media startup Asian Innovations Group, says it will be "positive for innovation" and "competition in China will be fiercer than in the US," because smaller companies will benefit from policies that rein in the largest competitors.

Angela Zhang, director of Hong Kong University's Centre for Chinese Law and the author of Chinese Antitrust Exceptionalism, says the intervention will reshape the tech industry in China faster than it could happen elsewhere. "The case against Alibaba took the Chinese antitrust authority only four months to complete, whereas it will take years for US and EU regulators to go after tech firms such as Facebook, Google, and Amazon, who are ready to fight tooth and nail," she says.

Lillian Li, founder of the newsletter Chinese Characteristics, deems the disruption "a rebalancing of the dynamics, redrawing the boundaries. I don't think the Chinese government is out there to destroy tech giants." After decades of an anything-goes ethos, she says, China wanted to remind its tech industry "what they can do and can't do."

If China is abandoning the Silicon Valley model, what will it replace it with? Insiders suggest it will be less founder-driven and more China-centric. US antitrust action often focuses on strengthening consumer protections, but China's crackdown is ultimately geared toward protecting government policy. Alicia García-Herrero, a top economist in Hong Kong at investment bank Natixis, notes that neither Huawei nor ZTE, which together have a lock on the Chinese telecom networking market, have been targeted so far, likely because they maintain closer ties to government officials. "Full alignment with China's leadership is a must to operate in China," she says.

President Xi's government has outlined sectors it wants to prioritize, including semiconductors and artificial intelligence. Xi has called the data its tech industry collects "an essential and strategic resource" and has been pushing to tap into it for years. Following a 2015 mandate, cities from Guiyang to Shanghai have set up data exchanges that facilitate the transfer of anonymized information between corporations. This could lead to a nationalized data-sharing system that serves as a kind of digital public infrastructure, putting a massive trove of data into the central government's hands.

The danger with this approach is that it could have a chilling effect on innovation. As one Chinese unicorn founder puts it, this new China tech model would "help hold back some overcreative ideas." Although this was meant as approval, it also can be read as a scarily restrictive view of innovation. The war for control over data could also threaten the Cayman Islands' status as a bridge between the superpowers. William Kirby, a Harvard professor who specializes in Chinese business studies, notes that Washington has passed legislation that threatens to delist the stocks of Chinese companies that don't submit documentation for audits, potentially exposing the data China wants to keep for itself. China has already signalled it will make it harder for Chinese companies to list on US stock markets, limiting their ability to grow and raise capital outside Asia. "All this is a lose-lose proposition," Kirby says.

If the crackdown makes it more difficult for China's largest companies to expand, the beneficiaries could be American tech giants. The prospects for regulation in the US remain uncertain, and Silicon Valley's dominant players could keep buying up future rivals, winning at a global scale. Of course, if they do so by smothering startups that could develop into rivals, it could end up depriving the US of useful innovations just because Google or Facebook Inc. find them threatening.

The cost of China's turn on tech is also being borne by its future business leaders, who, after years of looking up to the founders of DiDi and Alibaba, now have to figure out how to think differently. One China-based startup founder, who requested anonymity to speak openly about a politically fraught subject, says tech companies will likely be more cautious in rolling out riskier products, act with more reverence for CCP policy, and may try to avoid growing too huge, lest they draw unwanted government attention.

Yet another entrepreneur who's operated for years in China scoffs at this notion. "No one is going to say, 'Oh, maybe I shouldn't get too big, because then I run the risk of being shut down by the government,' " says this person, who also requested anonymity. "If I get to that point, where I'm so big that I'm getting shut down by the government, that's amazing. That means I won. That means I'm the next Jack Ma."


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement

Top News / World+Biz / Global Economy

china / tech attack / tech / China tech firms / China tech threat / Chinese tech companies / Chinese tech / Chinese Tech Giants / Chinese tech threat

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • International Monetary Fund logo : AP via UNB
    IMF sets time-bound reform agenda as it releases first tranche of loan
  • Shipped Bhola gas to cost higher, yet cheaper than spot LNG
    Shipped Bhola gas to cost higher, yet cheaper than spot LNG
  • The trio spearheading the revival of book cover designs
    The trio spearheading the revival of book cover designs

MOST VIEWED

  • Illustration: TBS
    IMF’s reform proposals: Where is the beef?
  • Infographic: TBS
    How to redirect inward remittances to formal channels
  • Illustration: TBS
    IMF reform suggestions reasonable
  • Go slow on subsidy cuts
    Go slow on subsidy cuts
  • Dr Salehuddin Ahmed. Illustration: TBS
    Reforms for country's sake, not just IMF loan
  • Illustration: TBS
    Think of the poor when adjusting prices

Related News

  • China to fully resume travel with Hong Kong, Macau on 6 Feb
  • Oil heads for weekly loss awaiting China recovery signs
  • China, Japan discuss concerns over disputed East China Sea islands
  • With rare China trip, Blinken aims to steady rocky relationship
  • Chinese spy balloon spotted flying over the United States, Pentagon says

Features

Andy Mukherjee. Sketch: TBS

What makes India's billionaires' support special for Adani

1h | Panorama
Photo: Rejaul Hafiz Rahi

A jackal farewell

2h | Earth
The trio spearheading the revival of book cover designs

The trio spearheading the revival of book cover designs

3h | Panorama
Six Jeep Wranglers and a special XJ Jeep Cherokee set out into the depths of Lalakhal, Sylhet for an experience of a lifetime. Photo: Ahbaar Mohammad

Jeep Life Bangladesh: A club for Jeep owners to harness the power of their vehicles

1d | Wheels

More Videos from TBS

A proper price formula can help investors to plan big

A proper price formula can help investors to plan big

18h | TBS Round Table
Rumors about Sarika that everyone thinks are true

Rumors about Sarika that everyone thinks are true

16h | TBS Entertainment
Mugging rife in Tejgaon, murder in Wari

Mugging rife in Tejgaon, murder in Wari

19h | TBS Current Affairs
What secrets are hidden behind Adani's wealth?

What secrets are hidden behind Adani's wealth?

17h | TBS Stories

Most Read

1
Bapex calls candidates for job test 9 years after advert!
Bangladesh

Bapex calls candidates for job test 9 years after advert!

2
Leepu realised his love for cars from a young age and for the last 40 years, he has transformed, designed and customised hundreds of cars. Photo: Collected
Panorama

'I am not crazy about cars anymore': Nizamuddin Awlia Leepu

3
Photo: Collected
Energy

8 Ctg power plants out of production

4
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen outside the headquarters building in Washington, U.S., September 4, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
Economy

IMF approves $4.7 billion loan for Bangladesh, calls for ambitious reforms

5
Photo: Collected
Court

Japanese mother gets guardianship of daughters, free to leave country

6
Fund cut as Dhaka's fast-track transit projects on slow spending lane
Infrastructure

Fund cut as Dhaka's fast-track transit projects on slow spending lane

EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2023
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net