January 2002 – ComputerUser.com

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                        China: Ready to jump into the world market

                        The World Trade Organization has welcomed China. How will this long-sought, controversial

                        step affect hungry U.S. tech players?

 

                        By James Mathewson and William Swanson

 

                        Michael Maibach has been through the trade battles. As vice president of

                        government affairs for Intel for 18 years, Maibach was in charge of improving

                        Intel's trade relationships abroad. One of the largest and most difficult markets

                        for Intel over that period was China, which has a longstanding tradition of

                        protectionism for its state-owned industries.

 

                        According to Maibach, China is the third-largest market for computers and silicon,

                        the second-largest for cellular phones, the third-largest for telecom, and the

                        third-largest for IT services, after the United States and Japan. China is well on

                        its way to becoming the second-largest IT market in the world, yet the market

                        can be impenetrable for U.S. companies because of the stifling trade restrictions

                        China places on foreign competition.

 

                        Maibach illustrates the trouble his company had in trying to sell its chips to

                        Chinese computer manufacturers. "In China, foreign companies don't have

                        trading or distribution rights," the recently retired Maibach explains. "We typically

                        needed to sell our chips to a reseller in Hong Kong, who would then bring the

                        chips into China and ship them to a computer manufacturer, such as Legend."

 

                        Maibach explains that this situation has been intolerable for companies like Intel:

                        "Once you leave the chips with the reseller, you really have no control over how

                        they are distributed--whether the tariffs and taxes are properly paid; how quickly

                        the chips are shipped to their destination; whether the chips are received properly

                        or just left out in the rain, and so on."

 

                        Fortunately, these and other distressing trade relations are receiving attention.

                        After China falls into lockstep with WTO trading rhythms, many formal barriers

                        addressed by the WTO, like foreign investment percentages and duties, will

                        dissolve over the next few years.

 

                        But other economic, legal, and social trade impediments may require years of

                        frustrating attention: some of the highest tariffs in the world; state subsidies for

                        large, inefficient Chinese monopolies; and poor intellectual property rights for

                        software and hardware manufacturers. Among these hindrances is what Maibach

                        calls segmentation: With few exceptions, U.S. companies that manufacture

                        products for Chinese companies do not have rights to do anything else with the

                        products in China, such as distributing, promoting, or integrating them into other

                        products.

 

                        New breeds of monopolies

 

                        Most analysts agree: China's most challenging changes in the wake of WTO entry

                        will be the reposturing of the state-sponsored monopolies vis-à-vis both

                        domestic and foreign competition. The China of Mao Tse-tung consisted solely of

                        state-run companies whose primary mission was to employ hundreds of millions

                        of Chinese people. Deng Xiaoping's capitalist reforms enabled some foreign

                        competition with the remnants of communism, but the state-run monopolies

                        persist as preferred business partners, especially for government projects in the

                        telecom and IT services area.

 

                        In theory, China's entry into the WTO attempts to level the playing field on which

                        foreign and legacy Chinese companies compete. In practice, of the many

                        impediments to smoothly ramping foreign trade, domestic company favoring by

                        local bureaucracies will surely weigh heavily. As benefits accrue, of course, the

                        aging and inefficient monopolies will be forced to restructure--many say by using

                        new-age IT productivity tools.

 

                        "Many Chinese officials are nervous about unemployment and instability that could

                        occur if the Chinese monopolies fail," says Harris Miller, president of the

                        Information Technology Association of America (ITAA). "For that reason, it will

                        take time for these reforms to take hold throughout China."

 

                        Miller says China's inclusion in the WTO will have far-reaching implications for

                        several U.S. technology sectors, especially telecom and IT services. He adds that

                        inclusion in the WTO does two primary things for companies wishing to trade with

                        China: It opens up the market for companies to compete with Chinese

                        monopolies, and it obligates China to follow international rules of the road for

                        trade.

 

                        "I'm fairly confident that China will follow through with its commitment to open up

                        markets," Miller says. "President Jiang Zemin is committed to following [WTO

                        trade reform] time tables."

 

                        But Miller cautions that change in China will take time--seven to 10 years in some

                        cases. "As far as China's commitment to play by the rules, it will take a much

                        longer period of time than the two to four years laid out in the WTO accord," he

                        says. "Jiang's commitments are meaningless if, when it comes to implementation,

                        bureaucrats don't in fact adhere to the rules of the road."

 

                        Major WTO entry bruises are forecast as China embarks on the largest telecom

                        infrastructure investment the world has ever known. The strength of China's

                        desire to grow as a trading partner will be strongly observed. For the past several

                        years, it has built the equivalent of a Regional Bell Operating Company every year,

                        a project estimated to take another seven years before it serves the entire

                        country. Companies such as Lucent, Cisco, and Nortel have been able to compete

                        with the state-subsidized telecom monopolies, but at heretofore unseen levels of

                        low margins and high risk.

 

                        Miller says while the WTO will help U.S. telecom equipment manufacturers, there

                        will be unique barriers in China. He says the model will be for a Nortel to invest in

                        a local Chinese company and provide the wherewithal for the company to make

                        money. "Majority ownership is a big issue in a lot of areas. As long as the

                        company has Chinese ownership, issues of control, earnings, and repatriation of

                        earnings will all serve as high-risk factors for foreign investors," Miller says.

 

                        Intellectual property

 

                        In addressing intellectual property, Michael Maibach says China is the 10th-largest

                        software market in the world, even with the competition from piracy (almost 80

                        percent of all software in China is pirated). He says one of the crucial issues with

                        China's inclusion in the WTO is the legal framework supporting

                        intellectual-property (IP) rights to include not just copyright protections for

                        software manufacturers, but also patent protection for hardware manufacturers.

                        In this area, China lags far behind.

 

                        Robert Hollyeman, president of the Business Software Alliance, underscores the

                        need for stronger, enforceable intellectual-property rights, especially for software

                        companies. According to Hollyeman, the WTO will help legitimize China's posture

                        by setting standards for its copyright and patent laws in China. "A new copyright

                        law for China, based on WTO standards, [is] working its way through the National

                        Peoples Conference," Hollyeman says. "This will improve the piracy situation in

                        China tremendously."

 

                        Hollyeman says history is a strong indicator of what will happen in China. "At one

                        time in Italy, two-thirds of all software was pirated. When the government made

                        a concerted antipiracy effort, the rate was reduced to 50 percent in one year," he

                        says. "We're hoping to see that kind of decline in software piracy in China very

                        soon."

 

                        Hollyeman says he is confident that WTO reforms will boost the total Chinese

                        software market, in part because strong copyright protections are as necessary

                        for Chinese software companies as they are for foreign software companies

                        operating in China. Most of the software in China will be written by Chinese people

                        for Chinese people. It is necessary for Chinese companies to have enforceable

                        antipiracy legislation in order for them to make money on their own software, he

                        adds.

 

                        IT services

 

                        Both Maibach and Miller agree that another fast-growth market in China is IT

                        services. As legacy Chinese companies revamp and modernize, there will be

                        growing needs for productivity--enhancing help from the likes of IBM and EDS.

                        The productivity of capitalism is a big swim from the make-work of communism,

                        and China is midstream. As its global competitive stature grows, so will its

                        reliance on technology to enhance the productivity of its huge labor force.

 

                        "One of China's strengths is its tremendous talent base," says Miller. He cautions

                        that much help will be needed: Consultants and trainers will play a large role in

                        properly meshing that talent with the necessary technology. Maibach agrees. "As

                        the Chinese government's use of technology continues to expand, they will need

                        more technical help," he says. "As they do that, they will need to contact

                        companies for IT support."

 

                        Proof in the eating

 

                        Will China make good on its commitment to WTO trade regulations? Its domestic

                        aims and WTO trade partnering directions will be on display in coming years as it

                        prepares for the massive $4 billion 2008 Beijing Olympic games--the success of

                        which will ultimately be judged against the applauded 2000 Sydney games.

 

                        "To the extent the Chinese call upon foreign IT and telecom services companies in

                        the next year or two, that will be a good test of China's commitment to these

                        reforms," Miller says. "We're looking for not just a minor role, but a substantial

                        one.

 

                        "In Sydney, IBM and EDS played a leading IT role. I expect both companies to

                        play a strong role in the Beijing Olympics," Miller adds. "The proof of the pudding

                        is in the eating."

 

                        WTO benefits for U.S. companies that trade in China

 

                             Trading/Distribution--Full trading rights will be granted for U.S. companies

                             to import, export, and distribute products directly to Chinese customers,

                             including after-sales service and repair, without going through a Chinese

                             middleman.

                             Tariffs--Chinese tariffs will be cut from the current overall average of 24.6

                             percent to 9.4 percent by 2005. China will join the WTO's Information

                             Technology Agreement, so that tariffs on U.S. computers, semiconductors,

                             telecommunications, and other U.S. high-technology products will be cut to

                             zero.

                             Services--Market access will be achieved for U.S. telecommunications and

                             financial services under WTO Basic Telecommunications and Financial

                             Services Agreements. Chinese GATS commitments cover U.S. priorities,

                             including Internet, audio-visual, banking, insurance, and auto finance.

                             U.S. Jobs--U.S. trade with China already supports more than 200,000

                             export-related American jobs, as well as tens of thousands of jobs in U.S.

                             retail, financial services, transportation, entertainment, marketing,

                             consumers goods, and services firms. By addressing Chinese technology

                             transfer, distribution, and export performance requirements, WTO

                             accession will make it easier to ship American products, supporting U.S.

                             production and jobs.

                             U.S. Exports--The Congressional Research Service, based on a

                             Goldman-Sachs analysis, projects that a China WTO agreement would

                             boost annual U.S. exports by between $12.7 and $13.9 billion by 2005.

 

                        Source: uschina.org

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