logo
How China's self-sufficiency drive is dividing the global tech ecosystem

How China's self-sufficiency drive is dividing the global tech ecosystem

China is rapidly advancing its technological self-sufficiency in
semiconductors and
biotechnology , a trend accelerated by escalating trade tensions with the US, industry experts said in a webinar hosted by the South China Morning Post's China Future Tech.
Advertisement
'We need to be ready to see a world that will be increasingly polarised, basically with the bifurcation in supply chains, which could be about manufacturing, which could be about data flows … could be about investment,' said Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis Corporate & Investment Bank, during the panel discussion on Thursday.
Ng noted that the ongoing US-China trade disputes have spurred China's investment in technological independence, especially in semiconductor capabilities. Since 2018, China's research and development spending in technology has increased from about 2 per cent of gross domestic product to 2.6 per cent, surpassing the European Union but still trailing the US.
'We will begin to see two separate tech ecosystems in the future, one maybe dominated by China, the other one led by the US,' Ng said. 'Different countries … will need to decide which one to get into.'
Huawei Technologies ' resurgence epitomises China's strides towards tech independence. 'In 2023, August, Huawei surprised the world by quietly releasing for the domestic market its own 5G smartphone, which they had actually given up … because of the [US] trade sanctions,' said Bien Perez, a senior production editor at the Post. Perez added that while Huawei's domestic revival was robust, the lack of access to foreign tech ecosystems – such as Google services on Android – remained a hurdle in global markets.
Advertisement

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South Korea set to join global race to develop sixth-generation fighters
South Korea set to join global race to develop sixth-generation fighters

South China Morning Post

time29 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

South Korea set to join global race to develop sixth-generation fighters

South Korea is set to become the latest country to develop a sixth-generation fighter, according to a senior aerospace executive. Advertisement Shin Dong-hak, vice-president of international business development at Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI), said in an interview at the Paris Air Show that the technology it was showcasing at the event – including 4.5-generation fighters and unmanned aerial vehicles – would 'ultimately' become 'key elements' of the switch to sixth-generation fighters. The country is joining a global race where footage recently released on social media suggests China may have started testing its sixth-generation prototypes Meanwhile, in the United States, US President Donald Trump has confirmed that the US will go ahead with its sixth-generation fighter programme by awarding Boeing the contract to develop the planes. Last week at the event – the world's largest and oldest air show – KAI's display included the KF-21 Boramae, its latest 4.5-generation fighter jet, FA-50 light combat aircraft and next-generation unmanned combat aircraft. Advertisement These aircraft were each accompanied by multiple unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), suggesting it was working on crewed-uncrewed teaming – a key element of new-generation aerial warfare in which drones operate alongside piloted planes to increase their operational range and serve as a defensive shield.

Where to find glimpses of art deco architecture in Kowloon, Hong Kong
Where to find glimpses of art deco architecture in Kowloon, Hong Kong

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Where to find glimpses of art deco architecture in Kowloon, Hong Kong

A precise birth date for art deco is hard to pinpoint, but the term came into common parlance following the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris, France, making this year the centenary of one of the most distinctive architectural styles. Cities that embraced the innovations of the early 20th century, in industry, finance, fashion and the arts, likewise embraced art deco in their architecture. In the booming metropolises of New York and Chicago, as well as more established cities such as Bombay, London and Paris, new constructions in stainless steel, aluminium, ferro concrete, marble and plate glass soared skywards, with sleek, smoothed edges, and decorated with geometric forms. In East Asia, Shanghai is the best known and largest repository of art deco buildings, but examples can also be found in Tokyo, Singapore, Tianjin, Guangzhou and, if you know where to look, Hong Kong The prestigious King George V School in Ho Man Tin is a prime example of Hong Kong's art deco architecture. Photo: SCMP Archive The British colony was neither an early nor prolific adopter of art deco. Most examples here were built in the late 1930s, such as the frontage of King George V School in Ho Man Tin. While one of two great picture palaces, the Majestic Theatre in Jordan, opened in 1928, the other, the Cathay in Wan Chai, came more than a decade later, in 1939. Both are now demolished. Much else came post-war, such as the Star Ferry terminals (an example of Streamline Moderne, a late variation of the art deco style), as well as the pier constructed in 1979 at Hung Hom. The 1937-built Maryknoll Convent School, on Waterloo Road, features distinct art deco influences alongside those of Gothic Revival, Neo-Georgian and Romanesque. Local architecture firm Little, Adams and Wood seem to have been conflicted between the early 20th century fads among British university and school architects for Tudor and Gothic Revival and the more recent popularity of art deco. Well maintained, Maryknoll may be a bit of an architectural mash-up, but it still functions brilliantly as a school building, with a large assembly hall, classrooms flooded with natural light and colonnaded walkways. A view of the primary school campus of Maryknoll Convent School in Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong. Photo: SCMP Archives At the busy junction of Prince Edward Road West and Yuen Ngai Street, where most people blithely rush past, heads bent over phone screens, is a surviving example of Kowloon-side art deco. Built by Belgian construction company Crédit Foncier d'Extrême-Orient (CFEO) in the 1930s, the cluster of apartment buildings and ground-floor retail premises at 190-220 Prince Edward Road West was designed as 'modern flats' for middle-class families, with shophouses and a shady colonnade at street level. The building is replete with art deco features, from the cantilevered balconies that overlook Yuen Ngai Street to the floor-to-ceiling windows that allow daylight to spill in and the recurrent wave pattern on the exterior of the colonnade pillars and stairway frontages that take their inspiration from traditional Asian imagery.

Wagyu for the masses? Meat Malaysia's answer to Japanese premium beef: ‘Mygyu'
Wagyu for the masses? Meat Malaysia's answer to Japanese premium beef: ‘Mygyu'

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Wagyu for the masses? Meat Malaysia's answer to Japanese premium beef: ‘Mygyu'

Under the sweltering sun in coastal Kuala Selangor, Dollah lumbers to his feet, his 800kg (1,764lb) frame towering above the herd. The Australian-Malaysian crossbreed isn't just any bull, he's the prized patriarch of a 30-head cattle farm producing Mygyu: Malaysia 's answer to Japan 's famously marbled Wagyu. At Colla Cattle Farm, breeders see both promise and pressure in Malaysia's appetite for premium beef. With Mygyu, they aim to offer an affordable local alternative to imported Wagyu as rising living costs and government scrutiny of luxury imports cast doubt over the future of high-end foreign products. Since its establishment in 2017, the farm has grown rapidly. It now boasts five cowsheds and is expanding its napier grass fields to ensure a steady supply of feed for the growing herd. A social media advert for Mygyu: Malaysia's answer to Japan's famously marbled Wagyu. Photo: Instagram/CollaMeatHouse The farm raced to install a newly acquired meat-processing machine imported from China ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which centres on the ritual slaughter of livestock. With a complete chain from slaughter to processing, packaging as well as chilling, the beef products produced here will be ready for direct delivery to customers. 'Before this we could process five to eight cows an hour,' said Jamal Abdul Karim, Colla Cattle Farm chief executive officer. 'But after this we can go up to 20 in an hour.' Dollah, a breeding bull, is the farm's key asset and, on a recent visit by This Week in Asia, looked a little tired.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store