Commentary

In China, tech is now all but state-owned

China's established tech firms - notably Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent, or the BATs - are experiencing enormous growth as well. PHOTO: REUTERS

SHENZHEN, CHINA (BLOOMBERG VIEW) - As Bloomberg News reported this week, a key stumbling block in trade negotiations between China and the United States has been Beijing's extensive support for its technology firms.

But if US President Donald Trump's administration thinks that will change any time soon, it hasn't been paying attention: Far from reducing support for the tech sector, China is on the verge of nationalising it.

By many measures, China's tech companies seem unstoppable. Private equity and venture capital investment grew from US$14 billion in 2012 to US$120 billion (S$157 billion) in 2017. Last year, 34 Chinese companies joined the elite ranks of startups valued at more than US$1 billion, second only to the US.

From health care to bike-sharing, Chinese companies are improving on ideas from overseas and innovating in their own right.

And it's not just startups. China's established tech firms - notably Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent, or the BATs - are experiencing enormous growth as well. Tencent Holdings, with nearly one billion users, reported that its net income almost doubled in the last quarter, to US$3.3 billion. Alibaba Group Holding, which dominates online retail, is expecting growth of 55 per cent this year.

Investors may worry about Chinese debt, but they're giddy about Chinese tech.

At first glance, this rapid growth would seem to dovetail with the government's efforts to prove its market bona fides. China regularly pushes for recognition as a market economy at the World Trade Organisation, while touting the benefits of "supply-side reform" at home.

In a speech at the most recent Communist Party Congress, President Xi Jinping pledged to "support the growth of private businesses". Look beyond such rhetoric, though, and a very different picture emerges.

Communist Party committees have been installed at many tech firms, reviewing everything from operations to compliance with national goals. Regulators have been discussing taking a 1 per cent stake in some giants, including Alibaba and Tencent, along with a board seat. Tech companies have been widely encouraged to invest in state-owned firms, in the hopes of making them more productive. The common denominator of all these efforts is that the government wants more control.

An executive at a Chinese search engine recently summed up the new dynamic: We're entering an era in which we'll be fused together. It might be that there will be a request to establish a Party committee within your company, or that you should let state investors take a stake, you know, as a form of mixed ownership. If you think clearly about this, you really can resonate together with the state. You can receive massive support. But if it's your nature to want to go your own way, to think that your interests differ from what the state is advocating, then you'll probably find that things are painful, more painful than in the past.

This quasi-nationalisation applies to China's startup scene, too. One recent report found that 60 per cent of Chinese unicorns have either direct or indirect investment from the BATs. China's venture-capital (VC) sector is dominated not by traditional tech dealmakers but by the state: There are more than 1,000 government-owned VC firms in China, controlling more than US$750 billion.

All this has direct consequences for the trade dispute with the US. A recent research note from Natixis found that 70 per cent of the products targeted by the Trump administration in its initial tariff list fall under the China Manufacturing 2025 initiative, which aims to support Chinese companies in 10 high-tech sectors, including robotics and biotechnology.

If Beijing insists on protecting those industries - as it gives every indication of doing - significant progress on trade talks seems unlikely. Perhaps a bigger worry for China, though, is that this creeping nationalisation could harm its most dynamic companies. Lavishing the new national champions with handouts - such as cheap loans and employment subsidies - could turn them into rent-seekers. More bureaucracy could mean less efficiency and growth. Firms may start currying government favour rather than taking risks and innovating. Tech could become the new coal.

And that wouldn't be in anyone's interest.

(Christopher Balding is an Associate Professor of Business and Economics at the HSBC Business School in Shenzhen and author of "Sovereign Wealth Funds: The New Intersection of Money and Power".)

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