Trump tech war with China changes the game for US business
President Donald Trump's war on Chinese technology
firms has changed the ground rules for global business, underscoring a new
political reality that could have negative repercussions for American firms.
The White House moves against the popular
Chinese-owned apps TikTok and WeChat and the tough sanctions on tech giant
Huawei highlight the struggle for technology supremacy between the two economic
giants, under the guise of national security.
The economic relationship has been roiled by an
unprecedented campaign by Trump that has included tariffs, threats of bans and
economic sanctions on Chinese tech firms.
"At the heart of it is a struggle to dominate
emerging technologies," said Doug Barry of the US-China Business Council.
"The country that succeeds will realize huge
economic and geopolitical benefits."
But many analysts argue that Trump's actions could
backfire on the US tech sector and other American businesses by encouraging
China and other countries to respond in kind.
Trump's moves on TikTok and other Chinese firms
"are eroding confidence in US leadership," said Darrell West, who
heads the Brookings Institution's Center for Technology Innovation.
"There was little process associated with his
(TikTok) executive order and the company's forced sale to American investors
sets a bad precedent for other countries. It likely will embolden them to
retaliate against US companies and demand payments for the ability to operate
within their own borders."
More ominously, Trump appears to be moving toward "crony capitalism"
by brokering deals that benefit his friends and allies such as Oracle, whose
founder Larry Ellison is major fundraiser for the president.
The Wall Street Journal, despite its support for the
president on other issues, posted a scathing editorial this month of the
proposed deal to transfer control of TikTok from its Chinese parent to Oracle
and Walmart.
"Maybe the deal will protect national security
as the Trump administration claims, but it reeks of corporate cronyism that
will damage the US government's credibility and reputation for free-market
rules," the business daily said.
Benedict Evans, a venture investor who blogs on the
tech industry, said the complex TikTok deal being promoted by the Trump
administration has pushed national security into the background, making the
whole saga a "farce."
"Setting aside the chaos -- what does this
solve?" he wrote.
"This is a shakedown, but it's also a
climbdown. (Russian President Vladimir) Putin does this in Russia all the time,
but manages it much better."
The new ground rules have sparked concerns among
business leaders forced to adapt to a new political landscape.
"Once you start tossing this grenade about
protectionism and once you start turning these things into political questions
(the change) prevents natural commerce," Barry Diller, chairman of the
tech holding firm IAC, told CNBC television.
Edward Alden, a senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations, said the drama could harm US interests by discouraging
foreign investment.
"The deal for TikTok was done among friends of
the president, and with none of usual transparency and regulatory consistency
that historically characterized the US treatment of foreign investors,"
Alden said.
"That may also worry investors from other
countries, who will fear they no longer know what the rules are in the
US."
Roger Kay, analyst and consultant with Endpoint
Technologies Associates, said American technology firms have long benefitted
from free trade and global supply chains, and that these are being disrupted by
the US-China battle.
"There are a lot of intertwined webs that have
been disturbed by the war on China, which to me seems badly conceived," he
said.
"My view is that free trade is the right trade
and we've already lost a lot of that through tariffs and other matters, and
this (action by the president) ultimately impoverishes everyone."
One consequence of the conflict: the US move to ban
WeChat -- the massively popular Chinese multipurpose app for messaging,
shopping, payments and other services -- could likely see a dent in iPhone
sales in China if Apple is forced to remove it from its online marketplace.
Cornell University economist and trade policy
specialist Eswar Prasad said the conflict appears likely to escalate, noting
China's latest moves to restrict certain technology exports.
This suggests that "the two countries are going
to use every available tool to advance their commercial and technological
interests, and all companies operating in this space are at risk of getting
caught up in these bilateral hostilities," Prasad said.



