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Closer global cooperation, not trade restrictions, essential

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2020-04-08 10:04:37China Daily Editor : Li Yan ECNS App Download
Special: Battle Against Novel Coronavirus

Visitors check out Huawei products during the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Jan 7. (Photo/Xinhua)

As the world is deeply concerned with the COVID-19 outbreak's disruptions on the global supply chain, some U.S. officials have attempted to pour oil on the flames by using political forces to sever normal supply cooperation.

A new proposal has been reportedly put forward by some U.S. politicians to cut Chinese telecom heavyweight Huawei from global supply chains. The proposed rule change will require foreign companies that use U.S.-made chipmaking technology and software to obtain a license from the U.S. before selling designated types of chips to Huawei.

Such a move will undoubtedly add a burden on the world, which is already struggling with fragmentation of supplies and dwindling trade volumes amid the novel coronavirus pandemic. If adopted, the proposal will inevitably make things worse, given the sprawling size of Huawei's business and its thousands of suppliers around the world.

As the top telecom equipment maker and the second-largest smartphone vendor in the world, Huawei purchases tons of chips, relevant products and services every year from U.S. semiconductor chip companies, including Qualcomm Inc, Intel Corp and Micron Technology, as well as European suppliers, such as Arm Holdings and NXP Semiconductors.

While what those U.S. politicians are hoping to do to Huawei is a barbarian intervention in the operation of the Chinese company, it would disrupt the normal functioning of the global chip-related supply chain, and all companies that rely on this chain to survive will suffer.

Boston Consulting Group said in its latest report that in each of the three quarters after the U.S. government restricted sales of certain technology products to Huawei in May 2019, the top U.S. semiconductor makers have reported a median revenue decline of between 4 percent and 9 percent.

If the U.S. increases restrictions on the semiconductor trade with China, it could endanger its own position as leader in the sector, the report added.

The BCG also warned that if shipments of U.S. chips and chip making equipment to China were stopped, and China banned imports of U.S. electronics and software, it could cost U.S. companies 37 percent of their annual sales.

Some scaremongering U.S. politicians, however, totally go against such warnings and remain pigheaded in pursuing their dubious agenda. If their proposal were approved, it is the U.S. chip companies and the U.S. semiconductor industry that stand to suffer the most.

That explains why nine U.S. industry groups are reportedly pushing back on the proposed changes to tighten chip sale rules to Huawei. Reuters reported that in a letter sent on Monday, the nine groups urged the U.S. Department of Commerce to allow public comments before putting the rules into effect to avoid unintended consequences.

Ren Zhengfei, founder of Huawei, once said the U.S. is just like ice water on the Himalayas; it can flow down the mountains to water the plants. But if it stays on top of the mountains and refuses to water the plants at the foot of the mountains, it will freeze and become a glacier.

If the U.S. government leverages its technological superiority in an area to sever the global supply chain, the U.S. industry in that area will risk losing vitality, and it is just a matter of time before other countries develop their own alternatives of equal or even better quality.

History has already showed that Chinese companies excel in turning a crisis into an opportunity to stand out. Five years ago, Washington banned sales of premium processors to China's high-performance computers. The ban ended up accelerating China's development of its own CPUs. In 2017, China came up with its own chip for high-performance computers: The SW26010.

As the world's largest 5G and smartphone market, China has already made constant progress in telecommunication and electronics industries. A string of U.S. tech firms, including Qualcomm and Apple, heavily rely on the China market for revenue and supply chains.

Contrary to some U.S. politicians' despicable practices of threatening to sever chip-related supply chains amid the pandemic, China has been scrambling to help local factories of international companies resume production to help stabilize global supply chains.

China has recently stepped up resumption at manufacturing, commercial and logistic firms, such as pharmaceutical product manufacturers, to ensure the global supply.

Amid the world's biggest healthcare challenge in decades, it is closer global cooperation, not disconnection and trade restrictions, that is needed to fight the virus and restore business activities.

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