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A researcher examines luminescent materials developed by the State Key Laboratory of Synthetic Chemistry at the University of Hong Kong in Pok Fu Lam. Photo: SCMP/Dickson Lee

China-US tech rivalry: Beijing plans to restructure national labs, boost investment in scientific research

  • State-backed labs that can carry out the world’s most advanced research are an important part of China’s efforts to boost its technological capabilities
  • But the country has fallen short of its target of developing 700 labs by the end of 2020

China is planning to realign hundreds of “state key laboratories” with the country’s technology priorities and articulate a 10-year programme to boost spending on fundamental science research, as Beijing rolls up its sleeves in competing for tech dominance against the United States.

At the national technology working conference on Tuesday, the Ministry of Science and Technology said China will carry out a systemic restructuring of the country’s national key labs and release a 10-year plan to boost the country’s basic scientific research.

Priorities for 2021 also include mobilising a nationwide system to seek breakthroughs in key research areas, and encouraging enterprises to take on a more dominant role in science and technology research, the ministry said at the conference chaired by Minister of Science and Technology Wang Zhigang.

Although China is increasingly showcasing its tech prowess whether in space or the deep sea, mounting US sanctions – which have restricted access to US technologies by China’s tech champions such as telecommunications giant Huawei Technologies Co. and chip maker SMIC – have also laid bare some of its weaknesses. President Xi Jinping has described the country’s inability to produce key hi-tech components as being strangled by an opponent.
When China released its latest five-year plan at the end of last year, it included a chapter dedicated to technology for the first time.

Five-year plan: China moves to technology self-sufficiency

“[Catching up in technology] has long been a quiet policy goal in China, but the fact that we’re seeing this explicitly come out into the open now is notable,” said Nick Marro, a global trade lead at The Economist Intelligence Unit. “China is adopting a more hardline, sober assessment of current geopolitical risks, which will inevitably drive much of its future digital policymaking.”

State-backed labs that can carry out the world’s most advanced research are an important part of China’s overall efforts to boost its technological capabilities, with the State Council saying last May that these labs must better serve China’s strategic needs. But the country has fallen short of its target of developing 700 state key labs by the end of 2020, including 270 at Chinese enterprises. By the end of 2019, it only had 515 key labs in operation, scarcely more than the 501 it counted at the end of 2018, according to the latest government data.

One hurdle has been a lack of enthusiasm by Chinese enterprises, especially private businesses. The majority of Chinese state key labs are at universities, the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences and state-owned enterprises.

At the same time, China’s aspiration to become a tech superpower has met increasing scrutiny from the US and its policies, including the Thousand Talents Plan to hire Chinese scientists from overseas, have met with resistance.
Several state key labs have been caught in the middle of the China-US tech feud in the past two years. The US Department of Commerce added the prestigious Harbin Institute of Technology (HIT) to its Entity List in June last year, barring it from using US products or services – including popular analysis software MATLAB – without an export licence. HIT runs seven key state labs including one specialising in robotics.

China accelerates plan to build 700 state-backed labs by end of this year

Huawei, which houses one state key lab on wireless communication, was also put on the Entity List in May 2019.

But Marro said US restrictions to prevent China’s development “can only go so far”, as Chinese policymakers and US firms will just try to find loopholes. “A more sustainable strategy would be to try to out-innovate China, whereby US investment is directed into supporting domestic science and technology activities, including R&D. The Biden administration has hinted that it resonates more with this stance.”

Naubahar Sharif, associate professor of public policy at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said state key labs are the “main vehicles that the Chinese authorities are employing to direct resources towards advancing basic research capacity and capabilities”.

Aside from the labs on the mainland, there are over a dozen housed in Hong Kong schools such as the University of Hong Kong, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.

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China’s booming economy has made it possible for the country to steadily increase spending on research and development, but its R&D expenditure as a percentage of GDP still lags behind advanced economies like the US and Japan.

“Scientific knowledge often takes a long time to become useful,” Sharif said. “With that in mind, the Chinese authorities have taken concrete and extensive steps to invest heavily in basic research, fully realising that the fruits of that focus and investment may take a very long time to appear.”

Marro said that in many areas such as integrated circuit manufacturing, the country’s investment “hasn’t really yielded a lot of results, other than some noteworthy cases of wastage and fraud”. However, he said, “we shouldn’t fully rule out China, which will likely pivot towards expanding its existing comparative advantages, including in areas like mobile finance and Big Data”.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: State labs key part of Beijing’s new tech drive
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