27 November 2018

Why ‘Made in China 2025’ triggered the wrath of President Trump

BY ALICE

WU‘Made in China’ is often associated with cheap and poor quality goods, but Beijing has ambitious plans to transform itself into an innovative hi-tech powerhouse by 2025

The Chinese government announced the ‘Made in China 2025’ strategic plan in 2015. Aimed at closing the gap with Western hi-tech prowess and lessening China’s dependency on imported technology, it specified 10 areas where the country should take the lead. But as the trade war between the US and China heated up in mutual rounds of punitive tariffs, the plan became a focus of Washington’s discontent with Beijing

the first of three phrases, ‘Made in China 2025’ is a ten-year plan
The reality


After the meteoric rise of recent years, China’s economy now faces a number of potential issues. Maligned as ‘big, but not powerful’, the manufacturing sector in particular has reached a bottleneck, with a slowdown in sales of cheap exports like shoes and toys. Many of these products have reached market saturation and it is hard to keep sales buoyant in sectors requiring little innovation or hi-tech development. What is more, the country’s working-age population is expected to fall sharply by 2030 as a result of the ‘one-child’ policy

‘MADE IN CHINA’ CHANGES 
China travelled a long and hard road to establish itself as the world’s largest export economy, and the ‘made in China’ tag is now assigned to more sophisticated products than was the case two decades ago. In 1996, Chinese exports were largely textiles and footwear. But by 2016, computers, telephones and other electrical devices began to dominate the export list


* “Animal hides” and “Mineral products” are combined into one category 
** “Others” includes foodstuffs, vegetable products, animal products, stone and glass, wood products, paper goods, animal and vegetable bi-products, weapons, precious metals
Strategy

To realise the plan, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has set up ‘five principles, five major tasks’, focusing on improving 10 key manufacturing sectors

TEN KEY SECTORS 
The plan highlights 10 key prioritised industries including robotics, new energy and green vehicles. China sets the targets as follows:



Robotics 
Robots and key parts with IP rights to supply 70 per cent of domestic market. Models of the next generation of robots to be developed and put to use on a certain scale. One to two companies to rank among the top five in the world. 


New generation information technology 
Handful of companies becomes top-tier internationally. 14-20nm design and manufacturing technique will be achieved. Domestically-produced mobile communications equipment meets 80 per cent and 40 per cent of domestic market and international market demand respectively.


Aviation and aerospace equipment
China aims to have domestically produced commercial aircraft and turboprop regional airliners to supply to 10 per cent and up to 20 per cent of mainland Chinese market and international market respectively. Major development work of prototype of large aircraft engine to be completed. 


Maritime equipment and hi-tech ships 
China to have more than five internationally renowned manufacturing companies. Maritime equipment to supply 40 per cent of international market. Hi-tech ship design and manufacturing equipment to supply 50 per cent of the international market. Breakthrough to be achieved in key design, manufacturing, testing and installing technologies for under water production systems.


Railway transport 
Overseas business to account for 40 per cent with China occupying the high end of the value chain for global railway transportation. 


New energy and energy-saving vehicles 
Domestic products with IP rights to supply 50 per cent of domestic market. Fuel consumption of passenger vehicles will not exceed 4L/100km, self-sufficiency rate for key parts to exceed 60 per cent. China aims to export 20 per cent of all commercial vehicles and have three companies that are ranked in the top five for sales internationally.


Energy equipment 
Globally competitive companies of energy equipment to be established. China aims to reach globally advanced level in producing large-scale thermal power, hydropower and nuclear power equipment. New energy and renewable energy equipment with original IP rights to account for 80 per cent of market. Industry size of power electric power transmission to reach three trillion yuan. 


Agricultural equipment 
Industrial output aims to reach 800 billion yuan and China will become the world's biggest agricultural equipment maker. Domestically manufactured equipment will meet 95 per cent or more of Chinese market demand. Automation technologies and equipment to reach advanced international standards.


New materials 
Domestically produced basic materials products should meet 90 per cent of local demand. 


Biopharma and hi-tech medical devices 
Biopharma innovative development and production to reach international standards. Industrial output of medical devices to reach 1.2 trillion yuan. 85 per cent of core components of devices to be domestically manufactured. Commercialisation of innovative chemical medicines and Chinese medicines to be achieved.

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INDICATORS 
The results of ‘Made in China 2025’ will be evaluated by 12 indicators in the four following areas. Here we list one example for each category:



1. Innovation 
Research and development (R&D) revenue expenses 
Percentage of sales allocated to R&D expenditure


2. Product quality 
Growth rate of improved quality 
The projected growth rates due to improved manufacturing quality are two and four per cent points higher than the rate in 2015


3. Digitalisation 
Broadband internet penetration 
The projected penetration rates of 70 per cent by 2020 and 82 per cent by 2025, means 400 million and 480 million households will have access to broadband internet, respectively


4. Green production 
Decrease of CO2 Emission 
Carbon dioxide emission is expected to decrease from 2015 by 22 per cent in 2020 and 40 per cent in 2025

Long way to go

SATELLITES IN ORBIT 
The first Chinese satellite, ‘Dong Fang Hong’, was launched In 1970. Today, there are 311 Chinese satellites in orbit, about one-fifth of the US, but China aspires to increase long-term and stable spatial information services like satellite remote sensing, communication and navigation


Pujiang-z1 
In 2015, China successfully launched ‘Pujiang-1’ to help promote and monitor the construction of smart cities. It is the first satellite to feature 3D printed parts. Developed by the Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology, the frame inside the satellite was made using 3D printing 


Ziyuan III-02 
The satellite ‘Ziyuan III-02’ was launched in 2016. A remote sensing satellite monitoring land use, natural disasters and water resources, it will join ‘Ziyuan III-01’ (launched in 2012) to form a network capturing high-definition, 3D multi-spectral images

ROBOTICS SUPPLY 
In 2016, 74 per cent of robot sales were represented by five markets, with China accounting for the lion’s share at 30 per cent of the total. Beijing aims to boost technology production and sales by achieving automation and digitisation in the manufacturing sectors by producing 100,000 of its own industrial robots by 2020



INDUSTRIAL ROBOTS 
China is banking on automation and digitisation to improve productivity and set it on a trajectory to become one of the world’s 10 most automated nations. The country ranked well below the world average for industrial robot density in 2016, but Beijing aims to have 150 units per 10,000 employees by 2020

Challenges

TRADE SURPLUS AND DEFICIT 

China’s exports of hi-tech goods increased steadily after reform policies began and by 2004 their value had already already exceeded US exports. The Trump administration argues the trade deficit between China and the US is a result of unfair competition. The ‘Section 301 investigation’ also accuses China of stealing intellectual property from American companies
Export ValueExports between China and US1990200020100 b200 b400 b600 bChina export to USUS export to China

Export ValueHigh-tech ExportsChinaUS1990200020100 b200 b400 b600 b

HEAVY RELIANCE ON OTHER COUNTRIES 

China currently lacks the ability to make many key electronic components and relies on other countries to supply many hi-tech parts. ‘Made in China 2025’ aims to have 70 per cent of essential spare parts manufactured domestically to resolve the issue

Total fruit consumptionSuppliers of China, 2016Machinery and Transport EquipmentIntermediate goodsRaw materialsSouth KoreaAustraliaGermanyUnited StatesJapan0b50b100b150b

TRADE WAR 
On July 6, 2018, the US started implementing 25 per cent tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods. It is targeting 818 products central to Beijing’s ‘Made in China 2025’ initiative, particularly technological parts. The table below illustrates how China’s prioritised sectors are being hit:

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