Battered by Covid, China Hits Pause on Giant Chip Spending Aimed at
Rivaling US
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Beijing
plans alternative measures to support local firms
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US
is bolstering campaign to crimp China’s access to key tech
China is pausing massive
investments aimed at building a chip
industry to compete with the US, as a nationwide Covid resurgence strains
the world’s No. 2 economy and Beijing’s finances.
Top officials are discussing
ways to move away from costly subsidies that
have so far borne little fruit and encouraged both graft and American sanctions,
people familiar with the matter said. While some continue to push for incentives
of as much as 1 trillion yuan ($145 billion), other policymakers have lost their
taste for an investment-led approach that’s not yielded the results anticipated,
the people said.
Instead, they’re seeking
alternative ways to assist homegrown chipmakers, such as lowering the cost of semiconductor
materials, the people said, asking not to be identified revealing sensitive negotiations.
That would mark a shift
in Beijing’s approach toward an industry regarded as crucial to challenging
American dominance and safeguarding Chinese economic and military competitiveness.
It underscores how the country’s economic ructions are taxing Beijing’s resources
and hobbling its chip ambitions — one of President Xi Jinping’s top priorities.
That could have ramifications for spending in other critical areas, from the environment
to defense.
Shares in Chinese chipmakers
and gear suppliers underperformed a broad market rally. Tokyo Electron Ltd. slid
1.2% in Japan, while Chinese peers including Naura Technology Group
Co.
and Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment Inc. fell
more than 1%.
It’s unclear what other
chip policies Beijing is considering, or whether it will ultimately decide to ditch
the capital investment-heavy approach that’s worked so well in propelling its manufacturing
sector over the past decades. China’s government could still decide to divert resources
from other arenas to fund its chipmakers. Representatives for the State Council
Information Office and Ministry of Industry and Information Technology didn’t immediately
respond to faxed requests for comment.
But the discussions now
underway are in stark contrast to Beijing’s prior efforts of pouring colossal resources
into the chip industry, including setting up the National Integrated Circuit Industry
Investment Fund in 2014.
That vehicle lies at the
heart of Xi’s unhappiness with Beijing’s prior philosophy. Known within the industry
as the Big Fund, it drew about $45 billion in capital and backed scores of companies,
including China’s chipmaking champions Semiconductor Manufacturing
International Corp. and Yangtze Memory Technologies
Co.
Xi’s administration grew
frustrated that
tens of billions of dollars funneled into the industry over the past decade haven’t
produced breakthroughs that allow China to compete with the US on a more equal footing.
In fact, SMIC and Yangtze, arguably the two most advanced
Chinese semiconductor players, were crippled by US sanctions.
Senior Beijing officials
ordered a flurry
of anti-graft probes into top industry figures last summer, blaming corruption for
wasted and inefficient investment. The Big Fund is likely to lose its stature as
a result, the people said.
All that happened as semiconductors
increasingly became a key battleground in the rivalry between China and the US.
Xi has repeatedly talked about the need for a sense of urgency
to resolve China’s so-called chokepoints: areas where the country still relies heavily
on the US and other foreign powers, including critical technologies such as chips.
He has implored top
officials to achieve self-sufficiency in key technologies as the US moves to isolate
China. When he secured a precedent-breaking third term in October, Xi vowed to “move
faster” in implementing strategic projects to increase innovation, saying “efforts
will be made to improve the new system for mobilizing resources nationwide to make
key technological breakthroughs, and boost China’s strength in strategic science
and technology.”
In response, Chinese officials
recently discussed whether to offer additional incentives for domestic semiconductor
companies, the people said. But many reckoned it would be difficult to pool a substantial
amount after Beijing had spent heavily to combat
Covid over past years, according to the people.
Instead, officials are
now asking local semiconductor material suppliers to cut prices to provide support
to their domestic customers, the people said.
Read more: China’s Economy Ends
Year in Slump as Covid Infections Surge
Weak tax revenue, declining
land sales and the cost of stemming Covid has squeezed the
government’s finances, pushing the fiscal deficit to a record last
year.
Meanwhile, the US is proving
increasingly aggressive in going after China’s technological ambitions.
Last year, it accelerated
a campaign to contain Beijing’s chip endeavors, wielding various
tools including export controls to deter China’s progress in emerging technologies.
That was part of efforts to maintain what US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan
called “as large of a lead as possible.”
Its key allies including
the Netherlands and Japan have also agreed in principle
to tighten controls over the export of advanced chipmaking machinery to China, Bloomberg
News has reported, in what may be another potentially debilitating blow to Beijing’s
grand chip plans.