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Chinese Leaders Split Over Releasing Blacklist of U.S. Companies WSJ

Chinese Leaders Split Over Releasing Blacklist of
U.S. Companies; Some in Beijing hesitant to
issue list of American firms to target, arguing
publication should wait until after U.S. election
Wei, Lingling . Wall Street Journal (Online) ; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]21 Sep 2020.
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Beijing has sped up development of a blacklist that could be used to punish American technology firms, but
officials say leaders are hesitating to pull the trigger, with some arguing a decision on the list should wait until
after the U.S. election.
The debate highlights Beijing's continued grappling with how to respond to the Trump administration without
driving the relationship closer to collapse.
So far, the Chinese leadership has tried to respond in kind to Washington's actions but has tried to avoid measures
that go beyond those of the U.S. A well-timed strike can sometimes work in Beijing's and Chinese companies'
favor. After President Trump's campaign for a U.S. company to take over video-sharing app TikTok, Chinese
regulators rolled out new export-control rules that have helped TikTok parent ByteDance Ltd. set terms that could
help it avoid losing control of the platform's U.S. operations or crucial technology.
The Latest U.S.-China Coverage
China first announced its plan to create a blacklist of U.S. entities in May 2019, soon after the U.S. restricted
telecom giant Huawei Technologies Co.'s access to U.S. components and technology. But Beijing refrained from
specifying any companies or individuals for the list as both countries' trade negotiators were engaged in the talks
that eventually led to the signing of a "phase one" trade agreement in January.
As the Trump administration has intensified its attacks on some of China's best-known companies—also including
Tencent Holdings Inc., which runs the WeChat messaging and payments app—the list has gained urgency.
In recent weeks, according to people with knowledge of the matter, an interagency group led by Vice Premier Hu
Chunhua, who oversees foreign investment and trade, has stepped up finalization of the "unreliable-entity"
list—China's answer to the U.S.'s list of Chinese entities it is targeting for sanctions.
China's Commerce Ministry gave more details Saturday indicating a list was near completion, saying blacklisted
companies and individuals would be banned from both selling to and buying from China, and from investing in the
country. However, it again refrained from disclosing any names. The ministry said in its statement that the list is
"strictly limited to a very small number of illegal foreign entities."
Officials are now debating when or whether to publish the list, with some arguing it shouldn't be done before the
U.S. election.
It is one of Beijing's trickiest balancing acts under President Xi Jinping as the Chinese leadership weighs how to hit
back at Washington without inflicting irreparable damage, either to the two countries' relationship or to China's
own economy and industries.
"They've been very disciplined not to be baited to do something too egregious against U.S. companies," says Paul
Triolo, head of global technology policy at Eurasia Group, a New York-based consulting firm.
When it first started preparing the list, China looked at how much its own technology companies rely on American
suppliers , according to people familiar with the matter. Relations have deteriorated rapidly since then. The White
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House has piled one measure targeting China on top of another, in areas from human rights and national security
to finance and technology. Beijing has retaliated each time. Chinese officials say Mr. Xi, powerful as he is, must
account for growing anti-American sentiment within China.
A team led by Mr. Hu has in the past few weeks asked a handful of ministries—including the top economicplanning agency, the Commerce Ministry, the Cybersecurity Administration and the antitrust regulator—each to
submit names of companies to be included on the list, the people familiar with the matter said. Those named by
each ministry would make the final list.
One U.S. company that so far has made all the individual lists is Cisco Systems, the people said. The maker of
networking equipment, which competes with Huawei, already has lost contracts to supply some of its long-term
Chinese customers, such as China's large state-owned telecom carriers.
Cisco said in a statement, "We look forward to many more years of engagement in China."
Some senior officials, including Vice Premier Liu He, Beijing's chief trade negotiator with Washington, now fear that
publishing the list could provoke the U.S. to take even harsher measures and argue a decision should wait until
after the U.S. election. Recent news reports that Mr. Trump might sanction more Chinese firms including chip
maker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and state
telecom carrier China Mobile have sent Chinese stocks sharply lower.
Many in China are hoping to reset relations with the U.S. should Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden
defeat Mr. Trump. In their view, the strategic rivalry between the two sides is here to stay , but there are areas
where Beijing could work with a Biden administration. For example, Mr. Biden has laid out plans to increase
engagement with China over regional issues such as Afghanistan, Iran and North Korea. Mr. Biden would also
likely engage China in dealing with climate change.
"At least it might be possible for everybody to work under the multilateral institutions with Biden while, currently,
things are being pushed to extremes," a senior government adviser in Beijing said.
Mr. Xi's priority for the next two years or so is to prevent any challenges to his hold on power in the run-up to the
next leadership shuffle slated for late 2022. A mishandling of the U.S.-China relationship could hurt him politically
at home.
Jacob Parker, senior vice president at the U.S.-China Business Council, a group representing more than 200
American companies, said a Chinese blacklist "will exacerbate the damage being done to American companies
doing business with China."
Meantime, Chinese authorities already are punishing U.S. companies doing business in China. Since last year,
firms including DuPont have been dropped from procurement lists by companies such as Huawei. In recent
months, authorities even directed Chinese companies to pay penalties to break contracts with their U.S. suppliers,
according to American executives.
Still, Beijing is wary of scaring off foreign companies at a time of rising unemployment pressures. China also needs
foreign imports, especially of semiconductors and other high-tech gear.
Last month, Mr. Hu personally invited American and European industry groups to what some participants
described as a "love fest" to assure them of continued access to Chinese markets.
Write to Lingling Wei at lingling.wei@wsj.com
Credit: By Lingling Wei
DETAILS
Subject:
Blacklisting; Leadership; Sanctions
Location:
China Beijing China United States--US
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People:
Lingling Wei
Publication title:
Wall Street Journal (Online); New York, N.Y.
Publication year:
2020
Publication date:
Sep 21, 2020
column:
China News
Section:
World
Publisher:
Dow Jones &Company Inc
Place of publication:
New York, N.Y.
Country of publication:
United States, New York, N.Y.
Publication subject:
Business And Economics
e-ISSN:
25749579
Source type:
Newspapers
Language of publication:
English
Document type:
News
ProQuest document ID:
2444403689
Document URL:
https://search.proquest.com/docview/2444403689?accountid=15172
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Dow Jones &Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Last updated:
2020-09-22
Database:
Latin American Newsstream,ABI/INFORM Collection,U.S. Major Dailies
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