China's government has highlighted big data,
encryption technology and “core technologies”
such as semiconductors as the key elements of its push to grow into a tech powerhouse,
according to a new five-year plan released Saturday that envisages the Internet as a major
source of growth as well as a potential risk. Even as it highlighted the need to improve
Internet infrastructure to rural areas and unlock
the digital economy’s potential, Chinese
economic planners called for a more secure and
better managed Web, with enhanced Internet
control systems, Internet security laws and real-
name registration policies. Chinese officials including Internet czar Lu Wei have played down concerns over what
critics have described as China’s expanding
Web censorship, saying that it is the Chinese
government’s sovereign prerogative and a
necessary measure to maintain domestic order. China’s development plan calls for a better
cybersecurity approval system and more
“precise” Web management to “clean up illegal
and bad information.” The plan also calls for a multilateral, democratic,
transparent and international governance
system and active participation in international
Internet governance efforts. Premier Li Keqiang highlighted the promise of the Internet, saying Saturday that various
traditional sectors, ranging from manufacturing
to government to health care, need to connect
to the Web and raise their e ciency as part of an overarching national strategy called
“Internet Plus.” He vowed to raise research and technology spending to account for 2.5
percent of gross domestic product in the five
years through 2020, which he said would mark
a “remarkable achievement.” The five-year plan calls for all families in large cities to have access to 100 megabyte-
per-second Internet service and broadband
coverage reaching 98 percent of the population
in incorporated villages. At the same time, Chinese leaders, wary of over-
relying on foreign technology, will seek to boost
China’s homegrown industry and cut down on
imports - a strategy that has drawn complaints
from trade partners like the United States. Similar to previous years, when Chinese leaders
highlighted industries such as e-commerce as a growth focus, the new draft of China’s
development plan specifically elevated big
data and cloud computing, relatively new and
promising fields that Chinese industry experts
view as not yet cornered by U.S. companies that
dominate other parts of the technology market. The plan also calls for China to catch up on
“core” technologies such as semiconductors and
basic computer parts and software, as well as
encryption technology. China’s campaign to beef up its chip
technology has encountered political
resistance from the United States. China’s
national chip champion, Tsinghua Unigroup,
said last month that it would abandon its
attempt to acquire a stake in California data
storage rm Western Digital, the second deal
it has scrapped because of opposition from
U.S. regulators who do not want sensitive
technology to fall into Chinese hands.
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