Southeast Asia’s reliance on China may upend US-EU plan for global tech standards
- ‘China is a fundamental partner to these countries in technology, trade and production’, so asking them to choose sides will be a challenge, US experts say
- The EU and US recently deepened their commitment to ‘work together to align our technology standards in a way that’s consistent with our democratic values’
Washington’s efforts to promote global tech standards developed with the EU may falter in Asia because the region is too dependent on Chinese products, a panel of experts said on Wednesday.
While not officially an effort to counter China, the EU and US deepened their commitment to “work together to align our technology standards in a way that’s consistent with our democratic values” after the second meeting of the Trade and Technology Council (TTC) in Paris on Monday, a statement said.
“It’s not clear what digital interoperability will mean” since the US seems intent on excluding China, said Mary Lovely, a China expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based think tank.
“China is a fundamental partner to these countries in technology, trade and production … so asking them [to choose sides on tech standards] may have a negative effect in terms of some of these countries,” Lovely said in a panel discussion hosted by the Institute for China-America Studies.
“We are moving toward a bifurcated 6G world,” she added. “China is very serious about 6G and it will clearly have to be developed in coordination with the rest of Asia. How is that going to work with the US insistence that China not be in 6G?”
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“We are committed to exchange information and explore opportunities for collaboration in our research and development agendas, notably for artificial intelligence, telecommunication technologies beyond 5G and 6G, and quantum computing,” TTC negotiators said in their joint statement.
“Given that 6G will be a critical global infrastructure, common approaches towards 6G international standards are particularly relevant.”
US-China Business Council president Craig Allen, also speaking on the panel, said the diverse priorities among Southeast Asian countries relative to the EU present another challenge as the US tries to push standards developed with some of its closest allies.
“With the US and EU, [implementing common technical standards] is much easier to do because there’s one Brussels, and within IPEF there are multiple countries with multiple standards, authorities and very little coordination,” Allen said, adding that China already had a strong influence over the region when it comes to technology.
“In an ideal world, we have international standards wherever possible, but it appears that we’re headed into a world where we’re going to have much more bloc conflict on standards, and that’s probably not a good thing for global economic growth and development,” he added.
While largely agreeing that most Southeast Asian countries are keen to develop closer economic ties with the US, the panellists said Biden’s ability to displace China as a result would be difficult to pull off.
“Southeast Asia welcomes China’s role, but it also welcomes the EU role, Japan’s role, South Korea’s role, and Australia, New Zealand and the United States,” said Satu Limaye, director of the East-West Center’s Washington office.
“It has a polygamous commercial appetite, and it is perfectly sound in wanting [engagement from multiple parties] if it means benefits from all,” he said.
Lovely was more blunt. “Many of these countries are seeing increasing Chinese aggression, [such as] what we see in Lithuania and Australia, and welcome some diversification,” she said. “But are they interested in decoupling? I think the answer is a resounding no.”