From now on, every country or group of countries must ask itself whether it produces the technologies it needs or has guaranteed, unfettered, long-term access to them. A country that answers no is vulnerable to technological coercion that is no less severe than the military coercion of yesteryear.
AUCKLAND
– Back when states regularly used armed forces to compel others into
compliance or dependence, sovereignty was primarily a geographic and
military concept. But the term has more recently taken on an added
dimension.
The COVID-19 pandemic, for example, revealed
the West’s dependence on China for supplies of face masks and personal
protective equipment. And former US President Donald Trump weaponized
American technology and payment systems in an effort to advance US
interests. Technology sovereignty – or the lack of it – is fast becoming
a central strategic issue, not least for Europe.
Imagine, for example,
that Vice Admiral Eugene H. Black III, the commander of the US Sixth
Fleet, suddenly requested something unpalatable of UK Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, noting that his fleet was stationed in the English
Channel. The government and most people in the United Kingdom would
regard this as a very strange manifestation of the bilateral “special
relationship,” and object strenuously.
Yet, there was no public outcry last year when Mike Pompeo, Trump’s secretary of state, leaned heavily
on Johnson to exclude Chinese technology firm Huawei from the UK’s 5G
network, implying that the United States otherwise would stop sharing
intelligence with the UK. Pompeo also referred to the fact that the US controls
the City of London’s payment infrastructure, and that all electronic
chips used in the UK require US electronic design tool software. The
public silence in response to Pompeo’s tactics came despite a thorough
analysis by GCHQ, the UK’s high-tech intelligence and security agency,
which had concluded
that Huawei products were safe to use in non-critical parts of the
country’s 5G infrastructure. Pompeo’s coercion was no less blatant than
that in the hypothetical example above, but technological might is less
visible to the public than a US aircraft carrier in the Thames Estuary.The
UK long overlooked its technological dependence on other countries,
because it believed that supply chains were secure and regarded America
as a reliable ally. Both of these assumptions are now in question.
From now on, every
country or group of countries must ask itself three questions. First, do
we produce the technologies we need? If not, do we have access to them
from a number of sources? And if still not, do we have guaranteed,
unfettered, long-term (more than five years) access to them from
monopoly or oligopoly suppliers from a single country, typically the US
or China?
A country that answers no to all three questions is
vulnerable to technological coercion that is no less severe than the
military coercion of yesteryear.Does the UK have all the critical
technologies it needs for its economy and government to function
properly? To take just 5G, payment systems, and semiconductors as
examples, the answer is clearly no.Nor is it likely that the UK, acting
alone, can secure guaranteed, unfettered, long-term access to these
technologies, given that the outcome of international trade negotiations
is determined by the relative heft of the participants. The UK accounts
for about 1% of the world’s population and 2% of global
GDP (in
purchasing-power-parity terms), and has almost no globally dominant
technologies.Despite Brexit, therefore, the UK’s only rational option
for achieving technology sovereignty is to collaborate with the world’s
third economic superpower, the European Union.
Whereas the chimera of
national sovereignty has hypnotized the English, in particular, the EU
understands the real threats to sovereignty in the hyper-technological
twenty-first century and has been developing policies to protect itself.Specifically,
Europe recognizes that it risks becoming collateral damage in the
current US-China trade war. Trump’s aggressive overreach in using
America’s semiconductor dominance to cripple Huawei served as an
alarming “Sputnik moment” for the Chinese government, prompting it to
launch a massive state-funded national effort to make the country
independent in semiconductor production.China can and is outspending the
US in semiconductor development, and is deploying many times the number
of highly trained engineers, leaving no doubt that the country will
rapidly end its dependence on America in this sector.
If China comes to
dominate the global semiconductor industry, as it may very well do, the
relationship may be reversed – battle won, war lost.The rational
alternative to Trump-style strategic myopia is to help China develop its
semiconductor industry based on the principle of reciprocity. For
example, in exchange for intellectual property (IP) and technical
support, China could be given permission to build semiconductor
factories in Europe to serve European markets, and share the jointly
developed IP.
Technology
sovereignty is a particularly salient issue today in the UK, where the
government must soon decide whether to allow US technology giant
Nvidia’s planned takeover of Cambridge-based chip designer Arm. Nvidia’s
purchase of the firm – whose microprocessors are in most cars and
information-technology infrastructure equipment, as well as 95% of the
world’s mobile phones – would create yet another giant US technology
monopoly, this time in mobile computing. It would also invariably enhance US powers of coercion vis-à-vis the UK, and deprive Britain of a valuable bargaining chip in the struggle for technology sovereignty.
Beyond
maintaining Arm’s independence, the UK and the EU should together
establish a €100 billion ($120 billion) Technology Sovereignty Fund to
counter the
$100 billion
that the US is spending on its technology sovereignty and the even
larger amounts China is mobilizing. Europe needs to build alternatives
to Chinese technology manufacturing monopolies and to US-based IP,
digital, and payment monopolies.The only stable and equitable solution
to the global technology sovereignty problem is to apply the reciprocity
principle to establish independent sovereignties for the US, China, and
Europe. Achieving that might even lead to a world order in which Vice
Admiral Black and the Sixth Fleet spend more time at home.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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