China
lays out its vision to become a tech power
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[March 05, 2016]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China aims to
become a world leader in advanced industries such as semiconductors and
in the next generation of chip materials, robotics, aviation equipment
and satellites, the government said in its blueprint for development
between 2016 and 2020.
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In its new draft five-year development plan unveiled on Saturday,
Beijing also said it aims to use the internet to bolster a slowing
economy and make the country a cyber power.
China aims to boost its R&D spending to 2.5 percent of gross
domestic product for the five-year period, compared with 2.1 percent
of GDP in 2011-to-2015.
Innovation is the primary driving force for the country's
development, Premier Li Keqiang said in a speech at the start of the
annual full session of parliament.
China is hoping to marry its tech sector's nimbleness and ability to
gather and process mountains of data to make other, traditional
areas of the economy more advanced and efficient, with an eye to
shoring up its slowing economy and helping transition to a growth
model that is driven more by services and consumption than by
exports and investment.
This policy, known as "Internet Plus", also applies to government,
health care and education.
As technology has come to permeate every layer of Chinese business
and society, controlling technology and using technology to exert
control have become key priorities for the government.
China will implement its "cyber power strategy", the five-year plan
said, underscoring the weight Beijing gives to controlling the
Internet, both for domestic national security and the aim of
becoming a powerful voice in international governance of the web.
China aims to increase Internet control capabilities, set up a
network security review system, strengthen cyberspace control and
promote a multilateral, democratic and transparent international
Internet governance system, according to the plan.
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Since President Xi Jinping came to power in early 2013, the
government has increasingly reined in the Internet, seeing the web
as a crucial domain for controlling public opinion and eliminating
anti-Communist Party sentiment.
China will "strengthen the struggle against enemies in online
sovereign space and increase control of online public sentiment,"
said the plan.
It will also "perfect cybersecurity laws and legislation".
Such laws and regulations have sparked fear amongst foreign
businesses operating in China, and prompted major powers to express
concern to Beijing over three new or planned laws, including one on
counterterrorism.
These laws codify sweeping powers for the government to combat
perceived threats, from widespread censorship to heightened control
over certain technologies.
(Reporting by Paul Carsten; Additional reporting by Ryan Woo in
BEIJING; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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