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Huawei a Key Beneficiary of China Subsidies That US Wants Ended (afp.com) 195

From a report: A replica of the Palace of Versailles, medieval turrets, and spires rise across Huawei's new campus in southern China, a monument to the telecom giant's growing fortune -- and the benefits of state aid. The fairytale-like facilities rest on land that was sold by the local government at cut-rate prices to woo and bolster a strategic, high-tech company like Huawei. It is the kind of government largesse that has fanned US frustrations at China's industrial policies -- subsidies are a sticking point in protracted trade talks between the world's top two economies.

Huawei has become a major flashpoint in the trade war, with President Donald Trump taking steps to block the company's dealings with US companies, threatening its global ambitions. With the dispute shining a spotlight on China's technological shortcomings, the subsidies are a window into the kind of measures Beijing may step up as trade negotiations founder. Huawei's annual reports and public records show that it has received hundreds of millions of dollars in grants, heavily subsidised land to build facilities and apartments for loyal employees, bonuses to top engineers, and massive state loans to international customers to fund purchases of Huawei products. [...] Over the past 10 years, Huawei has received 11 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) in grants, according to its annual reports.

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Huawei a Key Beneficiary of China Subsidies That US Wants Ended

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  • Right after USA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by anarcobra ( 1551067 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:25AM (#58679624)
    When will USA stop subsidizing their corn and other farmers?
    • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:28AM (#58679654)

      It's all about food security. There is a national security interest in making sure farms are kept in business. Most nations do not want to be reliant on food imports to feed their population. As a result, you see farming related protectionism in most developed nations. It simply makes sense, people die if they don't have enough food.

      • Re:Right after USA (Score:4, Insightful)

        by anarcobra ( 1551067 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:31AM (#58679684)
        Of course it makes sense. But it also makes sense not to want to be dependent on other countries for your communications infrastructure. So it makes sense for china to subsidize huawei.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Before I get into how that's not the case, it seems a reasonable rule. I mean, cities are for dense living. Farms are for growing food. It's just efficient to concentrate growing in areas and living in other areas.

          Also, most rules against gardens are HOAs, I'm not aware of any that are citywide. Which does not imply the converse, that most HOAs have rules against it. And those that do are mostly about people thinking they lower property values.

          I guarantee that all those rules will go away during WWIII

          • It's just efficient to concentrate growing in areas and living in other areas.

            Wouldn't it be more efficient to combine production and living in the same area, to minimize transportation and commuting?

            Either way, the solution is to leave it up to the market, rather than government edicts.

            • No, it's not more efficient to combine them, because of economies of scale (e.g. large multi-million dollar combines). Most gardens are recreational, not productive in a significant way, and therefore make regulation via zoning laws and appropriate venue. Even if you disagree with the above, HOAs are the market, not government edicts.

              • Nah. HOAs are microgoverments.

                • I assume because they exercise control over your life via a contract (well, not even over your life, just over what things can be done with a specific piece of real estate) you think they are a "microgovernment". Please draw a dividing line between an HOA and the company that employs you and regulates your behavior there. Is it also a "microgovernment"? In either case you're welcome not to join the HOA/employer, free to leave at any time (selling your house if like), free to sue if the contract is unenfo

                  • Assumptions, assumptions. Who said I'm okay with the government-like power corporations hold over employees? Certainly I did not. "Sanctity of contract" is an article of faith for naive anglo-american "libertarians". Few free thinkers indeed hold sacred that particular, pernicious element of Liberturdian faith.

          • It's just efficient to concentrate growing in areas and living in other areas.
            But an unnecessary efficiency ... why put a farm hundreds of km away from a city, if you could be closer to the city? The only good reasons are: you want to live alone, or you need a special environment, e.g. like for rice fields or wine yards.

        • Poor people usually don't get/have to deal with HOAs.

          In fact many HOAs prohibit renting.

      • by Kludge ( 13653 )

        Governments have been subsidizing food production for many millennia. It keeps people from starving. It will not stop now, and no one expects it to. Except the totally whacky libertarians.

        • It's been many, many years since the world could not produce enough food for everyone. A more globalized and peaceful world doesn't need to worry about food security because - unless you are violating human rights all over the place - you can always import food from elsewhere.

        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          subsidizing food production has nothing to do with food scarcity or starvation and hasn't since the dawn of the industrial revolution. It is purely about rewarding large landed voting blocks.
      • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @11:52AM (#58680390)

        It's all about food security.

        Nope. It is about the Iowa caucuses.

        If you ever want to be president, you have to support corn subsidies.

      • That makes sense... to a point. Unfortunately a heckuva lot of corn that is grown in the US is used to produce ethanol, so it isn't being used as part of the supply chain at all. But of course, woe to the President or Congresscritter that even whispers the idea of ending subsidies on that particular agricultural product.

      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        Not really no. That the plausible explanation used to publicly justify the subsidies. Talk to any national security analysts and they will probably laugh since the policies are linked to a great deal of global and domestic instability. Subsidies are in place because farmers and people who respond to the pleas of farmers make up a disproportionately large voting block.
      • Subsidizing corn to make ethanol all so that the US doesn't have to buy ethanol made from sugar cane that's cheaper from Brazil.

        Or would that be subsidizing corn to use in foreign food aid programs that only allow the recipients to purchase American food, hurting the local farmers.

        Or subsidizing corn to feed animals on massive feed lots to fatten them up fast. Never mind about animal welfare. Feeding the animals a diet they have never eaten naturally and crowding them together with no room to behave natural

    • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:28AM (#58679658)

      It is not socialism if the Republicans do it.

    • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

      by chrism238 ( 657741 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:31AM (#58679682)
      And if Amazon had received several $Billion in tax breaks (the benefits of state aid) by building HQ2 in New York, would we be reading a similar article?
      • would we be reading a similar article?

        Probably not; how's your Mandarin?

      • Fun fact, Amazon is buying(renting?) office space in Manhattan for a major HQ... call it HQ3. I guess the people who said "cancel the tax breaks" were right.

      • And if Amazon had received several $Billion in tax breaks (the benefits of state aid) by building HQ2 in New York, would we be reading a similar article?

        Amazon's handout fell through due to public pressure, but there are plenty of large US corporations that receive billions of dollars in handouts every year. For example, just Apple alone saved many tens of billions of tax dollars due to the repatriation holiday. Apple's return on investment paid for lobbyists far outstrips the best venture capital funds. At the local level, Apple saves tens of millions of dollars in tax rebates every year due to advantageous "arrangements." And, that's just one company.

    • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:43AM (#58679800) Homepage Journal

      That is actually the reason for many of the tariffs on US goods entering the EU. It suits both sides because both want to maintain their own crop growing capability and thus food independence, so need to subsidise their own.

      The biggest problem is US subsidies for things like fossil fuels and tech. The massive tax breaks companies get for building their facilities in a particular jurisdiction are illegal in the EU.

      • by taskiss ( 94652 )

        You say "tax breaks" like it's something other than the government not taking as much money from a private company as it says it can in order to stimulate a regional economy

        • by suutar ( 1860506 )

          You say "tax breaks" like it's something other than the government not charging a private company as much for services as it normally would in order to stimulate a regional economy

          This seems to gloss over stuff a bit less while still sounding good for your point. HTH!

        • Re:Right after USA (Score:5, Insightful)

          by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @01:47PM (#58681172)

          Taxes are not charity. They are fees for services provided. When a company gets a tax break its not like it gives up the services like access to roads, protection from cops and regulation so that they can have breathable air. They just get those services for free.
          A tax break is not you getting to keep your money, its you not paying for services you are still consuming

    • Funny, the US seems to feed a good portion of the world. The subsidies help do that. It also provides for Wick and other low income programs. But I guess you would rather see people starve. That's fine, I just hope you are one of the first.
      • Subsidies are funded from taxes which poor people have to pay so that rich corporations can make more money. So that executives can put more gas in their yachts and buy another Ferrari every so often. It certainly does not help the poor. It's welfare for the rich. If you care about the poor it would be better just to give them the money directly so that they can actually have money to buy food. Welfare for the poor is a lot more defensible than welfare for the rich.

        • by es330td ( 964170 )

          Subsidies are funded from taxes which poor people have to pay so that rich corporations can make more money.

          Your ignorance of actual facts is truly amazing.

          In 2016 (the latest year for which data is available) the top 1% paid more in taxes than the bottom 90%, 37.3% vs 30.5% of total taxes paid. The top 1% earned 19% of total income but paid 37% of the taxes so if anybody is paying for subsidies it is the top 1%.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        US subsidies to large food corporations are driving small farmers in poor countries out of business and leading to rural poverty and farmer suicides as US subsidized cost of production is lower than even farmers working starvation wages.. All so that fat cats running farming corporations in the US can buy their third private jet. And its funded using taxes on the US middle class. Nothing is more eveil than farming subsidies.

        • are driving small farmers in poor countries out of business and leading to rural poverty and farmer suicides
          Only if in those countries subsidized american food companies do farming. Poverty and suicides are more the cause of genetical modified cotton etc. where the farmers where convinced/forced to take up a credit, buy seeds that grow sterile plants, agree to a long term selling contract for a to low price, and have to buy seeds every year again ... happened in India, no idea if that phase is over or is s

      • Corn farmers don't need subsidies to grow lots of corn.
        Also, destroying markets in other countries by dumping cheap corn based products there is not exactly helping them either.
    • When will USA stop subsidizing their corn and other farmers?

      Ignoring food security is a profoundly stupid idea. If we relied on other countries for food they could blackmail us to the extreme. Think of how quickly China pulls out the rare earth metals card and just refuses to ship some. Now imagine doing that with food. Certain things are too important to ignore, food and energy both qualify.

      • Yeah, so? Ignoring your local companies is profoundly stupid. Of course China is going to subsidize local business like huawei. In the modern world telecom and tech sector is almost as important as food production.
        Who does the US think it is that it can demand other countries to stop subsidizing important aspects of their economy while they continue to subsidize theirs?
        • In the modern world telecom and tech sector is almost as important as food production.

          You are just 3 meals away from the end of civilization. It takes a shockingly short amount of time for things to break down. When things are working and people are largely fed then Facebook can have billions of dollars of value. When you're starving you'll trade it all for food.

    • Nice first post whataboutism...

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:30AM (#58679674)

    ...about a 1/10th of the amount given to Boeing by the US government in State and Federal subsidies.

    https://subsidytracker.goodjob... [goodjobsfirst.org]

    • Indeed. And we have to have the courage to admit that $1.6bn over 10 years is a vanishingly small number in comparison with Huawei's revenue over that same period of time.

      • by suutar ( 1860506 )

        also a vanishingly small number in terms of Boeing's revenue. Those are nice oranges, but they're not apples.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    U.S. companies also get these tax incentives and other such benefits from cities looking to get the company to build new local facilities. So Pot and Kettle IMO.

  • by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:35AM (#58679714)

    Almost every large American company has got land at cut rate prices and tax subsidies for setting up factories whether it was AMD in upstate New York or TESLA in Fremont or Solar City in Michigan.
    Almost every govt gives subsidies to attract jobs. Heck US subsidizes farmers to keep growing corn nobody needs.
    Almost every private company in the US has tech built on top of research done with NSF grants yet we dont accuse Intel or Apple to be agents of the US Govt.
    Google, AT&T and Microsoft have all given up private data to Govt prosecutors under subpoena yet we dont accuse US companies of being unsafe to work with due to the US Cybersecurity law
    Cisco has knowingly put in backdoors and shared the same with NSA yet we are not pressuring Europe to not use CISCO routers in the 5G Backbone.

    Lets recognize what is happening here. US is losing its lead in tech and is fighting dirty using National Security as an excuse to try and keep the lead

    • And I don't really care. What part about realpolitik don't you guys get? The universe is not a charity, entropy and scarcity exist and the world ain't big enough for the both of us. You can use whatever argument you want to justify why we (being the western world in general and the US in particular should be on top), but ultimately it doesn't matter. I want my tribe to have a prosperous and comfortable life and everyone else can get fucked.

      I'm fine with us doing everything we can to further out best inter

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        Realpolitik is all good but if we were going to compete only at the level of realpolitik China is always going to beat our ass with 4 times the population and a culture which puts science and business before sports.

        The US wins because its believed to be the most fair country in the world, where an immigrant who comes to the country with nothing can have his grandson become the President (Trump). If we lose that moral leadership no longer will the cream of crop of each country want to immigrate to the US and

    • Lets recognize what is happening here. US is losing its lead in tech and is fighting dirty using National Security as an excuse to try and keep the lead

      I cant work up any actual outrage over the fact that the US is looking after her own interests. I'm not even American.

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @10:36AM (#58679734) Journal

    Maybe we should just put some black tape over the Huawei name and logo so it doesn't upset us.

    • Maybe we should just put some black tape over the Huawei name and logo so it doesn't upset us.

      Perhaps that's and idea for the right wing snow flakes, myself I'm perfectly fine with Huawei logos.

    • Scratch the "us' and we'll call it good. ;)
    • Maybe we should just put some black tape over the Huawei name and logo so it doesn't upset us.

      I'm still waiting for the Russian mod-bombers to figure out that was a knock on their favorite president. I guess their algorithms only work if you explicitly use the name, "Trump", or the words "mushroom dick".

      I guess we'll see.

  • ... oil subsidies in the US?

  • Welfare is a subsidy to Wal-Mart. The Interstate is a subsidy to trucking. Satellite launches are a subsidy to private space industry. Middle East military adventurism is a subsidy for oil. We literally pay farmers to throw out their crops as a subsidy.

    If you add it up, the U.S. is far guiltier of subsidizing its international corporate interests than China is.

    • Wal-Mart has raised wages since you last looked at it. Infrastructure (aka Interstates) isn't subsidizing, it's enabling and a base government function. Satellite launches are for a purpose other than subsidies. Middle East adventurism is actually pretty mixed for oil. Farmer subsidies are important for the food supply and are a real subsidy.

      Meanwhile, China subsidizes power to the point that it's cheaper to import marbles from China than to pay the electric bill at a US plant.

  • This administration is complaining that China treats Huawei like the US has treated Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, BAE, General Dynamics, Raytheon, Boeing, and any sports club wanting a new stadium/arena for the past 50 years or more, plus a absolute shit ton more companies.
    • So your argument is that Huawei is a patastate military contractor? Or a patastate provider of stultifying mass entertainment to keep the masses apathetic and confused?

  • The USA, a country that is famed for giving huge tax-breaks & subsidies to its own favoured industries, corporations, & billionaires, is complaining about China doing the same?

    Yeah, just another comment the same as many of the above. The current administration are a bunch of a-historical, a-contextual incompetents.

  • A business receiving special treatment from local government in land grants, tax incentives, etc. is abhorrent. Why would a country allow for such blatant anti-competitive corrupt practices?

    The USA should be ashamed of what they've allowed to occur with Amazon's courting of state governments for their 2nd HQ.

    Wait, what are we talking about? Hua-who-now? Same deal. Also bad.
  • A replica of the Palace of Versailles, medieval turrets, and spires rise across Huawei's new campus

    .....Why? That just seems silly.

    • .....Why? That just seems silly.
      Pffft, you are silly.

      Why not? First of all: they have the money. Secondly: it looks good!! Thirdly: it most likely is fun.
      And if you look at this, it is a tourist attraction as it is even inside a copy of Versailles
        https://sputniknews.com/videoc... [sputniknews.com]
      So they probably even make money with it.

  • If I understand WTO rules correctly, US companies could ask Chinese government for the same help that Huawei got. If the Chinese government refuses, a WTO ruling could free US companies of WTO rules regarding China, but I am not sure what rules would be of interest to be removed.
    • Be careful what you wish for because Chinese companies, and those from other countries, could ask for the same thing that American companies get in the US. Once you start playing that game you open yourself up to going to the WTO on the wrong side of a complaint.

  • seriously, why the focus on Huawei. Many others do the same.

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