Private 5G network deployed at Petronas LNG Complex Bintulu to accelerate digital innovation

  • Gobind, a minister of modern, takes note of the ongoing efforts to accede to 5G adoption in businesses.
  • 5G-enabled brilliant techniques such as business IoT, uavs, robotics, XR

Gobind Singh Deo (seated), Minister of Digital, Malaysia at the 5G enabled Petronas LNG Complex in Bintulu, Sarawak with senior executives from Petronas, DNB, MyDigital, his Digital Ministry and the Sarawak State Government.

The oil and gas ( O&amp, G ) sector plays a vital part in Malaysia’s economy, contributing approximately 20 % to the nation’s gross domestic product ( GDP ), according to the Malaysia Investment Development Authority.

The firm’s habitat comprises more than 3, 500 O&amp, G firms in Malaysia, including global oil firms, support and service providers, as well as producers.

Even a traditional business like the O&amp is seeing an increase in online adoption as players use 5G to accede to their electronic change and competitiveness in line with the rising adoption and sophistication of Malaysia’s modern economy.

Gobind Singh Deo, the minister of modern, has urged the O&G sector to raise its game by supporting the use of 5G technology in businesses.

“5G is among the important technology that is gaining significance. The technology, which offers ultra-high rate coupled with low latency connection between power hubs, production sites and vessels, helps to simplify the growing complexity in administrative activities”, Gobind said.

” Increased use of 5G-enabled intelligent systems such as industrial IoT, drones, robotics, extended reality (XR ), and artificial intelligence ( AI ) enhances operational efficiency and safety”.

At a meeting held to officially launch the private 5G system at Bintulu, Sarawak’s Petronas LNG Complex, Gobind said this. Petronas and Telekom Malaysia ( TM) collaborate on the deployment, which is supported by Digital Nasional Bhd ( DNB).

The fresh Bintulu blog is one of four places equipped with the technologies following Petronas ‘ Regasification Terminal Sungai Udang (RGTSU) Melaka’s traditional launch of Malaysia’s first private 5G network for business in 2022.

The event was attended by the Sarawak Deputy Minister of Utilities and Telecommunications, Liwan Lagang, Abang Yusuf Abang Puteh, Senior Vice President, LNG Assets, Gas and Maritime Business, Petronas, Mohamed Syazwan Abdullah@Laga Jenggi, Managing Director and CEO, Petronas Malaysia LNG Group of Companies, Amar Huzaimi Md Deris, TM Group CEO, and DNB Chief Strategy Officer, Ahmad Zaki Zahid.

With a production capacity of 29.8 million tonnes per year, Petronas LNG Complex has the third-largest liquefied natural gas ( LNG ) plant in one location. The 5G network’s deployment is anticipated to increase productivity, operational efficiency, and safety across crucial production processes.

Gobind added that the global O&G sector’s adoption of 5G technology is growing steadily.

” According to a ResearchAndMarkets .com report, while specific adoption rates can vary, the global market for 5G in oil and gas is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of nearly 26 % from 2023 to 2030. Energy companies around the world are racing to modernise their operations, and I applaud Petronas, TM and DNB for taking the lead in digitalising Malaysia’s energy sector”.

Gobind added that Malaysia’s digital transformation is dependent on the ongoing efforts to promote 5G adoption in various businesses.

” I’m pleased to see that more and more Malaysian businesses, from large multinational corporations to SMEs, are discovering how 5G can facilitate a variety of digital solutions to improve productivity and improve operational efficiency and safety across critical production processes,” he said.

” We are seeing the development of private 5G networks and use cases undergoing proof-of-concept trials within the manufacturing, transportation and logistics industries, among others. Smart city solutions are also being supported by 5G in towns and municipalities like Putrajaya.

Through collaborations with industry associations like the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers and international technology and telecommunications companies, DNB, an agency under the Ministry of Digital, continues to actively advocate for the adoption of 5G technology in businesses.

According to him,” these efforts truly align with the MADANI government’s and the Ministry of Digital’s goals of making Malaysia a digital nation.”

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Bob Neff focused reporting on Japan ‘revisionists’ – Asia Times

Robert C Neff, who was at the middle of America’s discussion about a fast rising Japan in the late 1980s, died on July 31, 2024, at his house in Hayama, Japan, north of Tokyo, after a lengthy illness. He was 77 years older. He is survived by his family of more than 40 times, Fumiko Sekizawa.

Neff was born on July 22, 1947, in St. Louis, Missouri. His relatives, who were missionaries, were sent to Asia. Spending little of his youth in Japan, where he attended the American School in Japan, Neff developed tribal competence in the Chinese language, which is exceptional among&nbsp, gaijin&nbsp, – immigrants.

Neff’s BusinessWeek support account,” Rethinking Japan,” was most well known for its August 1989 publication, which addressed a contentious debate between the United States and the magazine about whether Japan may switch to an economic and political model more Western-style.

Americans were debating whether Japan’s political and economic model would overthrow American industries or whether it would forego its post-World War II model in favor of a wide opening.

The magazine’s include read:” The US still has a$ 52 billion trade deficit with Japan, and Chinese culture continues to be tightly knit. As a result, a dramatic shift in US thinking about Japan is afoot. This revisionist view assumes that conventional free trade strategies wo n’t work for Japan because it is truly different. Again, such sights would have been dismissed as ‘ Japan-bashing,’ but now they have an academic base”.

Neff was credited with primary applying the word “revisionists” to speak to the academic leaders of this school of thought, whom he identified as Clyde Prestowitz, Chalmers Johnson, James Fallows and Karel van Wolferen.

In an email, Prestowitz wrote,” I would like to express my undying gratitude for [Neff’s ] clear understanding of the reality of US-Japan trade relations in the 1980s. He was the only journalist who could see what was happening, out of all the big newspapers. I will miss him tremendously” .&nbsp,

In the early 1990s, the Japanese monetary bubble lost popularity, and some critics claimed that revisionists had misled it. China’s rise in some ways overshadowed the Chinese issue. However, Japan maintained its political and business models.

Neff was portion of a golden era of mag media. He circled the world with messages in Honolulu, Los Angeles, Tokyo, London and New York. Neff was one of the most admired and likeable practitioners in the country, and American news organizations had substantial networks of foreign correspondents.

Steven Shepard, who was the editor-in-chief of Business Week from 1984 to 2005, was emphatic in his praise of Neff. ” A great journalist, a beautiful man”, Shepard posted. I recall seeing him in Tokyo and absorbing some of his vast knowledge of the nation. I cherished our friendship”.

Neff was even known for supporting the advancement of reporters with little experience, both those who worked for him and those who did not. He mentored several fresh reporters who arrived in Japan in the 1980s to tell the stories of Japan’s economic increase, the value of its currency, the yen, its technical prowess and, ultimately, its trade conflicts.

Neff attended the University of Michigan between 1965 and 1969. He met Urban Lehner, who did turn out to be both a literary rival and a longtime friend. Lehner became the Wall Street Journal’s Tokyo bureau captain, while Neff held the position of BusinessWeek magazine’s Tokyo writer.

Neff served in the Vietnam War as a conscientious objector, and he spent two years performing medical care. After that, he attended the University of Missouri School of Journalism. Before being hired by BusinessWeek in its Los Angeles office in 1977, he began his career at Pacific Business News in Honolulu. The McGraw-Hill Businesses owned BusinessWeek as well as niche industry journals and a cable company, McGraw-Hill News.

In 1979, McGraw-Hill benefited from Neff’s ability to speak Japanese and transfer him to the Tokyo information service. He rose to the position of bureaucrat.

Neff relocated to New York in 1987 as the director of BusinesssWeek’s global release after working there for a while editing International Management publication. He moved up to Tokyo in 1989 as that publication’s bureau chief, a job he held until the mid-1990s. He afterwards served as managing director of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan while also editing and writing for various publications, including Forbes and Fortune.

A big Neff success was his author of&nbsp, a prominent link to the best among Japan’s plenty of&nbsp, onsen, or warm baths, entitled&nbsp,” Japan’s Hidden Hot Springs”. Neff and his wife Fumiko took friend Lehner and his family on a trip to some hot springs, which Lehner did feature in his Eastern Wall Street Journal article.

Lehner claimed that Neff was a master at discovering onsen that were quirky and cheap and frequently featured mountain views from the hot hot tubs. The leading Japanese-owned English-language paper, the Japan Times, wrote that Neff was” a sensitive bather”.

Neff even was known for his encyclopedic knowledge of Tokyo’s vibrant nightlife. He adored music, a traditional Japanese evening ritual that was often performed over drinks. Leslie Helm, a Neff employee in the BusinessWeek commission, recalls how many Chinese contacts commented on how well Bob was speak those songs and how much they enjoyed having drinks with him.

Neff was a member of Japan’s Foreign Correspondents Club. He was secretary in 1981-82 and leader in 1998-99. He and the other co-chair, the late Bob Kirschenbaum ( they were known as the Two Bobs ), also co-chaired the club’s food and beverage committee, which required them to taste all food and beverages before including them on any menu.

Neff also served on various commissions. Toshio Aritake, a friend and fellow journalist, recalls that Neff was” a device at the reporters ‘ tables and always at the middle of the most heated disputes.”

On August 2, a Hayama home funeral was held. A memorial hour will be held in September at the Foreign Correspondents ‘ Club of Japan.

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China racing to stockpile AI-powering HBM chips – Asia Times

In anticipation that the US would soon outlaw their export to China, Chinese technology companies began stockpiling Samsung’s high-bandwidth memory ( HBM ) chips earlier this year.

According to Reuters, citing three unknown publications, China accounted for about 30 % of Samsung’s HBM device profits in the first half of this year as a result of growing demand from tech companies like Huawei and Baidu as well as from innovative Chinese companies. HBM chips are commonly used as artificial intelligence ( AI ) accelerators.

According to the Reuters report, the majority of Chinese companies are looking for the HBM2E device, which is two decades and one-generations apart from the most cutting-edge HBM3E. China plans to produce indigenously the HBM2, the most intelligent, least advanced design.

International HBM business income may rise to US$ 14 billion in 2024 from$ 2.7 billion in 2022, Yole Group, a France-based research university, said in a statement in February 2024. The number is expected to rise to$ 37.7 billion in 2029, representing a compound annual growth rate of 38 % from 2023 to 2029. &nbsp,

Yole added that this year, the share of HBM in the overall DRAM market will increase from 3 % to 19 %, according to Yole. &nbsp,

However, researchers at Fangzheng Securities expected that world HBM need may simply achieve$ 9.14 billion, or 40 million devices, in 2024. &nbsp,

They said Nvidia will consume 58 % of all HBM chips, followed by Google ( 15 % ), AMD ( 14 % ) and Chinese firms ( 7 % ). The remaining 6 % will be used by other tech firms, the statement said.

The first seven months of 2024 saw a rise in China’s overall chip imports, according to Taiwan’s DigiTimes on Thursday ( August 8 ). &nbsp,

But, Li Yali, a journalist for Guancha.cn, claimed in an article published on Thursday that the rise in Chinese chip imports from January through July was largely due to a rise in global need for Chinese buyer electronic goods as opposed to the stockpiling of HBM cards.

In January-July, China’s imports of integrated circuits grew 14.5 % to 308.2 billion units, up 11.5 % to$ 212.1 billion from the same period last year, according to Chinese Customs data. Following the downturn of last year, the numbers were also below what they had been for 2022. &nbsp, &nbsp,

China’s HBM interests

The US Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security ( BIS ) chief, Alan Estevez, traveled to Japan and the Netherlands to urge their governments to stop ASML and Tokyo Electron from selling HBM chip-making equipment to China in June.

According to Bloomberg, the US may use its Foreign Direct Product Rule ( FDPR ) to prevent China from purchasing HBM chips from Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix in South Korea on July 31. By the end of August, a new circular of device export controls may be announced, according to Reuters. &nbsp,

On August 4, Tom’s Hardware reported that China’s ChangXin Memory Technologies ( CXMT ) has reportedly begun mass production of HBM2 chips. It cited a DigiTimes statement, which said it got the information from South Korea’s ETNews.

The progress made by CXMT’s HBM device manufacturing has not yet been made publicly known. &nbsp,

In a Reuters document from May 15, it was reported that CXMT had shown the products to clients after working with Tongfu Microelectronics to develop test HBM chips. &nbsp,

Some Chinese critics claimed that Huatian Technology, Tongfu Microelectronics, and JCET Group could make HBM chips. They claimed that Tongfu Microelectronics is a capable person but also needs more time to get ready for mass creation.

In December 2022, Nantong Tongfu, a fully-owned company of Tongfu Microelectronics, completed the construction of its step three shop in Nantong, Jiangsu state.

Tongfu Microelectronics celebrated the release of its first 2.5D/3D integrated circuit packaging device on February 22 this year in a great ceremony. However, it kept the machine’s company secret. &nbsp,

The HBM device manufacturing facility in Nantong Tongfu received an economic analysis report on March 1 from the Ministry of Ecology and Environment. According to the statement, the 250-employee service can make 36, 000 models of 80-millimeter-long HBM chips per month. &nbsp,

Tongfu Microelectronics stated to shareholders last month that the HBM industry is still dominated by foreign chipmakers, without going into detail about its own creation. &nbsp,

Read more: US tightens China-chip quotas in response to outdated Cold War diktats.

Follow Jeff Pao on X: &nbsp, @jeffpao3

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What is stopping firms from listing on SGX and what more can be done?

SINGAPORE: Online used car market Carro is looking to raise about S$ 130 million ( US$ 98 million ) before its property sector debut.

According to its CEO and co-founder, Aaron Tan, the business raised$ 75 million from the world’s largest lender, HSBC, two months ago.

But despite being headquartered here, the Singapore Exchange (SGX ) is not the company’s first choice.

Instead, it is looking at either the New York Stock Exchange ( NYSE ) or Nasdaq. &nbsp,

” The ( American ) market has a lot of what we call’ depth’, in the sense that there is no lack of potential investors”, Mr Tan explained. &nbsp,

Among the bank’s considerations for identifying are profitability and assessment.

“( The United States has ) a very strong business which has been around for years. More importantly, generally, a lot of businesses that have listed in the US have been able to achieve great prices, specifically it businesses”.

He added that the problem in listing in various bourses, which may be less familiar with technology firms, is receiving a lower assessment.

The major issue and concern we had had, according to the statement,” Do we receive the pricing we want or deserve” if we list on, state, SGX, the Tokyo Stock Exchange, or the Thailand Stock Exchange? he said. &nbsp,

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China looking like a ‘buy’ as US, Japan markets sag – Asia Times

As global investors dump US and Japanese stocks, China’s beaten-down markets are suddenly looking more attractive.

The debate over whether China is “uninvestable” has plagued Xi Jinping’s government since late 2020. That was back when Xi’s Communist Party cracked down on tech platforms, starting with Jack Ma’s Alibaba Group.

It hardly helped that Xi’s draconian Covid-19 lockdowns drove China’s growth into the red. Or that Xi’s party was slow to add fresh stimulus to Asia’s biggest economy when it arguably needed it most.

Now, China has a unique opportunity to shine as a bastion of stability as the US and Japanese economies face fast-mounting challenges.

US employment growth is slowing, spooking global punters who had grown used to the economy adding 200,000-plus new jobs per month. The US Federal Reserve, meanwhile, has been slow to cut interest rates as inflation has remained stubbornly close to 3%.

Adding to the drama is extreme political polarization at a moment when Americans prepare to pick a new president on November 5. This, against the backdrop of the US national debt topping US$35 trillion.

In Tokyo, markets are in abject trauma following the Bank of Japan’s July 31 rate hike. On Monday, the Nikkei Stock Average fell the most since “Black Monday” in 1987. Though stock prices later stabilized, fears of additional BOJ rate hikes have global investors on edge.

A big worry is the “yen-carry trade” blowing up. Since 1999, when the BOJ first cut rates to zero, investors everywhere have been borrowing cheaply in yen and using those funds to bet on higher-yielding assets around the globe.

This explains why sudden moves in the yen can savage asset markets in New York, London, Dubai, Seoul and Shanghai. And raise questions about hedge funds everywhere blowing up.

All of this presents China with a chance to appear above the fray. To be sure, there’s an argument that China could indeed offer the calm that global investors seek. Particularly as events from Washington to Tokyo ring alarm bells.

Yet this requires Xi’s team to step up efforts to revive the narrative that China is moving upmarket as an investment destination.

A decade ago, Xi pledged to let market forces play a “decisive” role in decisions about economic and financial policy. A few years later, in 2015, a sudden plunge in stock prices slowed the reform process.

At the time, China Inc circled the wagons. Beijing directed waves of state funding into markets, suspending trading in thousands of companies, scrapped all initial public offerings and enabled mainlanders to pledge homes as collateral on margin loans. It even rushed out buzzy marketing campaigns to encourage stock-buying as a form of patriotism.

This treating-symptoms-over-reforms pattern has played out time and time again during Xi’s tenure. All of which explains why marshaling the state-sector-industrial complex to save the day, again, could backfire.

That episode, and others since then, exemplify why gains in Chinese shares too often haven’t been matched by moves to champion the private sector, increase transparency or strengthen corporate governance.

In recent years, investor disappointment sent capital fleeing China. Between late 2021 and early 2024, a $7 trillion rout in mainland shares shook global markets. Though Chinese stocks have stabilized somewhat since, the Shanghai-Shenzhen CSI 300 Index is still down 13.5% this year.

The question now, with price-to-earnings multiples trading at 13 versus 22 for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and 23 for Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average, is whether China is a “buy.”

“Chinese assets are expected to become a better choice for global funds in this round of global market turmoil triggered by the expectation of a US recession,” says Zhang Qiyao, analyst at Industrial Securities, arguing that the market boasts low valuations and improving fundamentals.

Analysts at Shanghai Securities said in a note that they “think a deep correction in the Japanese market has limited impact on China’s A-shares. Funds are expected to flow back into A-share. We believe that increased uncertainty in the overseas market and increased expectations of a recent interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve may prompt funds to seek safe havens.”

There are many risks to consider. One is the so-called “yen-carry trade” blowing up. The rebound in the Nikkei this week, a day after the market collapsed, was a relief for investors everywhere.

But the fact investors are buzzing about “contagion” effects is not a great sign as these things go. Nor is the yen’s continued upward trajectory after a powerful rally that’s already unnerving global markets.

It’s also worth noting that officials in Tokyo are preparing for the worst. Early next week, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda will be questioned by a parliamentary committee. Lawmakers are clearly spooked by the market freakout over a rather gentle July 31 rate hike.

Part of this paranoia reflects memories of what happened back in 2006 and 2007, the last time the BOJ tried to move rates away from zero. Back then, the central bank managed to get rates up to 0.5%.

The recession that followed still haunts Tokyo. By 2008, the BOJ was slashing rates back to zero and restoring quantitative easing. What lawmakers want answered are questions about whether Japan will suffer a rerun of that episode.

Ueda can’t say, of course. No one can. No Group of Seven nation has ever held rates at zero or near zero for 25 years. Or conducted a 23-year QE experiment, one that’s now backfiring on Asia’s second-biggest economy.

The uncertainty factor here is rather epic. It stems from the yen’s role as a key funding currency. Over the last quarter century, the most crowded trade anywhere has been borrowing cheaply in yen and redeploying those funds in higher-yielding assets around the globe.

This yen-carry trade explains why big yen rallies tend to pull the floor out from under asset markets from New York to Seoul. The yen’s 13% surge since a July low shoulder-checked global markets.

There’s concern now about similar dynamics in the Chinese currency. “The next carry trade unwind could be the yuan,” says Khoon Goh, the head of Asia research at ANZ.

On Monday, the yuan rallied against the dollar along with the yen. This move could bolster the China-as-safe-haven argument as markets from New York to Tokyo gyrate.

Yet to build trust among global investors, Beijing needs to step up efforts to improve Chinese capital markets. That’s the key to increasing the appeal of the yuan as the key currency in trade and finance.

“If they really wanted to de-dollarize China’s trade, preferably shifting at least some of it into renminbi over time, China’s leaders would need to ensure two things,” says Louis Gave, analyst at Gavekal Research.

“The renminbi should remain a stable, not excessively volatile, currency. Given the size of China’s export industry, currency stability was always a policy priority, but the drive to internationalize the renminbi made it even more important.”

Gave notes that it’s also important for Chinese government bonds (CGBs) to begin outpacing returns on US Treasuries. “If China was going to convince the central banks of Thailand, Indonesia, South Africa or South Korea to move some of their reserves from US Treasuries into CGBs, then the reserve managers at these central banks would have to be rewarded for their courageous decisions to shift away from the US dollar,” Gave said.

Sure enough, he adds, “in the years that followed, returns on CGBs crushed the returns from government bonds in the US, Germany and Japan — the world’s other major bond markets. China’s outperformance is almost as striking as the capital destruction endured by Japanese and German bondholders. Over the last 10 years, China has been the only major bond market where US-dollar-based investors were able to outperform US inflation.”

Over the last five years, Gave notes, “none of the big government bond markets have kept abreast of US inflation, but again CGBs have outperformed the others. And over the last three years, CGBs are the only bonds that have delivered positive nominal returns, although not enough to keep up with US inflation.”

Yet reforms have been uneven. News late last month that Beijing is increasing opacity surrounding the flow of capital – limiting daily data on the amount of capital international funds deploy into and out of China – is a step in the wrong direction.

Those signals came the same week as the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) pledged to improve market operations, strengthen comprehensive research capabilities, deepen response mechanisms to manage market risks and hone regulations for trading.

Still, the extreme volatility from New York to Tokyo could restore China’s appeal as a reliable investment destination. Xi’s team just needs to shift the reform process into higher gear.

Follow William Pesek on X at @WilliamPesek

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Will India’s new USb plan to boost employment pay off?

Apprenticeship Program

The correct job opportunities have proved to be challenging for those seeking employment right now.

” We do n’t seem to have any jobs that we like, but there are a lot of them.” And for a lot of us, there are n’t enough jobs”, said jobseeker Suman Kumari.

Another jobseeker, Shaurya Kumar, told CNA that companies want employees who are highly qualified, have previous experience, or have a great educational qualifications. ” But most of us do not match that profile”, she added.

The president’s internship program is aimed at solving that issue.

It wants to wire in India’s 500 biggest corporations to offer jobs to 10 million students. The volunteers ‘ earnings will be reimbursed to the participating companies, and the remaining money may be subject to tax advantages.

This is a critical step in the development of a highly-skilled talent pool, according to authorities.

However, it’s unclear how many of these jobs will later turn into full-time positions.

The move, according to Shantanu Rooj, CEO of TeamLease EdTech, will help increase new hires ‘ employment and work.

He claimed that this opportunity for hiring interns to enable the creation of their own skill supply chain lowers the cost of hiring for employers, which he called a fantastic initiative.Continue Reading

Looking for the upside of tariffs on China – Asia Times

I’ve been talking about&nbsp, vibes&nbsp, a lot over the past year, but this talk about something a little more substantial. Essentially, Trump and his movements have two key policy tenets: 1.) immigration limitations, and 2.) more taxes. This think about the next of these.

Taxes are no longer merely a Trump thought; they are a significant component of the Democratic policy kit. Biden’s tariffs on Chinese goods, announced up in May, went well beyond everything Trump did in his first word.

Some Democrats want to protect United manufacturing capacity in the face of a potential war with China, but I doubt a Harris presidency would do the opposite. But, regardless of who wins in November, tariffs will likely continue to be a significant policy instrument for the US.

I wrote a post about why tariffs frequently do n’t reduce trade deficits as effectively as their backers hoped back in February.

Generally, there are three factors tariffs tend to be disappointing. Most importantly, when you put up taxes against another country’s products, it causes that country’s currency to decrease against your money.

That raises the price of your export while lowering the cost of your goods. The taxes ‘ expected effect is partially offset by this. In fact, the Chinese currency drastically decreased a year and a half after Trump imposed tariffs on China during his first term:

Cause for authentic table: Xe .com

The numerous ways that Chinese businesses can circumvent tariffs are another aspect that reduce their success. They may “re-export” — generally, send someone to a third region, slap a” Made in Vietnam” or a” Made in Thailand” logo on it, and then offer it to America, free of taxes.

They can establish factories in third countries to ensure that those nations ‘ items are actually produced there. The US is unaware that it is importing a lot of Chinese goods because they can buy parts and components to builders in third countries.

They may take advantage of flaws like&nbsp, the “de minimis” rule&nbsp, that allows China to buy smaller items to America free of taxes. And so on. These techniques may all theoretically be corrected with sufficient information and surveillance. They hardly ever are in reality.

The second problem with taxes is that they make transitional products – components, parts, and components – more costly for US manufacturers. Taxes on steel and aluminum raise rates for American carmakers, aircraft companies, device manufacturers, and so on.

Building EVs in America costs more because of battery levies. Solar panel tariffs increase the cost of US production of strength. And so on. This&nbsp, <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-03-07/trump-s-tariffs-on-steel-aluminum-will-do-more-harm-than-good?sref=R8NfLgwS”>weakens US manufacturing&nbsp, and may harm US exports. 1

But between circumvention techniques, currency movements and harm to American companies, Trump’s levies on China ended up reducing the trade deficit a lot less than their engineers had hoped.

Even though Trump’s taxes are likely to be higher in a second word and Biden’s, these components will still have an impact. This is not to say that taxes are &nbsp, ineffectual&nbsp, — they’re just a weaker coverage instrument than their proponents like to believe.

Despite these fundamental weaknesses, tariffs are still&nbsp, an essential part of the toolkit&nbsp, for preserving offer chains and defence production capacity against the possibility of a major war.

However, it’s possible that tariffs will have other unanticipated benefits for people all over the world, including developing nations and Chinese consumers who are receiving bad deals from the nation’s current economic model.

We should also consider these advantageous side effects when we consider tariffs.

Tariffs might prompt China to reconsider its economic model.

Zongyuan Zoe Liu has &nbsp, a widely read article&nbsp, in Foreign Affairs this week about the drawbacks of China’s manufacturing-focused economic model.

The article excellently describes how manufacturing is promoted by China. Basically, it’s all about bank finance — banks loan huge amounts of money very cheaply to manufacturers, who then compete fiercely, resulting in a flood of cheap, often undifferentiated products.

Because all the Chinese manufacturers slam the market with goods they do n’t want to buy, these price wars cause collapsing profit margins. It also results in a flood of exports, as Chinese manufacturers try to&nbsp, sell their excess capacity overseas. And as a result, there is a mountain of corporate debt that obliges Chinese businesses to keep making interest payments even as they continue to be paid for it.

What’s interesting is that this is very similar to how&nbsp, Japan&nbsp, promoted manufacturing from the 1950s through the 1980s. As Chalmers Johnson explains in his book&nbsp,” Miti and the Japanese Miracle”, a key component of Japanese industrial policy was “overloaning” to manufacturers, using a combination of public and private banks.

Japan discovered that domestic overcapacity would only be a side effect of the domestic glut if it were to promote exports.

The main distinction between China and Japan is that the government of Japan attempted to counteract this overproduction by introducing price increases to prevent the country’s private companies from losing money. Cartels and other price-fixing measures – basically, antidotes to overcapacity – were one of the core features of Japan’s industrial policy.

China’s industrial policy, in contrast, &nbsp, leans in&nbsp, to overcapacity by dispensing&nbsp, absolutely massive government subsidies&nbsp, to manufacturers. This is why China’s overcapacity problem is much worse than Japan’s in the 20th century, which is why countries around the world are &nbsp, getting mad&nbsp, and&nbsp, putting up tariffs.

At the same time, China’s industrial policy is just exacerbating the price wars that are making its manufacturers unprofitable. Chinese consumers are unable to afford cheap goods because their employers had to lower their wages in order to sell more goods so they could pay off their loans, which is also hurting consumption.

Nobody benefits from creating an ocean of rusting metal and bankrupt companies because this system needs to change. Interestingly, though, Liu thinks tariffs are n’t the solution. She believes that developing nations should encourage China to voluntarily slash its exports and lessen their subsidies for its manufacturers:

China could start by developing more trade policies at the negotiation table rather than simply imposing tariffs. Since the escalation of the US-Chinese trade war, in 2018, Chinese scholars and officials have explored several policy options, including imposing voluntary export restrictions, revaluing the renminbi, promoting domestic consumption, expanding foreign direct investment, and investing in R &amp, D…

Apart from voluntary export restrictions, Beijing has already tried several of these options to some extent. It could kill several birds with one stone if the government started voluntary export controls, which would ease trade and potential political unrest with the US, force mature industries to consolidate and become more sustainable, and aid in the transfer of manufacturing capacity overseas to serve target markets directly.

However, Liu’s argument here goes against her own. She notes that China began exploring voluntary export restrictions, currency appreciation, domestic consumption promotion, etc. only because of Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods. There must be some kind of penalty for taking these steps, not for taking them, if the US wants to make Chinese policymakers consider these salutary options even more seriously.

In fact, earlier in her post, Liu lists tariffs as a big downside of China’s current overcapacity-promoting policies:

Since the mid-2010s, the problem has become a destabilizing force in international trade, as well. Chinese companies are pushing prices below the break-even point for producers in other countries by creating a glut of supply on the global market for many goods. Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, criticized Beijing for engaging in unfair trade practices by releasing ever-larger quantities of Chinese goods onto the European market at unbeatable prices in December 2023. In April, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that China’s overinvestment in steel, electric vehicles, and many other goods was threatening to cause “economic dislocation” around the globe. Yellen remarked that” China is simply too large” for the rest of the world to take advantage of this enormous capacity.

For the US and other countries to spontaneously and voluntarily remove the threat of tariffs would thus&nbsp, remove one of the major downsides&nbsp, of overcapacity. If China were to simply ignore the warning and dump its excess capacity onto the rest of the world, it would be pointless to try to wheedle it into enacting voluntary export restrictions.

Yes, it would benefit the&nbsp, people&nbsp, of China if their government changed the country’s economic model to raise the living standards of ordinary consumers instead of encouraging unprofitable overproduction. However, the government would have already done it if it had been important to the country’s general population.

Therefore, the Chinese government needs a second motivation to change its economic model. That incentive is tariffs. When Chinese companies find themselves unable to offload their goods at any price, the US and other countries can quicken the day of reckoning by preventing China from using the rest of the world as a release mechanism for its overproduction. The Chinese government will have to determine how to reduce production in response to that assessment.

If China agrees to a voluntary export ban and increases its currency, the US and other nations can make an offer to remove tariffs at that point. But without the” stick” of tariffs to force China to deal with its own overcapacity, nothing is likely to change.

China’s tariffs could spur development in the Global South and possibly even the US.

Another significant benefit could China’s tariffs have for the rest of the world. One way for Chinese companies to partially avoid tariffs is to move their factories out of China to other countries, like Vietnam, Mexico, or Morocco.

Because China’s businesses are required to pay the labor, land, and energy costs in the nation where they set up their factories, this results in a slightly lower revenue. But Chinese companies still get to sell materials, parts, and components to their overseas assemblers, and they still get to keep the profits. So they get to&nbsp, partially&nbsp, avoid the impact of tariffs.

The US and other countries could close this partial loophole, if they really wanted to, by imposing tariffs on goods made by Chinese-owned&nbsp, companies&nbsp, instead of just on goods made in&nbsp, China. In order to avoid being caught up in the tariff regime, Chinese companies would attempt to establish elaborate systems of shell companies and foreign partners.

However, in the end, selling goods to America and other tariff-free nations would cause Chinese companies to become so congested that they might abandon their jobs and head elsewhere.

However, if the tariff-paying nations do n’t close this loophole, or only partially close it, such as by imposing tariffs on Chinese-made goods but not Chinese brands, it will be highly motivating for Chinese companies to set up factories abroad. In fact, as&nbsp, The Economist reports, this is already happening on a large scale:

]China’s ] greenfield FDI ( building a new mine or factory, say, rather than buying one ) surged to a record$ 162bn last year, up from$ 50bn a year before…Nearly three-quarters of that was in manufacturing …

By moving their production from China to other developing nations, some Chinese companies are attempting to circumvent trade restrictions. That is an approach long taken by Chinese solar firms, which were, in effect, locked out of the American market in 2012 by anti-dumping duties. America imports almost no solar panels directly from China, but buys lots from South-East Asia, where Chinese firms like JinkoSolar, Trina Solar and Longi, the world’s three largest producers of solar modules, have built big factories…

That approach is now being used in other sectors, which accounts for Chinese companies ‘ exploding manufacturing overseas. Although some factories are being built in the West, the lion’s share of activity is in the global south, home to nine of China’s top ten destinations for greenfield FDI last year… In July BYD, a Chinese electric-vehicle company, opened a new car factory in Thailand, its first in South-East Asia. Chinese battery company CTL is reportedly looking into investments in Morocco and Turkey as well as expanding production in South-East Asia.

And here is The Economist’s chart of where the Chinese investment is going:

It’s difficult not to see this as a good thing. The nations where China is investing are generally quite a bit poorer than China, excluding Saudi Arabia and Kazakhstan, which are obviously just energy plays.

Mexico is still slightly richer, but it’s stagnant.

In other words, these are all nations that could benefit greatly from Chinese manufacturing investments. China is becoming a mature economy, while Vietnam, Indonesia, Egypt, and Morocco still badly need the growth in living standards that foreign-owned factories help provide.

And it ‘s&nbsp, tariffs&nbsp, in the US and other countries that are making this happen. Other factors, such as rising Chinese labor costs and sluggish domestic demand, are influencing Chinese companies ‘ plans to set up factories overseas, according to The Economist, but tariffs are proving to be the driving force.

Many strong factors bias Chinese companies toward keeping their factories in China – lack of language barriers, ease of navigating local regulations, political pressure, and so on. The key motivation is a spread of wealth throughout the developing world through tariffs, which help to break this home bias.

Cynics may now say that Chinese companies will only export high-quality components to themselves while preserving high-quality assembly work there. Indeed, multinational corporations have done to China for a long period of time with this exact strategy!

As recently as the early 2010s, many Chinese factories&nbsp, were still stuck&nbsp, doing low-value assembly work on high-value components made in Korea, Taiwan, Japan, or the US, using machines made in Germany or Japan. It was only recently that China started doing more of the high-value component manufacturing, design, branding, and marketing.

But if China could climb up the value chain, then so can Vietnam, Indonesia, Morocco and Egypt. The factories that make the factories for China will eventually learn enough of the trade’s nuances to start producing more and more of the harder, more valuable goods.

The US and other tariff-paying nations can aid in accelerating that process. By putting tariffs on Chinese components, &nbsp, but not on Chinese brands, they can incentivize Chinese companies to move more of their high-value work to poorer countries in Asia, the Middle East and Latin America. Companies like BYD will only be able to avoid tariffs if they transfer their technology to developing nations.

In other words, tariffs by the US, Europe, and others might help usher in&nbsp, the next phase of globalization. They’re a costly, ineffective policy that occasionally backfires, but it’s still a fair price to pay to reverse the unsustainable, toxic pattern of China-centric globalization that persisted in the 2000s and 2010s.

1 Of course, you can get around this problem by only putting tariffs finished consumer goods, like cars or appliances. But the problem is that intermediate goods are &nbsp, most of what China sells to the U. S., and since&nbsp, one primary goal of tariffs&nbsp, is to secure US supply chains against a possible war, then tariffs on intermediate goods are unfortunately necessary.

This&nbsp, article&nbsp, was first published on Noah Smith’s Noahpinion&nbsp, Substack and is republished with kind permission. Read the original here and become a Noahopinion&nbsp, subscriber&nbsp, here.

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David Yong from Netflix’s Super Rich In Korea gets fresh charges linked to false tax invoices

On Thursday ( Aug 8 ), Singaporean businessman David Yong, who starred in the Netflix series Super Rich In Korea, was charged with two additional tax-fraud related charges.

Evergreen Group Holdings, a 37-year-old chief executive officer, is accused of aiding Jolene, a person, in obtaining Evergreen GH’s false documents.

He reportedly stooped Ms. Low to prepare two income payments that Evergreen Assets Management issued in May and October of that year.

The invoices allegedly included fees for Evergreen Venture Capital’s furniture sales, as well as for Tay Ai Chern Pearlrie’s furniture sales, both.

Yong, whose legal name is Yong Khung Lin, was second accused of attempting to defraud a tax receipt from Evergreen Assets Management dated September 1, 2021 on August 3rd.

The receipt allegedly contained a Mr. Roy Teo’s claim that he had sold a lot of household goods and gadgets.

In his potential as an official of Evergreen GH, one of the businesses under Evergreen Group Holdings, he allegedly assisted the misrepresentation with the intention to mislead across the three costs.

Although his solicitor, Sunil Sudheesan from Quahe Woo &amp, Palmer, argued for it, he has been remanded since August 3 and has been denied parole on Thursday.

If convicted of abetting the fabrication of receipts, he faces up to 10 years ‘ prison, a great, or both per cost.

On the Netflix series that explores the lives of extremely wealthy people who have established bases in Korea, Yong had declared himself to be one of” Singapore’s top 1 % rich.”

SUSPECTED MISUSE OF INVESTORS ‘ Money

The police announced in a statement on August 3 that Evergreen Group Holdings ‘ business activities were being looked into by its Commercial Affairs Department ( CAD ).

The police said that the studies started because there were concerns about the use of shareholders ‘ funds.

Through the issuance of promissory notes that promised a 10 % annual interest rate, various Evergreen Group Holdings-affiliated businesses were generating money.

According to them, these bank notes, legal tenders where one party promises to pay a certain amount of funds to another party, may have been issued in violation of the Securities and Futures Act.

Companies under the name include Evergreen Grp Holdings, Evergreen GH- formerly known as Evergreen Assets Management ( Singapore ), and Everventures.

According to Evergreen Group Holdings ‘ site, the company was established in the 1990s and presently has a presence in Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Cambodia, Vietnam and Malaysia.

It started out as a forest business and is now involved in funding, electrical, real property and life industries.

Other than Yong, the authorities said they had arrested another 37-year-old person from the bank’s management in relation to the research.

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MYCentre4IR and Bursa Malaysia launch Global Innovation Challenge to accelerate ESG adoption

  • Opportunities for pilot projects will be provided for the five most promising thoughts.
  • attempts to discover creative solutions that address issues in the sector.

Partnering with Bursa Malaysia, one of Southeast Asia's largest bourses, and powered by UpLink, The Forum’s open innovation platform, this Innovation Challenge leverages the strengths and networks of these prestigious organisations.

leng The Malaysia (Innov Centre4IR tion ESG Ch Innovation llen Challenge ( e) as bee lau Innovation Challenge ) has been ched, accor d ng to t h launched, according to the Malaysia Centre4IR.

This initiative, in collaboration with Bursa Malaysia, is powered by the World Economic Forum’s ( The Forum ) UpLink platform, which invites startups and entrepreneurs from Malaysia and around the world to submit their cutting-edge digital solutions to enhance the efforts of five Malaysian Public Listed Companies ( PLCs ), namely CJ Century Logistics Holdings Bhd, Globetronics Technology Bhd, Malayan Banking Bhd, REDtone Digital Bhd, and Sunway Innovation Labs ( representing Sunway Group ).

( An expression of interest was made following the five PLCs ‘ interest following an ESG Tech Based Innovation Workshop held in Bursa Malaysia. )

Empowering entrepreneurs, driving shift

This Innovation Challenge seeks to join beautiful thoughts and promising startups with Malaysian PLCs in various sectors such as agriculture, construction, economic services, logistics and production. The issue seeks to find creative solutions that address business issues, which might boost Malaysia’s economy and the environment, and could also boost competition.

Strategic engagement

Partnering with Bursa Malaysia, one of Southeast Asia’s largest bourses, and driven by UpLink, The Forum’s available technology system, this problem leverages the strengths and networks of these renowned organisations.

The association with UpLink will help the problem have a global reach and draw high-quality submissions from all over the world. The Innovation Challenge promotes the development and implementation of systems that advance ESG principles while also providing a significant opportunity for PLCs to investigate business venture capital practices in line with Pillars 2, 4, and 5 of Bursa Malaysia’s Public Listed Companies Transformation Programme. This initiative helps PLCs become more responsible in addition to supporting businesses and entrepreneurs.

Five arches, which include:

  • Creating Purpose and Performance-Driven PLCs,
  • Being Responsible, Socially Accountable and Ethical PLCs,
  • Increasing investor ties and customer management,
  • Being Online Enabled, and,
  • Contributing towards Nation Building

Focus places

The Innovation Challenge places an emphasis on net-zero solutions and operation technology:

CJ Century Logistics Holdings Bhd

  • Data set for shipping fleet management
  • predicted model for conservation planning and information analysis

Globetronics Technology Bhd

  • Performance progress in manufacturing
  • AI-assisted online manufacturing helpers

Malayan Banking Bhd

  • Building environment endurance: Options in climate mitigation and adaptation
  • Waste to wealth: assisting SMEs in cutting back on their ongoing waste costs

REDtone Digital Bhd

  • Making use of the Internet of Things ( IoT ) for smarter farms in Malaysia
  • Unlocking AI’s potential for Malaysian agriculture

Sunway Group is represented by Sunway Innovation Labs.

  • Preventative health and well-being
  • Circular economy

Application and selection process

Applications are now open via UpLink and will close on 31 Aug. A panel of industry experts and representatives from MYCentre4IR, Bursa Malaysia, and the World Economic Forum will evaluate the submissions. On November 7, the Innovation Challenge will culminate with a Demo Day at Bursa Malaysia, where five of the most promising ideas will be given funding opportunities for pilot projects and access to a network of business leaders and investors.

For more information about the Malaysia Centre4IR ESG Innovation Challenge and how to participate, please visit the challenge page here or contact]email&nbsp, protected].

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Analysis: The Anwar government’s growing push against Big Tech raises questions of its true intentions

In what experts have called a “green flood” attributed to social media advertising and a decline in confidence in the ruling BN as the primary supporter of Malay right, the Malay vote significantly increased in favor of the criticism Perikatan Nasional ( PN) during GE15.

In addition, the unity government suffered in six state elections held in August 2023, which saw the opposition consolidating its hold on the status quo in opposition to conventional government rulings.

However, Mr. Anwar appears to be more socially stable now that the legislature speaker has mandated that six opposition MPs who pledged assistance for the premier in exchange for seat allocations were not required to resign.

By February 2028, Malaysia may hold its next general election. Mr Anwar’s group has stated its purpose to keep him as prime secretary.

SILENCING CRITICISM

The licensing program, according to Mr. Praba Ganesan, CEO of KUASA, may serve as Mr. Anwar’s unity government’s response to online “vitriol” directed at the incumbent.

Pakatan-BN, according to a statement he made in an opinion piece published by the Malay Mail on August 1,” Naturally, Pakatan-BN wants the option to upend PN’s social media if it does well during the election time.”

No sane government, according to Mr. Ganesan, will ignore social media and its responsibility to regulate like platforms, and can censor it to “protect its individual rule.”

” Malaysia’s work are not special nor disconnected but it worries however. particularly when phrases like “kill change” are frequently used, he continued.

The MCMC clarified the group licensing framework for social media platforms on August 1 by stating that governmental action has become “essential” in light of the recent rise in online harm.

According to MCMC, the school license is already in place and was recently exempt from social media. Buyers of licenses are required to adhere to MCMC instructions issued under the Communications and Multimedia Act or related policy and have “robust plans” against website damages.

If a social media platform or messaging service fails to obtain the class license, it could cost up to five years in jail and a maximum fine of RM500,000 ( US$ 111, 235 ). Users could also be fined RM1, 000 for each day they remain unregulated.

According to MCMC, directions can only be issued “arbitrarily and must follow due process,” and parties will be given an “opportunity to become heard” prior to a course being issued. According to the statement, events can even issue orders at an appeals court and then have them charm.

Mr Ganesan, but, said a “niggling” problem remains:” If a program fails to procure a licensing, does it begin to work in Malaysia”?

PLAY BALL PLAYERS SOCIAL MEDIA

The government has no aspirations of doing so, according to Communications Minister Mr. Fahmi, despite Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who is also the BN president, who has threatened to boycott noncompliance with social media platforms.

Mr Fahmi earlier acknowledged social public’s price in a state like Malaysia, which uses a wide range of such programs.

Regarding Malaysia’s conscious effort to regulate social press and the volume of operation calls it has received, CNA has reached out to Meta, TikTok, and Google-owned YouTube.

To determine the number of users, MCMC has chosen the systems that are deemed to include eight million customers in the nation, but instead will primarily use information from its “official studies” and another “publicly accessible and reliable data points.”

Local advertising, however, reported that these organizations include Meta’s Facebook and WhatsApp, Bytedance’s TikTok as well as Elon Musk’s X, among people. &nbsp,

In a social media-crazy area with institutions who are also interested in regulating it, Dr. Benjamin Loh, a senior lecturer in advertising and communication at Taylor’s University, thinks programs have much choice but to comply.

According to him,” I think the systems would probably accept because the rest of the place might experience a possible pyramid consequence,” he told CNA, noting that Indonesia and the Philippines are the main social media users.

” Many of these older tech companies are now in their payoff phase, meaning they ca n’t risk losing markets”.

The biggest social media platforms appear to be ready to play catch up for the time being.

MCMC statistics indicate that Meta-run platforms Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp have a attack demand compliance level of 79 to 88 per share, while TikTok is at 76 per share.

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