(WSJ) After five years, China is putting the finishing touches on a
sweeping new system to punish and reward companies for their corporate
behavior. But foreigners worry that, amid the continuing U.S.-China trade dispute, Beijing will use its new corporate “social credit” system as a weapon against international businesses.
While Beijing’s better-known plans for a social-credit system for individuals have
stirred privacy concerns, a parallel effort to monitor corporate
behavior would similarly consolidate data on credit ratings and other
characteristics, collected by various central and local government
agencies, into one central database, according to China’s State Council.
The system is set to fully start next year.
An algorithm would then determine to what degree companies are
complying with the country’s various laws and regulations. In some
cases, companies could be punished by losing access to preferential
policies or facing stricter levels of administrative punishment, a
document from the State Administration for Market Regulation showed.
Analysts said that other punishments could include denial of access to
land purchases, certain loans and procurement bidding.
The imminent nationwide implementation of Beijing’s corporate
social-credit system is unnerving foreign businesses, which have been
bracing for further countermeasures from Beijing as the trade war
continues to take unexpected twists and turns.
Beijing said in late May that it is drawing up a blacklist
of entities it deems unreliable in apparent retaliation against
Washington’s campaign targeting Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei
Technologies Co.
“It makes the instruments of the social-credit system usable as a
tool in the trade conflict,” said
Björn Conrad,
chief executive and co-founder of Sinolytics, a China-focused
consulting firm that is publishing a report Wednesday on Beijing’s new
social-credit system, together with the European Union Chamber of
Commerce in China.
Mr. Conrad said some of the language used in recently released draft
rules for a blacklist of heavily distrusted entities—which is a part of
the corporate social-credit system—echoed the Beijing authorities’
warnings about their planned unreliable foreign-entities blacklist,
suggesting that the two efforts are intertwined.
A company’s social credit could affect the individual credit score of
the company’s key personnel and vice versa, according to the EU Chamber
report—a point of particular concern for executives. A company’s social
credit could also be influenced by the conduct of its suppliers, the
report said, and getting removed from a blacklist could take years.
A separate report released Tuesday on the corporate social-credit
system by Beijing-based consulting firm Trivium China, whose clients
include foreign companies, doesn’t link it to the U.S.-China trade war
but said the system “will provide the government with vast amounts of
systematized data,” and warned about the possibility of Beijing
“co-opting technology to enforce political orthodoxy.”
Beijing’s social-credit system is set to add to the complexities of
doing business in China, a tantalizing but frustrating market.
The amount of data collected by authorities administering the
corporate social-credit system would give them “a massive X-ray of the
Chinese economic landscape,” said
Jörg Wuttke,
president of the EU Chamber in China. The chamber’s report said
that a foreign company blacklisted by tax authorities in, say, Hubei
province could find that information used by other government agencies
in other provinces to punish the company.
While some analysts are hopeful that the system could also allow for
more objective standards to be applied to foreign and domestic
companies, the new regulations will likely mean higher compliance costs
and more uncertainty for foreign businesses.
Some of China’s biggest and best-known corporate giants are deeply
involved in the rollout of the new corporate social-credit system:
Huawei, e-commerce and cloud services operator
Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd.
and mobile services giant
Tencent Holdings
Ltd.
are all named as members of a consortium developing one of the
system’s key databases, according to a Chinese government procurement
notice.
These companies, as well as the government agencies leading the
implementation of the corporate social-credit system—the State Council,
State Administration for Market Regulation, the National Development and
Reform Commission and the Ministry of Commerce—didn’t immediately
respond to requests for comments. China’s social-credit system has been
under development since 2014, well before the U.S.-China trade war. The
State Council published a blueprint for the program, which it said would
“build sincerity” in economic, social and political activity.
Besides credit ratings, the system incorporates various blacklists of
companies caught doing something illegal or undesirable, such as
spreading information deemed inappropriate online or violating safety
standards, according to the separate reports by Trivium and the EU
Chamber. The system also includes lists of companies with great credit
scores. Some of the credit information would be publicly accessible
online.
Source: Wall Street Journal By Yoko Kubota
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