The 3 pillars of China's booming start-up ecosystem
来源:World Economic Forum;发表于:2021-07-09;人气指数:485
The 3 pillars of China's booming start-up
ecosystem
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/06/china-booming-startup-ecosystem/
A gong at the listing ceremony of the first batch of
companies on Star Market, China's new NASDAQ-style tech board in Shanghai.
Image: Reuters
17 Jun 2021
Saemoon Yoon
Community Lead, Technology Pioneers, World Economic Forum
*China's transition from manufacturing hub to tech hotbed has largely been
driven by government policies.
*Collaboration between industry and academia in Zhongguancun, China’s
Silicon Valley, has created a nurturing environment for start-ups.
*The country's immense domestic market is an environment in which
competition drives success.
Once known as the “world’s factory”, China has risen to become an economic
superpower in recent decades. In fact, the nation is expected to become the
world’s largest economy in 2027 in terms of nominal GDP. Aside from its sheer
size, China has successfully transformed its economy from manufacturing towards
nurturing an environment to enable high-tech innovations: It is home to more
than 150 unicorns, leading the world in the field of AI, robotics and computer
vision, to name just a few.
This start-up scene wasn’t built overnight, but through decades of efforts
by the Chinese government, state-owned enterprises, large corporations,
universities and many more stakeholders. Here is a breakdown of the secret ingredients
that have made China a tech powerhouse, through the lens of the World Economic
Forum’s own community of trailblazing start-ups, this year’s cohort of
the Technology Pioneers.
1. Innovation-friendly policies
The Chinese government played a crucial role in laying out foundations for
innovation. In 1978, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping lured foreign investments and
capital with the Open Door Policy, aimed to encourage foreign businesses
to set up offices and do business in China. Alongside this policy, the
government also created Special Economic Zones in four different regions,
including Shenzhen, to further attract foreign business. The resulting urban
growth allowed these cities to position themselves as attractive start-up hubs
for the 21st century.
The government also created the Chinese Government Guidance Funds to
facilitate public-private investment. These funds – collaborations between
central, provincial and local government – focus on investment into industries
with emerging and high-potential technologies, including AI and robotics, as
well as the digital transformation of traditional industries.
China’s next five-year plan has highlighted industrial internet and
domestic industrial software as key focus areas for government policy. As a
result, regional governments are rolling out plans, supported by billions in
capital for subsidy schemes, trying to encourage small to large factories to
undergo digitalization. “Digital transformation is one of the key targets that
all governmental organizations must push to meet in the latest five-year plan.
On the entrepreneur side, government has rolled out tax and incubation policies
that make it much easier to launch start-ups and accelerate their growth,” said
Yuxiang Zhou, CEO of Black Lake Technologies, a tech-driven platform for
factories.
2. Academia and industry collaboration
Zhongguancun, China’s Silicon Valley, emerged as a hotbed of innovation
due to the Open Door Policy. Located in north-west Beijing, the district has
been known as “Electronics Avenue” since the 80s, eventually becoming the
Zhongguancun Science and Technology Zone. Lenovo emerged from Chinese Academy
of Sciences, and global tech giants including Google, Intel, AMD and Oracle
built their Chinese headquarters and research centres here. More than 20,000
high-tech enterprises and start-ups and nearly half of China’s unicorn
companies are based in the district, benefiting from an annual growth rate
of over 25% in the last decade .
Zhongguancun’s success stems from an abundance of high-tech talent flowing
from academic institutions, such as Peking University, Tsinghua University and
Chinese Academy of Sciences, strongly equipped with the start-up mindset. A
good example in practice is Tsinghua Holdings, a university-owned entity
that fosters the ecosystem in which academia, industry and research
collaborate. It has commercialized 56 national key scientific achievements and
contributed to over 62 key technologies.
On the industry side, it is nearly impossible to imagine the Chinese start-up
scene without BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent), the Chinese version of FAMGA.
According to a report by The Economist, about 80% of Chinese
start-ups received investment from BAT companies by the time they reach $5
billion in valuation. “Getting funded by Baidu Ventures, who truly believe in
the strength of AI technology, opened the doors to other great opportunities and
added further credibility to our name. Within three months after Baidu's
investment in us, we have received funding from two other investors, and our
valuation has doubled,” said Yili Wu, CEO of Sandstar, an AI platform that
provides computer vision technology to the retail industry.
It is interesting to note, though, that these Chinese tech giants tend not
to invest in the same start-up. This forces start-ups to choose which side they
will be on at an early stage, potentially impacting their long-term growth
trajectory and direction.
Government stimulus has encouraged the development of
Chinese tech hubs. Image: PwC
3. Market size, speed and culture
With a population of 1.5 billion, the domestic market is big enough for
Chinese start-ups to not have to immediately expand internationally, unlike in
a small country like Israel. Once an entrepreneur manages to position the
company on the leaderboard within China, the amount of capital and support that
can be attracted is huge, further fueling growth. On the minus side, start-up
founders need to be mindful of hundreds of competitors striving towards the
same goal. The 996 working hour system – the practice where employees
work from 09.00 to 21.00, six days a week – is one sign of this intense
environment.
“The size and accessibility of the large Chinese market provides
attractive scale and opportunity. For example, there are over 200 million school-age
students in China, compared to 50 million in the US, providing unique
opportunities for start-ups in the education sector to scale very quickly. One
the other hand, the Chinese start-up culture is hyper-competitive and fast,
meaning it is vital to offer differentiation while being agile,” said Guan
Wang, CEO of Learnable, providing interactive and artificial intelligence
AI solutions for education, finance, manufacturing and public services.
This is also partly what fuels the rapid maturation of Chinese start-ups.
For instance, Nio (automobile manufacture) and Ke.com (a
real estate platform) both completed their initial public offering on NASDAQ
within just five years. Once ready, many companies aim to either get listed on
NASDAQ or the domestic Star Market stock exchange in Shanghai. However, a
flurry of companies attempting to list on the latter have recently been forced
to cancel their plans following increased scrutiny of the tech sector by
regulators.
An interesting side effect of China’s tech growth has been a shift in the
country’s attitude to risk-taking. The country has traditionally been viewed as
a risk-averse society, driven by Confucian values, a focus on job security and
making savings. However, this is rapidly changing among the younger
generations, who are unafraid of taking on new challenges and confronting
failure. Driven by a highly competitive landscape, entrepreneurs take prompt
actions from idea phase and experiment with innovative concepts immediately in
the market. “Here in China, many are willing to take high risks and live their
entrepreneur dream to the fullest. They are working with a ‘try fast and fail
fast’ mindset, and function within a more flexible legal environment than in
the West in terms of data privacy and security,” said Charles Bark, CEO
of Hinounou, a digital healthcare platform trying to help seniors live
healthier lives.
Though there are pros and cons to all the aforementioned factors governing
China’s start-up ecosystem, one thing that will be clear is that the country’s
influence in the global innovation landscape will strengthen with continued
economic growth. As China recovers after the pandemic, tech industry eyes will
be on the way it nurtures innovation and collaborates with other international
players to consolidate its role.