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International News Title: CHINA! Flashback Bill Gates Says His Axed Nuclear Reactor Is a Trade War Warning When Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates tried to build an experimental nuclear reactor in China, his plan was thwarted by U.S. foreign investment restrictions. At Bloombergs New Economy Forum this week, Gates described the scuttled reactor project as a five-year setback for technology. A chorus of industry leaders, economists and researchers echoed Gates cautionary tale during the event in Beijing. Trade tensions between China and the U.S. have spilled into business and economics in tangible ways, they warned, including a slower pace of technological progress and scientific research. If relations between the two superpowers dont get back on track soon, were in danger of going back to the dark ages, said Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang. We need to reestablish some level of trust between initiatives that can really promote and benefit the people of two countries. Open systems will inevitably win out over closed ones, Yang argued. He also cautioned U.S. companies that doing business in China may require some uncomfortable compromises. The challenge with doing business across countries with different value systems is really starting to be more apparent, he said. Foreign companies that choose to operate in China have to face the fact that you have to comply with their rules. Several Chinese tech company officials said they still wanted to work with American companies and that together, the two countries could further technological progress. Were in the 5G era, lets not go back to the 2G or 3G era, where we had different standards, said Lenovo Chief Executive Officer Yang Yuanqing. Cooling political relations between Washington D.C. and Beijing have slowed international collaboration. In May, the U.S. subjected Huawei Technologies Co. to a variety of sanctions, citing security concerns. The company and other Chinese tech sector boosters believe the move was motivated more by fear of Chinas rising influence over fifth-generation networking gear and artificial intelligence. Key Speakers and Interviews From The Second Day At the Bloomberg New Economy Forum Sanjay Mehrotra speaks at the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Beijing, on Nov. 22.Photographer: Takaaki Iwabu/Bloomberg Huawei is Micron Technology Inc.s largest customer, and on Thursday in Beijing, Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra told Bloomberg TV that the company has no plan to move U.S.-based manufacturing out of the country to facilitate supply to China. Mehrotra was one of more than a dozen top tech company executives to attend the two-day forum, which was organized by Bloomberg Media Group, a division of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News. Most were cautiously optimistic that one way or another, tech companies would find a way to work across borders. Its important to differentiate between the stance of the U.S. government and that of industry, said Parag Khanna, Managing Partner at FutureMap. Theres always been a silicon curtain when it comes to social media for U.S. companies, he said, referring to the separate ecosystems that have developed in the U.S. and China. But on hardware side, thats the last thing they want. He said the head of supply chain at a major U.S. semiconductor supplier told him recently that they dont have a plan B for international revenue and access to a large important market like China. We have to find a way to keep selling to China. Zhu Min, chairman of the National Institute of Financial Research at Tsinghua University, put a finer point on it. Chinese imports accounted for about 65% of the $480 billion global chip market, he pointed out. If trade friction stops chip exports to China, I think the whole global chip industry will break down, Zhu said. While global business leaders may want to sidestep the political and trade tensions and simply get back to making money, that no longer seems possible, said Diana Choyleva, chief economist at Enodo Economics. This is about a clash of ideology in terms of how the different systems view the internet, data, privacy and digital governance, she said. Whoever wins the technology race will be the global dominant power.
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Why is it so important for Bill Gates to aid and transfer technology to the Chinese Communist Party?
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