HomeNewsOpinionAerospace is a bigger threat to US trade than Chinese chips

Aerospace is a bigger threat to US trade than Chinese chips

Beijing's C919 single-aisle passenger jet is setting the aerospace industry abuzz  having won orders for a 1000 planes just months after its first commercial flight.  In the duopolistic market, China winning orders — even from domestic clients — has a cost. Each Comac plane is a lost order to Airbus or Boeing. And that pain is being felt, especially in the US

October 06, 2023 / 11:23 IST
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Aerospace
Even as China’s aerospace sector has sought to procure technology through the front door with joint ventures and licensing deals, Beijing has been very busy acquiring know-how through the back door. (Representational image)

US teeth-gnashing over China’s development of a domestic semiconductor industry is drowning out an overlooked threat to trade, one which has far bigger implications for American jobs and could undermine national and economic security.

A statement from China Eastern Airlines Corp last week points to an overwhelming trend in the world’s second-largest economy. Commercial Aircraft Corp of China Ltd (Comac) landed orders for 100 of its C919 jets from the carrier just months after the aircraft model made its first commercial flight. Both companies are state-owned enterprises and although the list price is $9.9 billion, the actual deal is likely much smaller after a steep discount. The single-aisle passenger plane is a local equivalent to Boeing Co’s 737 series or Airbus SE’s A320Neo.

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Comac has made extraordinary progress since it was founded in 2008 as a joint venture of other SOEs including the Aviation Industry Corporation of China. Its first offering is the ARJ21, a medium-sized regional jet that was developed by AVIC. But it’s the C919 that is setting the industry abuzz. The latest deal from China Eastern, the nation’s second-largest carrier by fleet size, takes total orders to around 1,000.

In the duopolistic market of global aircraft manufacturers, China winning orders — even from domestic clients — doesn’t come without a cost. Each plane supplied by Comac is a lost order to Airbus or Boeing. And that pain is being felt, especially in the US.