New Zealand companies and the Government need to decide whether competitive pricing offered by China's Huawei makes subjecting this country to the risk of economic espionage worthwhile, an Australian security expert says.
John Lee, of the University of Sydney's Centre for International Security Studies, said he supported a report from the United States House Intelligence Committee warning US firms not to do business with Huawei and ZTE, another Chinese telecommunications firm, over fears of spying, corruption and links to China's military and government.
"Any government has to go through an analysis over whether the competitive cost structures that Huawei can offer is offset by the threat of economic espionage," Lee said.
He said there was no evidence linking Huawei to any cases of industrial espionage, which involves spying for commercial purposes.
"But we do know that the level of sophistication of espionage [in China] suggests there is both state and corporate collusion and Huawei is one of the candidates that could potentially be part of that collusion."