As America obsesses over ChatGPT, it’s losing the race with China on tech in 37 out of 44 key areas, study funded by the State Department says

Authored by finance.yahoo.com and submitted by fabstr1

The cutting edge of technology in 2023 is artificial intelligence, with the (sometimes creepy) ChatGPT nearing an “iPhone moment” as a revolutionary tool that is being adopted at record speed. But it could just be a sideshow to the real story: China’s emergence as the world’s tech superpower. From Baidu’s Ernie Bot to electric vehicle maker BYD, China has had an answer for almost every technological development taking on the world. The U.S. has responded with trade restrictions that limit Beijing’s access to critical materials for making chips used to power gadgets. And President Xi Jinping has, in turn, advocated for China to become self-reliant when it comes to technology. A think tank study partly funded by the U.S. State Department found that China’s lead is “sometimes stunning” and Western democracies are floundering.

The study by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), based in Canberra, found that in 37 out of 44 areas covering crucial technology such as defense, space, artificial intelligence, and robotics, China is clearly in the lead. And while the U.S. occupies second place in most categories, China is far ahead thanks to its stellar research, knowledge imported from overseas, and years of policy work geared toward tech talent and investments.

"Western democracies are losing the global technological competition, including the race for scientific and research breakthroughs," said the ASPI report, which tracked “high-impact” research based on citation numbers to measure the areas in which countries were having breakthroughs. The think tank urged Western governments to invest more in research and development.

The project was funded by the State Department’s Global Engagement Center and a grant from the Special Competitive Studies Project. ASPI also said a 2021 project on critical technologies funded by Australia’s Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet helped inform its direction.

The few areas where the U.S. remains the leader include vaccines and quantum computing, the study found. It did note, however, that China and the U.S. are far above any other country worldwide. Other tech powers such as the U.K., India, Germany, and Japan are trailing in the distance, with smaller pools of research and investment in their respective technology fields.

“It’s important that we seek to fill this gap so we don’t face a future in which one or two countries dominate new and emerging industries.” the report said. “In the long term, China’s leading research position means that it has set itself up to excel not just in current technological development in almost all sectors, but in future technologies that don’t yet exist.”

The report identified that China was boosting its knowledge from overseas, particularly in the “Five Eyes” countries—the U.K., the U.S., Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. Locally, the Chinese Academy of Sciences has won the top rank in several critical technologies identified by ASPI.

In the coming years, China could have a monopoly in 10 different fields ranging from electric batteries to 5G. ASPI cautioned that if China’s technological dominance is left unchecked, it could skew “global power and influence” in a way that is no longer transparent and available to public access or scrutiny.

ASPI did not immediately return Fortune’s request for comment.

The report comes as Xi Jinping renews his push for investments in domestic research and technology. Last year, he appointed a number of scientific experts in A.I., aerospace, and other fields to leadership positions in the Communist Party. In October, Xi famously used “research” several times during the CCP’s congress, emphasizing the role that technological advancement will have in coming years.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

hmmokby on April 2nd, 2023 at 20:50 UTC »

If China could establish the US university ecosystem and brain drain transfers, it wouldn't take long to overtake the US. In these matters, the USA is still advantageous and far ahead. But the difference is getting smaller. For the first time in the past years, the sum of scientific articles published in China, South Korea and Japan exceeded the United States and the gap was widening. The country that makes the biggest difference is China. Mega technology companies established in the last 30 or 40 years in the world were established either in the USA or in some countries in Asia. The biggest problem in this regard is Europe. They are losing their past performance.

TygarStyle on April 2nd, 2023 at 20:15 UTC »

I’m not sure who to believe here. Today’s Reuters article paints a different picture.

Breakingviews: Google giggles at China tech’s shrinking act

While all companies in China work at the behest of the government where that is not the case with the US, I don’t see how a strong authoritarian grip on the tech sector can benefit China in the long run.

Zero-zero20 on April 2nd, 2023 at 16:09 UTC »

I can understand their worry on AI and robotics, but have the Chinese really jumped the US on space technology?