Calgary Herald

China strives to become leader in artificial intelligen­ce industry

Combined effort of business, university and army offers ‘competitiv­e advantage’

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BEIJING China aims to make the artificial intelligen­ce industry a “new, important” driver of economic expansion by 2020, according to a developmen­t plan issued by the State Council.

Policy-makers want to be global leaders, with the AI industry generating more than 400 billion yuan ($74 billion) of output per year by 2025, according to an announceme­nt from the cabinet late Thursday. Key developmen­t areas include AI software and hardware, intelligen­t robotics and vehicles, virtual reality and augmented reality, it said.

“Artificial intelligen­ce has become the new focus of interna- tional competitio­n,” the report said. “We must take the initiative to firmly grasp the next stage of AI developmen­t to create a new competitiv­e advantage, open the developmen­t of new industries and improve the protection of national security.”

The plan highlights China’s ambition to become a world power backed by its technology business giants, research centres and military, which are investing heavily in AI. Globally, the technology will contribute as much as US$15.7 trillion to output by 2030, according to a PwC report last month. That’s more than the current combined output of China and India.

“The positive economic ripples could be pretty substantia­l,” said Kevin Lau, a senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong.

“The simple fact that China is embracing AI and having explicit targets for its developmen­t over the next decade is certainly positive for the continued upgrading of the manufactur­ing sector and overall economic transforma­tion.”

AI will have a significan­t influence on society and the internatio­nal community, according to an opinion piece by East China University of Political Science and Law professor Gao Qiqi published Wednesday in the People’s Daily, the flagship newspaper of the Communist Party.

PwC found that the world’s second-biggest economy stands to gain more than any other from AI because of the high proportion of output derived from manufactur­ing.

Another report from Accenture and Frontier Economics last month estimated that AI could increase China’s annual growth rate by 1.6 percentage point to 7.9 per cent by 2035 in terms of gross value added, a close proxy for GDP, adding more than $7 trillion.

The State Council directive also called for China’s businesses, universiti­es and armed forces to work more closely in developing the technology.

“We will further implement the strategy of integratin­g military and civilian developmen­ts,” it said. “Scientific research institutes, universiti­es, enterprise­s and military units should communicat­e and coordinate.”

More AI profession­als and scientists should be trained, the State Council said. It also called for promoting interdisci­plinary research to connect AI with other subjects such as cognitive science, psychology, mathematic­s and economics.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP PHOTO ?? The Ares is a humanoid robot designed by Chinese students. China has announced plans to make AI technology a priority.
NG HAN GUAN/AP PHOTO The Ares is a humanoid robot designed by Chinese students. China has announced plans to make AI technology a priority.

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