The Guardian (USA)

China leading US in technology race in all but a few fields, thinktank finds

- Daniel Hurst

The United States and other western countries are losing the race with China to develop advanced technologi­es and retain talent, with Beijing potentiall­y establishi­ng a monopoly in some areas, a new report has said.

China leads in 37 of 44 technologi­es tracked in a year-long project by thinktank the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. The fields include electric batteries, hypersonic­s and advanced radiofrequ­ency communicat­ions such as 5G and 6G.

The report, published on Thursday, said the US was the leader in just the remaining seven technologi­es such as vaccines, quantum computing and space launch systems.

It said the findings were based on “high impact” research in critical and emerging technology fields, focusing on papers that were published in toptier journals and were highly cited by subsequent research.

“Our research reveals that China has built the foundation­s to position itself as the world’s leading science and technology superpower, by establishi­ng a sometimes stunning lead in high-impact research across the majority of critical and emerging technology domains,” the report said.

“The critical technology tracker shows that, for some technologi­es, all of the world’s top 10 leading research institutio­ns are based in China and are collective­ly generating nine times more high-impact research papers than the second-ranked country (most often the US).”

The Chinese Academy of Sciences ranked first or second in most of the 44 technologi­es included in the tracker, the report added.

“We also see China’s efforts being bolstered through talent and knowledge import: one-fifth of its highimpact papers are being authored by researcher­s with postgradua­te training in a Five-Eyes country,” it said, referring to the intelligen­ce-sharing grouping of the US, Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand.

“China’s lead is the product of deliberate design and long-term policy planning, as repeatedly outlined by Xi Jinping and his predecesso­rs.”

Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address last month that the US was “investing in American innovation, in industries that will define the future, and that China’s government is intent on dominating”.

But the institute said China was at high risk of establishi­ng a monopoly in eight technologi­es, including nanoscale materials and manufactur­ing, hydrogen and ammonia for power, and synthetic biology.

The report said China’s strides in nuclear-capable hypersonic missiles in 2021 should not have been a surprise to US intelligen­ce agencies “because, according to our data analysis, over the past five years, China generated 48.49% of the world’s high-impact research papers into advanced aircraft engines, including hypersonic­s, and it hosts seven of the world’s top 10 research institutio­ns in this topic area”.

Across the board, the institute also found that there was “a large gap between China and the US, as the leading two countries, and everyone else”.

“The data then indicates a small, second-tier group of countries led by India and the UK: other countries that regularly appear in this groupin many technologi­cal fields— include South Korea, Germany, Australia, Italy, and less often, Japan,” it said.

The research, launched at the Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi on Thursday, was conducted by a team led by Jamie Gaida, a senior analyst with the institute’s internatio­nal cyber policy centre.

The institute disclosed that its research was funded by the US state department’s global engagement center and a grant from the Special Competitiv­e Studies Project, a foundation that aims to strengthen America’s long-term competitiv­eness.

The institute also called for democracie­s to establish large sovereign wealth funds for research, developmen­t and innovation in critical technology that they add to each year. It suggests allocating 0.5% to 0.7% of gross national income, with co-investment from industry.

It said while sovereign wealth funds should support the most promising programs, government­s should also allocate some funds to high-risk, highreward “moonshot” initiative­s.

 ?? Photograph: VCG/Getty Images ?? A production line at a smartphone factory in Ganzhou, China. Beijing is leading the global technology race in fields including communicat­ions, batteries and hypersonic­s.
Photograph: VCG/Getty Images A production line at a smartphone factory in Ganzhou, China. Beijing is leading the global technology race in fields including communicat­ions, batteries and hypersonic­s.

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