The debate centers on China’s massive R&D investment, which reached 4 trillion yuan ($589 billion) last year, surpassing the OECD average. Nobel laureate Michael Spence notes that Beijing’s systematic deployment of AI across manufacturing and services provides a distinct competitive edge, effectively creating a high-speed testing ground for global firms. Executives from companies like Dassault Systemes and Merck China reinforce this, characterizing their presence in the country as a strategic necessity to tap into an accelerated innovation cycle.
Data from the EU Chamber of Commerce in China supports this shift: 48 percent of surveyed firms now view Chinese competitors as more innovative than their European counterparts. This sentiment is echoed by the US-China Business Council, where 95 percent of members identify the Chinese market as essential for global competitiveness. Beyond software and AI, China’s dominance in renewables—supplying 70 percent of global wind equipment and 80 percent of photovoltaic modules—has slashed international electricity costs by over 60 percent for wind and 80 percent for solar projects over the last decade.
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