One country focuses on entertainment, the other on social control and military dominance.
Does the U.S. still hold a technological edge over China? For now, the answer is “yes.” U.S. export restrictions briefly threatened to put Huawei — arguably China’s top technology company — out of business, until the U.S. relented. That episode exposed holes in the Chinese tech ecosystem and demonstrated the value of having a broad, deep pool of specialized high-tech companies.
The U.S. has the leading research system, with the world’s best research universities, a network of top-notch national laboratories, government agencies such as the National Institutes of Health and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and dominant companies such as Amazon, Intel and Alphabet that spend a great deal on R&D. The country continues to claim the lion’s share of Nobel Prizes, and most of the big breakthrough discoveries and inventions — CRISPR, deep learning, synthetic biology — originate in the U.S.
China, meanwhile, has been doing all it can to catch up. It has been training a veritable army of scientists and engineers, and it long ago surpassed the U.S. in the number of people who graduate each year with science, engineering, technology and math degrees