- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
Global and country findings
- China’s lead continues to grow
- China significantly strengthened its standing in the middle of the last decade
- The US is losing the strong historical advantage that it has built
- China has built up potential monopoly positions in scientific expertise and top performing institutions
- India accelerates: India now ranks in the top 5 countries for 45 of 64 technologies
- The UK ranks in the top 5 countries for 36 technologies—a decline from 44 technologies in last year’s results
- The European Union, as a whole, is a competitive technological player
- Germany is the top-performing European Union country
- South Korea’s performance shows that Japan has work to do
- Iran excels at defence-sensitive technologies
- Australia has improved in some technologies and slipped in others
- AUKUS—the trilateral security and technology partnership involving the US, the UK and Australia28—closes the gap in some Pillar 2–relevant technologies, but not all
Technology monopoly risk metric results
- Scientific breakthroughs and research innovations in key defence technologies are increasingly likely to occur in China:
- China’s research lead in advanced materials and manufacturing technologies grows
Institutional findings: US tech companies, government agencies and CAS
- Private-sector research is increasingly concentrated in US technology giants
- Private sector research was more diverse between 2003-2007
- The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) is the global science and research powerhouse
- Government agencies and national laboratories feature prominently
- Chinese companies play a relatively small role in the global research ecosystem
These aspi studies studies probably only anger and demoralize their intended audience.
It’s basically and scaremongering piece fincanced by the MIC aimed at selling more arms the way I read it. I do hope that it demoralizes China-will-collapse-any-day-now libs though.