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While the US holds a clear technological advantage on most fronts, China emphasises cost-effectiveness and a supportive manufacturing supply chain. For leading companies in this battle, the goal is not only commercial success, but also advancing their nation’s long-term ambition for global tech leadership.
Chinese companies can now produce much of what the US has tried to restrict. AI models like those from DeepSeek are improving, chips from companies like Huawei are being commercialised and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) is testing new types of advanced semiconductor equipment. With a growing downstream market in areas such as autonomous driving and intelligent robots, China can offer alternatives to the global market.
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As both sides deliver increasingly advanced tech to the market, capturing share has become central. The US made this explicit in its AI Action Plan: “Whoever builds the largest AI ecosystem will set global AI standards and reap broad economic and military benefits.” Market success now determines not just economic and military power, but also the ability to set global rules for emerging industries.