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China Evolves From ‘Copier’ to ‘Innovator,’ Posing Serious Threat, Experts Say

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China Evolves From ‘Copier’ to ‘Innovator,’ Posing Serious Threat, Experts Say
BY EMEL AKAN
April 14, 2019 Updated: April 14, 2019

WASHINGTON—A new report shows that China isn’t just copying technology, but also moving faster than the United States in innovation and in developing advanced technology industries.

The U.S. think tank Information Technology and Innovation Foundation examined various areas in which China has made progress and closed the innovation gap with the United States in the past decade. The report uses 36 indicators in measuring Chinese performance and shows that China has closed the gap or, in some cases, even outstripped the United States.

“If China were only a copier, then the competitive threat to advanced economies would be limited,” the report stated. “But there is no reason to believe China won’t follow the path of ‘Asian tigers’ that rapidly evolved from copiers to innovators, which poses a serious threat.”

To become a global innovation leader, China is following the path of Asian tigers such as Japan and South Korea. The country made notable progress in the last decade in the areas of research and development (R&D), university performance, patents, entrepreneurial activity, industrial sales, and exports, according to the report.

China, for example, increased its R&D investment significantly during the 10-year period. In 2007, the country invested $129 billion in R&D, which was 33 percent of the R&D spending in the United States. By 2017, the gap was reduced, reaching 76 percent of U.S. levels and surpassing the European Union, the report says.

The number of U.S. patents issued to Chinese companies, which is an important indicator of innovation, also jumped in recent years.

Nearly half of the patents granted by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office each year go to foreign inventors. In 2006, the United States granted 1,066 patents to Chinese, which accounted for 1.2 percent of patents granted to U.S. inventors. By 2016, the number had risen to more than 11,000, which equaled 8 percent of U.S. patents.

The study also highlights the role universities play in national innovation systems, as they produce skilled scientists and engineers as well as entrepreneurs and innovators. About 7 million students in China obtain a bachelor’s degree every year, with over 30 percent receiving an engineering degree, compared with just 5 percent in the United States. The report also finds that as a share of the population, China produces 46 percent more computer science and engineering degrees than the United States.

China also is actively recruiting foreign engineers and scientists from other Asian countries and the United States by paying them very high salaries, all backed by government subsidies, according to the report.

The development in Chinese high-tech manufacturing also provides insight into China’s innovation. For example, Chinese high-tech exports grew from 139 percent of U.S. levels in 2006 to 203 percent in 2016. And value-added—the measure of industry output minus inputs such as raw materials, energy, and so on—increased to 77 percent in 2016 from 30 percent in 2006. If the pace of growth continues, China will surpass the United States in high-tech manufacturing value added by 2020, the report indicates.

In other sectors such as information and communication technology, semiconductors, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, high-speed rail, and aerospace, the report showed that China made dramatic progress relative to the United States in the past decade.

The United States, however, had gained competencies and leadership in many sectors by investing trillions of dollars in R&D, workforce training, and other areas in order to innovate complex products, according to the report.

“The Chinese government knows that if it proceeds the fair and ‘natural’ way that it will take it many decades or more to seriously close the innovation gap with the global leaders,” said the report.

Hence, it resorts to various policies to obtain the know-how it needs from foreign companies, such as theft of intellectual property, forced joint ventures and technology transfer, and state-subsidized acquisition of foreign advanced industry firms.

“Korea went through the same process of development China is now following,” stated the report. “Like China, Korea was initially focused on copying.”

If China rapidly evolves from a copier to innovator, however, the negative impact on advanced economies will be big because the Chinese economy is massive and it’s much more difficult to get China to compete fairly, according to the report.

The loss of leadership in innovation and technology has two implications for advanced economies. The first is that it reduces prosperity and living standards. The second factor relates to national security and the defense industrial base, which is a significant problem for the United States, as its defense superiority is driven largely by technological superiority, the report says.

The very fabric of America is under attack ...
Our freedoms, our republic, and our constitutional rights have become contested terrain. The Epoch Times, a media committed to truthful, responsible journalism, is a rare bastion of hope and stability in these testing times.

While other media may twist the facts to serve political agendas, we deliver stories while upholding our responsibility to society.

We’ve reported truthfully on the current U.S. administration from the start. We reported on the real possibility of a Trump victory in 2016. We’ve led reporting on the Chinese communist threat since 2000; we have been exposing communist thought in our government, schools, universities, popular culture, and media; and we, like no other media, are rigorously investigating and exposing the unscrupulous agents working to subvert our society.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/china...ing-a-serious-threat-say-experts_2879572.html
 
That what happens when you allow Indians to innovation centers, the country falls behind in the race.
 
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“The Chinese government knows that if it proceeds the fair and ‘natural’ way that it will take it many decades or more to seriously close the innovation gap with the global leaders,” said the report.

Hence, it resorts to various policies to obtain the know-how it needs from foreign companies, such as theft of intellectual property, forced joint ventures and technology transfer, and state-subsidized acquisition of foreign advanced industry firms.

Epoch Times
LOL! I guess you have no problem with this part of the article. While the West invents...China steals.
 
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Epoch Times... Lol

Falun Gong media.

By reading this article, I just know that Falun Gong want China to be a poor country, where the people work in sweatshop factory with low salary, to be a slave of others.

And the one who want to bring prosperity to all Chinese people is labeled as the devil, the evil red dragon.

Falun Gong, this is your real face.

In my opinion, you are the devil himself, borrowing the face of Buddha and God.
 
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Epoch Times
LOL! I guess you have no problem with this part of the article. While the West invents...China steals.

You again (haha)!

But the West always claims that innovation all-around is good. Of course the West has a massive lead but the gap continues to close. It'll be interesting to see what happens if/when the dollar isn't used as much for global trade. Probably a long way away...
 
You again (haha)!

But the West always claims that innovation all-around is good. Of course the West has a massive lead but the gap continues to close. It'll be interesting to see what happens if/when the dollar isn't used as much for global trade. Probably a long way away...
Ugh...Here we go again...Another 'dollar collapse' prediction...:rolleyes:
 
China Evolves From ‘Copier’ to ‘Innovator,’ Posing Serious Threat, Experts Say
BY EMEL AKAN
April 14, 2019 Updated: April 14, 2019

WASHINGTON—A new report shows that China isn’t just copying technology, but also moving faster than the United States in innovation and in developing advanced technology industries.

The U.S. think tank Information Technology and Innovation Foundation examined various areas in which China has made progress and closed the innovation gap with the United States in the past decade. The report uses 36 indicators in measuring Chinese performance and shows that China has closed the gap or, in some cases, even outstripped the United States.

“If China were only a copier, then the competitive threat to advanced economies would be limited,” the report stated. “But there is no reason to believe China won’t follow the path of ‘Asian tigers’ that rapidly evolved from copiers to innovators, which poses a serious threat.”

To become a global innovation leader, China is following the path of Asian tigers such as Japan and South Korea. The country made notable progress in the last decade in the areas of research and development (R&D), university performance, patents, entrepreneurial activity, industrial sales, and exports, according to the report.

China, for example, increased its R&D investment significantly during the 10-year period. In 2007, the country invested $129 billion in R&D, which was 33 percent of the R&D spending in the United States. By 2017, the gap was reduced, reaching 76 percent of U.S. levels and surpassing the European Union, the report says.

The number of U.S. patents issued to Chinese companies, which is an important indicator of innovation, also jumped in recent years.

Nearly half of the patents granted by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office each year go to foreign inventors. In 2006, the United States granted 1,066 patents to Chinese, which accounted for 1.2 percent of patents granted to U.S. inventors. By 2016, the number had risen to more than 11,000, which equaled 8 percent of U.S. patents.

The study also highlights the role universities play in national innovation systems, as they produce skilled scientists and engineers as well as entrepreneurs and innovators. About 7 million students in China obtain a bachelor’s degree every year, with over 30 percent receiving an engineering degree, compared with just 5 percent in the United States. The report also finds that as a share of the population, China produces 46 percent more computer science and engineering degrees than the United States.

China also is actively recruiting foreign engineers and scientists from other Asian countries and the United States by paying them very high salaries, all backed by government subsidies, according to the report.

The development in Chinese high-tech manufacturing also provides insight into China’s innovation. For example, Chinese high-tech exports grew from 139 percent of U.S. levels in 2006 to 203 percent in 2016. And value-added—the measure of industry output minus inputs such as raw materials, energy, and so on—increased to 77 percent in 2016 from 30 percent in 2006. If the pace of growth continues, China will surpass the United States in high-tech manufacturing value added by 2020, the report indicates.

In other sectors such as information and communication technology, semiconductors, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, high-speed rail, and aerospace, the report showed that China made dramatic progress relative to the United States in the past decade.

The United States, however, had gained competencies and leadership in many sectors by investing trillions of dollars in R&D, workforce training, and other areas in order to innovate complex products, according to the report.

“The Chinese government knows that if it proceeds the fair and ‘natural’ way that it will take it many decades or more to seriously close the innovation gap with the global leaders,” said the report.

Hence, it resorts to various policies to obtain the know-how it needs from foreign companies, such as theft of intellectual property, forced joint ventures and technology transfer, and state-subsidized acquisition of foreign advanced industry firms.

“Korea went through the same process of development China is now following,” stated the report. “Like China, Korea was initially focused on copying.”

If China rapidly evolves from a copier to innovator, however, the negative impact on advanced economies will be big because the Chinese economy is massive and it’s much more difficult to get China to compete fairly, according to the report.

The loss of leadership in innovation and technology has two implications for advanced economies. The first is that it reduces prosperity and living standards. The second factor relates to national security and the defense industrial base, which is a significant problem for the United States, as its defense superiority is driven largely by technological superiority, the report says.

The very fabric of America is under attack ...
Our freedoms, our republic, and our constitutional rights have become contested terrain. The Epoch Times, a media committed to truthful, responsible journalism, is a rare bastion of hope and stability in these testing times.

While other media may twist the facts to serve political agendas, we deliver stories while upholding our responsibility to society.

We’ve reported truthfully on the current U.S. administration from the start. We reported on the real possibility of a Trump victory in 2016. We’ve led reporting on the Chinese communist threat since 2000; we have been exposing communist thought in our government, schools, universities, popular culture, and media; and we, like no other media, are rigorously investigating and exposing the unscrupulous agents working to subvert our society.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/china...ing-a-serious-threat-say-experts_2879572.html
China should allow the EU and US and other nations to copy their tech advancements right back. To quote the opium wars as reason for some kinda drive for superiority now, is not only historically crazy, it's downright dangerous.
 
Ugh...Here we go again...Another 'dollar collapse' prediction...:rolleyes:

I said "if/when" --- apparently you missed the "if"...

I just enjoy pointing out American hypocrisy. Most of us who have the intellectual capability to see through American double standards are quite sick of lectures and pressure for democratic rights, freedom of press, etc., while countries like Saudi Arabia (dictatorship, essentially no citizen/expression/media rights, etc.) and Israel (massive illegal and inhumane occupation, military censorship of media, etc.) are lavished with military toys and money. Enough!
 
I said "if/when" --- apparently you missed the "if"...

I just enjoy pointing out American hypocrisy. Most of us who have the intellectual capability to see through American double standards are quite sick of lectures and pressure for democratic rights, freedom of press, etc., while countries like Saudi Arabia (dictatorship, essentially no citizen/expression/media rights, etc.) and Israel (massive illegal and inhumane occupation, military censorship of media, etc.) are lavished with military toys and money. Enough!
If you do have the intellectual capability as you claimed, then you would have realized, from even a cursory reading of history, that such alliances are those of geopolitical conveniences and not of ideals.
 
Epoch Times
LOL! I guess you have no problem with this part of the article. While the West invents...China steals.

LOL, I guess you can't even read this part of the article, "Chinese performance and shows that China has closed the gap or, in some cases, even outstripped the United States." suck it up, China invents, US cries. By the way, Epoch Time is a known anti-china newspaper headquartered in the US funded by the US government.

China today is the number 2 INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGICAL PATENT filer in the world, for 8 straight years now, link from WIPO.
https://www.wipo.int/pressroom/en/articles/2019/article_0004.html
 
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The Topping NX4 DAC/Amp is a pretty decent Chinese made device for the price.
 

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