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US must act quickly to counter China’s growing tech progress, lawmakers told

Analysts claim Washington needs to slow down Chinese momentum and speed up US technology advances now or fall well behind the Asian giant

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Witnesses told lawmakers at a Congressional round table on Tuesday that the US needs to implement new strategies to counter Beijing’s growing prowess in the global technology industry, especially AI. Photo: Shutterstock
Mark Magnierin New York
China is an existential threat to the United States, and Washington needs to slow Chinese momentum and accelerate US technological advances, or fall well behind the Asian giant, witnesses told lawmakers at a Congressional round table on Tuesday.

Among the possible strategies needed to counter Beijing’s growing prowess, analysts said, included expanding the Silicon Shield – an attempt to remove China from semiconductor supply chains – to drone and other vital technologies; drastically reducing US bureaucracy; focusing more on emerging technologies like quantum; and countering China’s aggressive bid to create global standards.

“China is a systemic rival. It seeks to challenge and displace the United States as the guarantor for the American-led post-war order, and it does it on multiple fronts,” Piero Tozzi, senior China director with the American First Policy Institute, told lawmakers.

“We see them trying to set standards in the realm of technology. That’s true in telecommunications, which is why it’s important to win that race. We even see them trying to reset standards with regard to human rights.”

Beijing has repeatedly argued at the United Nations and elsewhere that raising people out of poverty is a human right on a par with more conventional interpretations.
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The panel on artificial intelligence and US-China competition, convened by a subcommittee of the highly influential House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, was held as competition between the US and China intensifies, despite US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s bid to stabilise relations at their Beijing summit in May.
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