Opinion | How the AI race could play out for the US, China and the world
From US-China dominance to regulatory reset or systemic disruption, the AI race is heading towards three very different outcomes

The global artificial intelligence (AI) race remains one of the most hotly contested spheres of international competition. Few would bet today on an eventual winner, but current trends point to three possible scenarios that we should consider.
In the first scenario, the AI world is dominated by the US and China. While the US still has the technological edge, China is closing in fast and vies with the US for leadership on many of the key dimensions of AI prowess.
In contrast, the US relies on a powerful nexus of technology titans, venture capital and government support. Yet worries are growing about potential fault lines in the US model, including the bubble-like appearance of the tech boom and the risks inherent in the use of complex debt mechanisms to fund data-centre expansion.
The second scenario, which might emerge amid a possible AI bubble collapse, is the rise of a tripolar AI world in which the European Union gains more sway for its ethics-driven approach to AI development.

