Poging GOUD - Vrij
China's role in AI-led industrial revolution
Mint Chennai
|January 01, 2026
AI is widely recognized as the core technology in an emerging industrial revolution that will probably transform every facet of the global economy.
UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) estimates—conservatively—that the global AI market will reach $5 trillion by 2033, thanks to average annual growth of about 31%. The International Monetary Fund predicts that the technology could boost global GDP by 4% over the next decade, with the United States gaining as much as 5.4%. AI's impact on science, innovation, the military, and geopolitics is already significant, reinforcing the sense that the race for AI dominance is also a race for global dominance.
In this context, the Chinese startup DeepSeek's release of a highly competitive chatbot caused a sensation in early 2025. Dubbed the “DeepSeek moment,” it immediately prompted analogies to the Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik in 1957. But do such spectacles really mean that China is closing the gap with the West?
In considering that question, it is important to bear in mind that no industrial revolution has ever emerged outside advanced democratic capitalism. This is no accident. Like its predecessors, the AI-driven industrial revolution requires robust institutions to ensure secure property rights, enforceable contracts, the ability to attract and empower talent, efficient allocation of resources, and—crucially—sustained demand. The last element is often overlooked in analyses of China’s progress in AI.
Dit verhaal komt uit de January 01, 2026-editie van Mint Chennai.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Mint Chennai
Mint Chennai
THE PEOPLE BEHIND INDIA'S LONELINESS ECONOMY
A handful of people are quietly coming up with solutions to help urban Indians feel less lonely
9 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
People in relationships with AI chatbots may need some help
They should refine their chatbot settings and engage humans more
3 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
Online health insurance: Why it's cheaper
While shopping for health insurance, I took quotes from multiple sources— through an agent, directly from the insurer’s website and via a broker.
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
20 years on, running is a mainstream business
Distance running has become an aspirational sport for Indians, and in turn, booming business for sponsors. Where does it go from here?
4 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
PSU banks gain productivity edge, outpace private peers
Median profit per employee at PSU banks rose to ₹19.6 lakh, against ₹14.5 lakh at private banks
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
The 48-hour Grok crisis that put X on Meit Y's list
In the final days of 2025, a meeting between the Indian government and X escalated into a confrontation over artificial intelligence (AI), online safety, and the limits of safe harbour protection—culminating in a formal notice to the Elon Musk-owned platform over the misuse of its AI tool, Grok.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
KC Das to be back in UK after 5 decades
Iconic sweetmeat chain KC Das is eyeing a return to the United Kingdom after more than five decades, encouraged by the proposed India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) and rising demand for authentic Indian food brands overseas.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
EV uptake in luxury car segment dips in GST 2.0 era
Electric vehicle (EV) penetration in the luxury car segment has seen a drop by nearly 3 percentage points in the GST 2.0 era with the internal combustion engine versions offering better total cost of ownership, according to industry players.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
India shops by season: ACs for summer, air purifiers for winter
If searing heat is an annual feature of the Indian summer, air pollution is fast settling into a permanent fixture of winter.
2 mins
January 05, 2026
Mint Chennai
Parliament sharpens oversight on PSUs
Parliament will significantly widen its scrutiny of central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) through the Committee on Public Undertakings (COPU) at a time the government is ramping up operations in strategic sectors such as nuclear energy and rare earths and opens sunrise sectors to greater private investments, said COPU chairperson Baijayant Panda in an interview.
1 min
January 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
