Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Streets ahead: China is winning the technology war against America
The Observer
|May 04, 2025
The US has fallen asleep at the wheel, as innovative Chinese companies lead the field in the development of electric vehicles, artificial intelligence and semiconductors, writes James Kynge

Elon Musk should be ruing the day that he scoffed at BYD, the Chinese car manufacturer.
In a television interview in 2011, the Tesla chief executive was asked about competitors that might challenge his world-beating electric vehicles (EVs). He burst into laughter at the mention of BYD and said he didn’t see it as a competitor. “I don’t think they have a great product,” he said.
Fourteen years on, the script has flipped. BYD now outshines Tesla in almost every metric of performance. The revenue of BYD - which stands for Build Your Dreams - leapfrogged Tesla’s last year. The Chinese company sells many more cars worldwide than its American rival and, in March, announced a breakthrough in battery-charging technology that leaves Tesla’s Supercharger in the dust.
The story of Tesla’s eclipse by BYD is well known. What is less understood is that it represents the shape of things to come - in technology after technology, industry after industry. The disruptive power of China’s technological rise is set to be felt throughout the west, notwithstanding the trade war that Donald Trump has launched to slow down or stymie China's emergence.
The reordering of the world’s technological tectonic plates is a topic that calls for big comparisons. Some liken it to the US overtaking the UK as the world’s leading tech power over a century ago. Others, more ominously, see echoes of Germany’s “mercantilist” policies in the late 1800s as Berlin sought to catch up with the established industrial powers.
“China’s rate of progress in production and innovation across a wide range of industries is striking,” write Robert Atkinson and Stephen Ezell at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), a Washington thinktank. “History has seen campaigns such as this before. From the late 1800s through World War Two, Germany illustrated how trade could be weaponised into an instrument of power, pressure and even of conquest.”
Bu hikaye The Observer dergisinin May 04, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Observer'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Observer
Reeves needs to call time on dodgy stats
On Friday, the latest retail sales numbers for the British economy were due to be published.
1 min
August 24, 2025
The Observer
Lucy Connolly isn't a hero. Justice doesn't mean a verdict you approve of Kenan Malik
Lionising a woman who pleaded guilty to stirring up racial hatred is a moral failure by the right
4 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
We can't shrink from Palestine Action
There is one part of the UK where terrorist flags and placards have rarely been off the news.
3 mins
August 24, 2025

The Observer
Politically acceptable UK racism is on the rise. And, worse, this is under 'progressive' Labour rule
As I wrote these words last autumn: \"We have made progress... even though that progress remains fragile and insufficient\", little did I realise just how right I was.
3 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
We want peace – but not on Putin's terms, Ukrainians say
Weary of Russia's war, the citizens of Ukraine are nevertheless wary of a settlement that might give away too much, or that doesn't carry a security guarantee, reports Liz Cookman in Kyiv
4 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
Take tougher line on asylum human rights, judges told
Labour will order judges to reinterpret parts of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) early next month as the government grapples with the asylum appeals backlog that has sparked the current crisis.
2 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
Musk flies a drone fleet over the capital. (Luckily, it's not Elon)
News that a Musk-owned fleet of drones is flying over London this weekend might be enough to prompt fears of a new Blitz.
1 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
Ganges river dolphin
The dark is my delight.
2 mins
August 24, 2025
The Observer
Jerome Powell
If anyone can stand up to Trump, it's the affable and decisive Fed chair, writes Matthew Bishop
4 mins
August 24, 2025

The Observer
'We're hiding some very dirty secrets'. The scandal of fake foreign honey
An investigation by Jon Ungoed-Thomas reveals the worldwide honey fraud that begins in China and ends with allegations of adulterated jars on UK supermarkets shelves
5 mins
August 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size