America builds AI, China uses it. That gap may decide the future

When it comes to artificial intelligence, the United States still dominates the headlines – and, by most conventional measures, the technology itself. American institutions continue to produce a large share of high-impact AI research, and private investment reached over US$109 billion in 2024, nearl

South China Morning Post
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America builds AI, China uses it. That gap may decide the future

When it comes to artificial intelligence, the United States still dominates the headlines – and, by most conventional measures, the technology itself. American institutions continue to produce a large share of high-impact AI research, and private investment reached over US$109 billion in 2024, nearly 12 times China’s total, according to the Stanford Institute for Human-Centred AI.

At the same time, the economics of AI are rapidly improving. Training and deployment costs have fallen dramatically in recent years, making large-scale adoption increasingly viable across industries. By these metrics, the US appears to be winning the AI race. But there is growing evidence this may not be the race that matters most. Because, while the US excels at building AI, China is moving more decisively to use it.

Across industries – from logistics to healthcare – China is not simply adopting AI tools. It is reorganising systems around them. By 2024, China had more than 600 million registered generative AI users and hundreds of models deployed across real-world environments, from hospitals to logistics systems. Adoption is not limited to experimentation; it is embedded in operations.

This difference is not primarily about technological capability. It is about implementation.

In the US, many organisations are attempting to integrate AI into systems designed decades ago. Nowhere is this more visible than in logistics. The US trucking sector – responsible for moving roughly 70 per cent of the nation’s goods – has access to advanced AI tools but often struggles to translate that access into meaningful transformation. Instead of redesigning workflows, companies frequently layer AI onto legacy infrastructure built in an era of fax machines and dial-up internet, producing incremental gains rather than systemic change.

Economists have seen this pattern before. During the electrification of manufacturing, factories that simply replaced steam engines with electric motors saw little productivity improvement. Real gains only came when companies reorganised entire production systems around electricity – a dynamic often associated with economist Robert Solow and later expanded by Erik Brynjolfsson in the context of digital transformation.

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