
As Trump flip-flops on US academia, China's brightest head back home. Here's why
Peking University and Zhejiang University have also moved up the list, climbing to 25th and 45th respectively.
The rankings are the latest list of the Best Global Universities compiled by American media company US News and World Report, which looks at 2,250 top institutions from 105 countries.
The assessment focuses exclusively on the overall academic research and reputations of the universities, weighing up 13 factors, from publications to citation impact.
This year's results show just how far Chinese universities have come in a few short years. In 2018, Tsinghua University was 50th and Peking University 68th, the only two in the top 100. Now they are among 15 Chinese universities in the top 100, with Tsinghua leading the pack at 11th.
It has been a steady rise for Chinese institutions up these kinds of ladders in recent decades, one built on sustained investment in education, students and recruitment of overseas staff.
That brain gain is growing in momentum, as the administration of US President Donald Trump flip-flops on visas for international students and cuts research funding, deterring more of China's best and brightest from study and research in the United States.
The decline in Chinese students heading to the US has been particularly stark over the past five years.
In the 2019-20 academic year, China accounted for the largest group of international students in the United States, with 372,532 crossing the Pacific for further studies. By the 2023-24 school year, that number had fallen to 277,398, a decline of more than a quarter over that period.
So much so that India now sends more students to the US than China.
Similarly, almost 20,000 scientists of Chinese descent left the US for other countries between 2010 and 2021, according to a study by Princeton University sociologist Yu Xie.
The rate jumped after 2018 when the US government launched the 'China Initiative' in what it framed as an effort to uncover 'Chinese economic espionage' threatening US national security.
The China Initiative was launched during Trump's first term and reportedly involved US Department of Justice investigations of thousands of scientists suspected of hiding Chinese connections. Most cases were quickly dropped due to lack of evidence, and the programme was scrapped in 2022 under Trump's successor, Joe Biden.
However, the academic chill between China and the US is still apparent at the institutional level. In January, the University of Michigan ended a two-decade partnership with Shanghai Jiao Tong University over what it said were national security risks.
The University of California, Berkeley, recently announced it was decoupling from the Tsinghua-Berkeley Shenzhen Institute after the US government began investigating millions of undisclosed dollars given to the institute by the Chinese government.
And in September 2024, the Georgia Institute of Technology announced the end of its participation at the China-based Georgia Tech Shenzhen Institute, also due to national security concerns.
The effect could be lasting.
While the most popular American universities – Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Stanford – continue to dominate the top spots in the US News university rankings, 'visa challenges and government scrutiny could deter talented Chinese students and researchers from choosing to study in the US in the future', according to Rick Carew, adjunct professor of finance and economics at Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business in New York.
'China-born scholars contribute immensely to academic research in the US. The heightened US-China political tensions have made them a target for scrutiny,' Carew said.
'Generous funding and the opportunity to teach the next generation of top Chinese students in their native language have made offers to return to Chinese universities attractive for some top scholars more interested in conducting research than geopolitics.'
One of the major pull factors for returning to China – the increase in funding – stems from Beijing's efforts to ramp up domestic innovation and development. China is seeking to move up the industrial value chain and is counting on investment in high technology to help get it there. At the National Science and Technology Conference in the capital last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping set a 2035 goal to develop the country's science and technology sectors into world-leading research hubs.
That involves a bigger emphasis on research. According to a report released in March by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, China spent more than US$780 billion on research and development in 2023, reaching 96 per cent of US R&D spending, measured in terms of gross domestic expenditure. That compared with just 72 per cent 10 years earlier.
In 2017, China surpassed the US in terms of research output, and since then has generated an increasing number of cited publications, a sign that Chinese research is attracting more attention from the international research community, according to the Springer Nature 2024 China Impact Report.
Xiong Bingqi, dean of the 21st Century Education Research Institute in Beijing, said conditions for researchers had improved over the past five years, with incentives such as higher salaries, better research funding, and benefits like housing subsidies and healthcare.
'The good scientific research environment has attracted a large number of foreign academic talent to teach in China, and the talent attraction policies are also quite helpful,' Xiong said.
Zhejiang University, a cradle of tech start-ups in China, has been on the receiving end of some of the research funding and has attracted notable scientists from the US. That reputation was burnished this year when university engineering graduate Liang Wenfeng made the world sit up with his AI start-up DeepSeek and its cost-effective, open-source and competitive approach to large language models.
Notably, many of the people at DeepSeek were young and educated wholly in China. In an interview with The China Academy, an academic networking hub, Liang said his hiring practice was to pick and nourish fresh young graduates from the very top Chinese universities but with little to no work experience.
Apart from DeepSeek, Zhejiang University graduates have been at the forefront of other innovative tech start-ups such as Deep Robotics, known for specialising in robot dogs and pioneering autonomous inspections of electrical substations and dangerous high-voltage environments. Both companies are part of the 'Six Little Dragons', the Hangzhou-based tech firms whose successes have come to embody China's tech aspirations.
'China produces an estimated 1.4 million engineering graduates each year, providing fresh talent to technology firms like Huawei and BYD competing with Silicon Valley,' Carew said.
'Chinese tech innovation has benefited from a combination of engineering talent, China's advanced manufacturing ecosystem in Zhejiang and Shenzhen, and government policies supporting investment in hard tech industries.'
In addition, US controls on technology exports to China, such as a ban on sales of some advanced chips, introduced in 2022 were supposed to help secure technological leadership, but they ended up costing US companies billions of dollars in market capitalisation while boosting Chinese domestic innovation and self-reliance, according to a 2024 report by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
But this has not always been the case. China-US relations, arguably one of the world's most important sets of bilateral ties, boast decades of strategic academic cooperation and competition.
In 1979, the two countries signed the US-China Science and Technology Cooperation Agreement. That agreement was renewed late last year after much delay and some changes but the extension signalled a continued willingness to cooperate.
And in May, Beijing's Tsinghua University opened four new residential colleges aimed at developing talent in science, engineering and AI, with one of them designed specifically for international students. The colleges were part of a global strategy launched in 2021 to boost worldwide competitiveness.
'Promoting internationalisation is an important part of efforts by Chinese universities to enhance their competitiveness,' Xiong said.
Attracting American students to China is one of Xi's goals. In late 2023, Xi said China was ready to invite 50,000 young Americans to China on exchange and study programmes in the next five years to increase exchanges between the two peoples, especially between the youth.
The number of American students studying in China is a shadow of just a decade ago.
In the 2023-24 academic year, 800 US students were enrolled in Chinese universities, according to a 2024 American Chamber of Commerce in China report. Enrolments peaked in 2011, when around 15,000 Americans studied in China. The drastic decline was attributed mostly to three years of the zero-Covid policy and ongoing bilateral tensions. Just before the pandemic, 11,000 American students had been studying in China, according to the report.
Improving those numbers would not just benefit international relations.
Xiong, from 21st Century Education, said that maintaining a global education push was 'a strategic step in building a strong country'.
'The tensions will have a severe impact on Chinese universities to achieve joint international cooperation in scientific research and talent cultivation,' Xiong said.
And university rankings may not be the best way of measuring that success.
Xiong said that rating systems could have a negative influence on university operations, leading to more pressure for quantity over quality and more frequent cases of fraudulent research papers.
'Ranking universities by using indicators such as the number of papers published and the number of citations is a simplistic and quantitative approach, but the spiritual qualities and traditions of a university cannot be quantified,' Xiong said.
'Talent development is the key to competitiveness. We cannot have first-class scientific research without first-class talent.'
-- SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Venezuela releases 48 detainees under prisoner swap deal
FILE PHOTO: Relatives of political prisoners hold balloons during a vigil outside the headquarters and detention centre of the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN) known as "Helicoide", in Caracas, Venezuela April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Gaby Oraa/File Photo CARACAS (Reuters) -Forty-eight Venezuelans detained by their own government have so far been released under the terms of a prisoner exchange agreed with the United States, legal rights advocacy group Foro Penal said on Monday. The U.S. said last week that 80 people would be released from Venezuelan jails as part of the prisoner exchange, which saw the return home of over 200 Venezuelans detained in a notorious El Salvador prison. A total of 57 people it classes as political prisoners have been released from Venezuelan jails, Foro Penal said on X, including 48 Venezuelans and nine Americans or U.S. permanent residents. A tenth American released in the swap had not been counted as a political prisoner, the NGO added. "We regret the absence of an official list that allows us to verify with more precision," the group said, adding that some lists in circulation have included people not classed as political detainees, people who had already been released and even prisoners who have died. "At Foro Penal we remain in coordination with families working to verify other cases." The communications ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment about who is set to be released and whether any of them will be subject to house arrest or other alternatives to detention. The main opposition coalition in Venezuela has cheered the release of the prisoners. But the coalition said on Sunday nearly 1,000 people remain jailed in Venezuela for political reasons and 12 others have been arrested in recent days, in what it called a "revolving door" for political prisoners. The Venezuelans who had been detained in El Salvador were sent there from the United States in March after U.S. President Donald Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport alleged members of the Tren de Aragua gang without normal immigration procedures. The deportations drew fierce criticism from human rights groups and a legal battle with the Trump administration. Family members and lawyers of many of the men deny they had gang ties. The former detainees arrived near Caracas on Friday, where some reunited with their families, but they have not yet returned to their own homes. Yajaira Fuenmayor, the mother of former El Salvador detainee Alirio Guillermo Belloso, said on Sunday afternoon from her home in Maracaibo that she was preparing him arepas, traditional corn cakes, as a welcome. "I can't stop thinking of the hunger my son went through. I have a salad ready, some grilled arepas because he loves them, and there is fish in the refrigerator to fry," she said. The government has said the men will be medically evaluated and interviewed about their time in El Salvador before being released. (Reporting by ReutersWriting by Julia Symmes CobbEditing by Rosalba O'Brien)


New Straits Times
3 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Jho Low reportedly living in luxury in China under unofficial protection
KUALA LUMPUR: Fugitive financier Low Taek Jho, better known as Jho Low, is reportedly living in luxury in China under unofficial protection, according to fresh claims by investigative journalists Bradley Hope and Tom Wright. Speaking in their podcast, Finding Jho Low, which aired on Friday, the authors of Billion Dollar Whale revealed that Low is allegedly residing in Shanghai's upscale Green Hills neighbourhood and operating under a forged Australian passport using the alias "Constantinos Achilles Veis." They claimed that former Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak had allegedly advised Low to flee the country as scrutiny of the 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) scandal intensified, prompting him to escape to China where he had familial ties in the Chiuchow region. "Despite being a fugitive, he is living comfortably, driving luxury cars and accompanied by Chinese security guards. It appears he is not under house arrest but enjoying an unrestricted life," Hope said in the podcast. Hope and Wright, who spent years tracking Low's global movements, also alleged that Malaysia lost as much as US$6 billion (RM28 billion) in Belt and Road Initiative-linked projects that were engineered with Low's involvement, mirroring the pattern of financial manipulation seen in the 1MDB scandal. Among the most revealing claims was that Low had allegedly cultivated ties with high-ranking Chinese political figures and intelligence officers, positioning himself as a "shadow broker" who influenced Malaysia's foreign policy tilt towards Beijing. The podcast also highlighted how Low allegedly played a role in corrupt infrastructure deals such as the East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) project, which involved bribes to Chinese officials, including former deputy public security minister Sun Lijun, who was later jailed for corruption. A turning point in the investigation came in 2019 when a photo of Low at Shanghai Disneyland surfaced. Analysts said the image helped identify his close-knit circle and added weight to claims that he is under unofficial protection by Chinese authorities. Hope and Wright suggested that Low has rebranded himself in China as a "dark arts coordinator," helping Chinese companies navigate complex regulatory environments, especially when dealing with the United States. "He is not just hiding. He is actively helping Chinese entities operate in hostile geopolitical terrain. That makes him valuable," Wright said. The journalists also claimed that Low had maintained an office at the Shanghai World Financial Centre, further suggesting he was actively engaged in financial or strategic work, rather than merely evading law enforcement. Much of the information shared in the podcast came from undisclosed documents and confidential sources, which the journalists said they could not reveal due to safety concerns. These revelations challenge earlier assumptions that Low was under house arrest or moving covertly from one location to another. Instead, they paint a picture of a man who remains influential and protected within a powerful foreign system. Law enforcement agencies, including those in Malaysia and the United States, may now have to recalibrate their approach in seeking Low's return as calls grow louder for accountability in the multibillion-dollar corruption scandal.


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Monday (July 21, 2025)
Malaysia: * Dewan Rakyat passes the Consumer Credit Bill * Court of Appeal grants stay for PM Anwar in civil suit proceedings * Nine areas record unhealthy API as of 3pm, July 21 * Wisma Putra yet to receive nomination of Nick Adams as US ambassador to Malaysia * Do not cross the 'red line', Anwar warns foreign powers including US * Trial for Chinese national who allegedly stabbed ex-girlfriend on uni campus * Bring it on, Anwar dares opposition to table no-confidence vote * Raid on Subang Jaya private party nets four suspected drug dealers * MACC to call up 20 more witnesses in RM180mil data centre probe * Penang Development Corp cooperating with police in MBI probe * A-G calls for overhaul of govt's Pre-Qualification procurement process * MACC seizes over RM332mil in assets in major scrap metal smuggling probe * Auditor-General's Report: Three UKM tenders worth over RM50mil did not follow SOP * Rise in 'buy now, pay later' accounts puts vulnerable consumers at risk, says Finance Ministry * Defence white paper mid-term review to be presented to select committee soon, says Mohamed Khaled * Wan Ahmad Farid was sole candidate for Chief Justice, no last minute changes made, says Anwar Water Polo - World Aquatics Championships - Women - Semi Final - Hungary v Spain - OCBC Aquatic Centre, Singapore - Monday, July 21, 2025; Hungary's Vanda Valyi scores a penalty goal. -- Photo: REUTERS/Edgar Su Singapore: * Singapore: Jail, caning for man who held metal rod to cashier's neck in failed robbery attempt * Singapore-Malaysia joint emergency exercise to affect the Tuas second link traffic on July 23 * Early morning bus driver strike causes disruption at Johor-Singapore Causeway * Singapore's Chiral Comics partners Archie Comics for exclusive SG60 book cover * Singapore military helps battle cyberattack:, says minister * Witness stand not arena for humiliation in sex offence cases, Singapore judge reminds lawyers * More stingrays, fewer sharks for sale at Singapore's fishery ports, say researchers * Singapore central bank to place S$1.1bil with asset managers to boost stock market Indonesia: * AFF U-23: 1,620 strong security deployment for heated Indonesia-Malaysia football clash in Jakarta * FIFA maintaining regional office in KL, not moving to Jakarta * Indonesia's Prabowo rolls out first of 80,000 'Red-White' cooperatives to boost economic growth * Indonesian exporters seek to split tariffs with US buyers to ensure demand * Asia shares, yen look past Japan politics as earnings loom * Oil prices little changed as investors eye impact of new sanctions on Russia Artistic Swimming - World Aquatics Championships - Team Technical - World Aquatics Championships Arena, Singapore - Monday, July 21, 2025; Team Thailand performs during preliminaries. -- Photo: REUTERS/Marko DjuricaTPX IMAGES OF THE DAY Thailand: * Thai police uncover two Chinese-led online fraud rings in latest blitz against scammers * Extreme heat waves spark climate emergencies worldwide * Thailand claims Cambodia planted land mines, escalating dispute * Thai land mine claims rejected by Cambodia in escalating dispute * Survey finds Thai public blames monks' misconduct for Buddhism's decline * Thailand's condo market plummets to 16-year low Philippines: * Typhoon Wipha: Philippine govt suspends work and school classes in Metro Manila and other provinces * Philippines' Marcos to meet Trump, hoping to secure trade deal that is favourable to both allied countries * A legend returns - Pacquiao is latest boxer to risk legacy for lure of the ring * Radio journalist killed in southern Philippines * Marcos goal: A trade deal unique to US-Philippine ties * Philippines suspends government work, classes due to heavy rains A man holding an umbrella walks near docked tourist boats, as Typhoon Wipha approaches, at Halong Bay, Quang Ninh province, Vietnam, on Monday, July 21, 2025. -- Photo: REUTERS/Thinh Nguyen Vietnam: * Boy's body recovered by rescuers, death toll in Vietnam's Ha Long boat tragedy hits 36 * "It took only a few seconds": survivors recount how a sudden storm drowned dozens in Vietnam * Storm Wipha nears northern Vietnam with heavy rain, strong winds and flood risk * Vietnam, China plan first joint army drill amid US tariffs * Vietnam: Survivor lives to tell his escape from capsized tour boat Myanmar: * Comment: A cautionary tale for Asean from the Middle East * Yet another jade mine collapse in northern Myanmar, two people dead and 20 others trapped inside * Series of aftershocks rattle Mandalay, including 5.5-magnitude tremor * Fire sparked by charging Bluetooth speaker destroys eight homes in central Myanmar A trishaw driver rides as his passenger uses an umbrella to cover themselves from the rain in Yangon on Monday, July 21, 2025. -- Photo by Sai Aung MAIN / AFP Cambodia: * Hun Sen calls Thaksin out, reveals historic role in Thai politics * Landmine dispute escalates tensions between Thailand and Cambodia * Asean disaster simulation exercise begins amid Typhoon Wipha * Cambodia arrests 2,767 online scam suspects Laos: * Typhoon Wipha rips through Laos, Vietnam, and the Philippines, damaging homes and infrastructure * Laos on alert as Typhoon Wipha brings torrential rain * Laos to renegotiate power purchase deals in bid to cut bills for home-owners Brunei: * Brunei royalty graces Girl Guides ceremony * Brunei Chinese chamber of commerce holds event on traditional Chinese medicine * 35 arrested in major anti-drug operation in Brunei Artistic Swimming - World Aquatics Championships - Women's Duet Technical Final - World Aquatics Championships Arena, Singapore - Monday, July 21, 2025; Gold medallists Austria's Anna-Maria Alexandri and Eirini-Marina Alexandri pose during the women's duet technical final medal ceremony with silver medallists China's Yanhan Lin and Yanjun Lin and bronze medallists Neutral Athletes B's Mayya Doroshko and Tatiana Gayday. -- Photo: REUTERS/Hollie Adams AseanPlus: * K-pop superstar G-Dragon declares Malaysia 'mantap (superb)' at his two-day sold-out concerts in Bukit Jalil * Malaysia sets sights on regional AI leadership with 2026-2030 action plan, says Gobind * Malaysia, Asean to propose reforming UN veto power of five countries * First day of Dewan Rakyat focuses on post-Asean foreign policy, cost of haj * Sarawak to kick off reforms to make business registrations quicker, easier, Dr Sim announces * 'Musang King is too delicious': HK actor Louis Fan ate 7 durians during 3-day stay in Malaysia * Evidence shows Jeju Air pilots shut off less-damaged engine before crash, source says * Torrential rain leaves at least 18 dead in South Korea, trail of devastation * Disney sues Hong Kong company it says is selling illegal Mickey Mouse jewellery * China stops US commerce employee from leaving, reports say * Can a superalloy method fix aircraft engine woes, even for sixth-gen fighters? * As Trump flip-flops on US academia, China's brightest head back home. Here's why * Asian investors trim US assets amid weak dollar, but full pullback 'difficult' * Nvidia CEO praises China's open-source models as 'very advanced' * In rare gun crime in South Korea, father kills son; bomb found at home * Hong Kong leads stocks higher, yen gains as Ishiba vows to stay * At least 18 dead in South Korea after heavy rains and landslides * Western aid cuts cede ground to China in South-East Asia: study * South Korea reviewing various options to improve North Korea ties * At least 19 killed as Bangladesh air force plane crashes into college campus * HK singer Kelly Chen reveals she once considered retiring from music after marriage * Wreck of WWII Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Teruzuki found 83 years after sinking * Exclusive-Trump pledged to save Afghans. But UAE had already sent some evacuees back, cable shows * Ishiba's party members urge him to take responsibility as they face poor showing in Japan's Upper House election * Airbus signs fresh deal with Chinese partner amid talk of massive China order * Trump says Beijing is making 'big steps' in controlling fentanyl * Sri Lanka Catholics seek prosecution of sacked spy chief * Australia's growing algal crisis in south devastates marine life * Israeli fire kills 67 aid seekers in Gaza, medics say, as hunger worsens * Pakistani Islamist militants use drones to target security forces, officials say * China stocks near 2022 high on construction, rare earth gains; Hang Seng tests 25,000 * Badminton - Zii Jia appears fine in first public appearance in China * Cricket - Knee injury ends Reddy's England tour, Arshdeep out of Manchester test