Official predicts 100 AI breakthroughs
Beijing: China's advantages in developing artificial intelligence (AI) are about to unleash a wave of innovation that will generate more than 100 DeepSeek-like breakthroughs in the coming 18 months, according to a former top official.
The new software products 'will fundamentally change the nature and the tech nature of the whole Chinese economy,' Zhu Min, who was previously a deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, said during the World Economic Forum in Tianjin yesterday.
Zhu, who also served as the deputy managing director at the International Monetary Fund, sees a transformation made possible by harnessing China's pool of engineers, massive consumer base and supportive government policies.
The bullish take on China's AI future promises no letup in the competition for dominance in cutting-edge technologies with the United States, just as the world's two biggest economies are also locked in a trade war.
The United States sees China as a key rival in the field of AI, especially after DeepSeek shocked the global tech industry in January with its low-cost but powerful model.
In addition to efforts to prevent China from securing advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment, Washington is blocking Chinese companies from acquiring Nvidia Corp's high-end AI chips for training, citing national security concerns.
Beijing is now pinning its hopes on domestic tech giants like Huawei Technologies Co when it comes to advanced chipmaking.
The emergence of DeepSeek triggered a rally in China's tech stocks, fuelling optimism over Chinese competitiveness despite tensions over trade with the Trump administration and economic challenges at home.
Bloomberg Economics estimates the contribution of high-tech to China's gross domestic product (GDP) climbed to about 15% last year – from near 14% a year earlier – and could exceed 18% in 2026.
Despite a tariff truce negotiated a month ago with the United States, American levies are still at high levels, with a more lasting deal still in question.
Zhu said the United States will likely see inflation pick up starting in August, as it takes some time for tariffs to feed through to the economy and for companies to use up stockpiles they accumulated before Trump hiked duties.
'The uncertainty brought by US tariff policy is an important factor that may lead to negative growth in global trade this year,' Zhu told reporters on the sidelines of the forum.
'The entire trade industrial chain has begun to slow, investments has begun to stop, so the impact is greater than the actual tariff rate.'
The World Economic Forum meeting in Tianjin, also known as 'Summer Davos', has attracted global business executives and world leaders.
Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong and Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh are scheduled to speak at the three-day event.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang is expected to address the conference during the opening plenary today and meet with participants.
Despite a tariff truce negotiated a month ago with the United States, American levies are still at high levels, with a more lasting deal still in question.
Analysts polled by Bloomberg forecast GDP will slip to 4.5% this year, significantly below the official target of around 5%. It expanded 5.4% in the first quarter.
'The uncertainty brought by US tariff policy is an important factor that may lead to negative growth in global trade this year,' Zhu told reporters on the sidelines of the forum. 'The entire trade industrial chain has begun to slow, investments has begun to stop, so the impact is greater than the actual tariff rate.'
Zhu said the United States will likely see inflation pick up starting in August, as it takes some time for tariffs to feed through to the economy and for companies to use up stockpiles they accumulated before Trump hiked duties.
Despite shocks from abroad, China's GDP likely grew faster than 5% in the second quarter, according to Huang Yiping, a member of the Chinese central bank's monetary policy committee. Speaking on another panel at the Tianjin forum, he pointed to the economy's solid performance in April and May.
But despite strong retail sales in May, when they grew at the fastest pace since December 2023, Huang said China still needs to address the issue of insufficient consumption. — Bloomberg
Hashtags

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


The Sun
16 minutes ago
- The Sun
FBI shifts focus to Iran threat after U.S. strikes
WASHINGTON: The FBI has ramped up its efforts to monitor potential threats to the U.S. from Iran following President Donald Trump's decision to attack the country's nuclear facilities, two people briefed on the matter told Reuters on Tuesday. FBI officials have informed some agents in recent days that they will be exempt from a mandate to focus part of their time on immigration enforcement given the elevated threat level from Iran, the people said. The directive related to counter-terrorism, counterintelligence and cyber security agents who work on issues connected to Iran. FBI field offices in Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York and Philadelphia have canceled rotations for agents to work on immigration issues, one of the sources said. NBC News and the Wall Street Journal earlier reported the shift in FBI resources. An FBI spokesperson declined to comment on the directives, but said in a statement, 'we continuously assess and realign our resources to respond to the most pressing threats to our national security and to ensure the safety of the American people.' Iran responded to the U.S. strikes by launching a missile attack on an American air base in Qatar on Monday that caused no injuries. A ceasefire ending days of open warfare between Israel and Iran appeared to take hold on Tuesday under pressure from Trump. Still, U.S. officials have been concerned that Iran may also seek to retaliate on U.S. soil. The FBI has been especially worried that Iran could direct operatives already in the U.S. to launch attacks, one source said. Federal prosecutors have brought several cases in recent years accusing people of aiding assassination plots in the U.S., including against Trump, at the behest of Tehran. The Iranian government has previously denied any involvement in the alleged plots. The FBI has been enlisted in Trump's effort to deport millions of people living illegally in the U.S., an area that has not been a point of emphasis for the bureau in the past. FBI agents in field offices were told in May to start devoting about a third of their time to immigration enforcement.


The Sun
30 minutes ago
- The Sun
Malaysia, Kyrgyz Republic urge inclusion of Afghanistan
PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia and the Kyrgyz Republic today called for greater efforts to acknowledge Afghanistan into the international community. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, in a joint press conference with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov here, said the two countries shared the view that Afghanistan should be embraced in the international community, albeit with certain observations. 'I share your views on that, because as a country closer to Afghanistan, you (Kyrgyz Republic) have a better understanding, and we will certainly benefit from your advice and views on this,' said Anwar. The Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in August 2021 following the swift collapse of the United States-backed government, after the withdrawal of American and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces. Despite their history of harsh rule, the international community did not impose full sanctions on the Taliban. -- More to come


New Straits Times
30 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
China can maintain high growth and transition to consumer-led economy, premier Li says
TIANJIN: China's Premier Li Qiang said on Wednesday he was confident the world's No.2 economy could maintain a "relatively rapid" growth rate as it transitions from a manufacturing-led model to a consumer-driven one, a shift analysts say is key to securing its future. Li's keynote speech, delivered at a World Economic Forum meeting in Tianjin, comes as Chinese officials seek to cushion the economic damage caused by the trade war with the United States through policy support - a particularly daunting challenge for authorities grappling with the pressing need to undertake painful structural reforms. Most analysts believe China's US$19 trillion economy faces two broad paths: it can sustain relatively high, albeit slowing, growth driven by strong exports - a trend likely to fade as trade tensions with the West escalate - or it can endure several years of slower growth while implementing reforms aimed at unlocking longer-term gains through its vast consumer market. But China's second-ranking official told delegates he was optimistic that Beijing could pull off both. "We are confident in our ability to maintain a relatively rapid growth rate for China's economy," Li said. "China's economy showed steady improvement in the second quarter," he added. "Regardless of how the international environment evolves, China's economy has consistently maintained a strong momentum for growth." Beijing has set an ambitious 2025 growth target of "around 5 per cent", although most analysts expect China will struggle to keep expanding at those rates in the coming years if a lasting truce cannot be secured with Washington. Oxford Economics expects average annual GDP growth this decade to halve from the 1999-2019 average to 4.5 per cent and slow to 3 per cent in the decade after. Economists say more policy support for households could ease the transition to consumption-led growth, but the shift remains politically sensitive for the ruling Communist Party, which has long tied its legitimacy to high growth - a key reason why policymakers have delayed seriously pursuing it for over a decade. Household consumption has remained at around 39 per cent of GDP over the past two decades, according to analysts at Rhodium Group, a China-focused US think tank, far below averages in OECD economies of 54 per cent. On Tuesday, China released guidelines aimed at using financial tools to boost consumption, including pledges to support employment and raise household incomes. The International Monetary Fund last year said deeper reforms are needed to convert China's economy to one led by consumption, including pension reforms, and erecting a social safety net to reduce the need for massive precautionary savings. "We aim to help China transition from a major manufacturing power to a colossal consumer market," Li said. "This will open up vast and untapped markets for businesses from many countries."