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China really wants to attract talented scientists, and Trump just helped

China really wants to attract talented scientists, and Trump just helped

The Star3 days ago

HANGZHOU: China was already scoring wins in its rivalry with the US for scientific talent.
It had drawn some of the world's best researchers to its campuses, people decorated with Nobel Prizes, MacArthur 'Genius' grants and seemingly every other academic laurel on offer.
Now, the Trump administration's policies might soon bolster China's efforts.
Under President Donald Trump, the US is slashing the research funding that helped establish its reputation as the global leader in science and technology. The President is also attacking the country's premier universities, and trying to limit the enrolment of international students.
Scientists from China are under particular pressure, as US officials have said that they may pose a national security threat by funnelling valuable knowledge to China. Chinese-born scientists have been investigated or even arrested.
Last week, the Trump administration said it would work to 'aggressively revoke' the visas of Chinese students in 'critical fields'.
As a result, many scholars are looking elsewhere.
And Chinese institutions have been quick to try to capitalise. Universities in Hong Kong and Xi'an said they would offer streamlined admission to transfer students from Harvard University. An ad from a group with links to the Chinese Academy of Sciences welcomed 'talents who have been dismissed by the US NIH', or National Institutes of Health.
'The United States is shooting itself in the foot,' said anatomy expert Zhang Xiaoming, who left the Baylor College of Medicine in Texas in 2024 to lead the medical education programme at Westlake University, a research university in the tech hub of Hangzhou.
'Since I went to the United States more than 30 years ago, so much of its research has been supported by foreigners, including many Chinese,' said Dr Zhang, who emphasised that he was speaking for himself, not his employer.
'Without foreigners, at least in the field of scientific research, they can't go on.'
On its own, China had become more attractive to scientists in recent years because of the huge investments the country has made in research. Westlake is a prime example.
Established in 2018 by several high-profile scientists who had returned to China from the West, Westlake's campus exudes technological advancement. A spaceshiplike tower looms over rows of research laboratories. Computing centres and animal testing facilities cluster around a central lawn, in a shape designed to evoke a biological cell.
In its main academic building, portraits of dozens of professors are on display – all of whom were recruited from overseas.
There is Dr Guan Kunliang, a biochemist who won a MacArthur 'Genius' grant while in Michigan; Dr Cheng Jianjun, a materials engineer honoured multiple times by the National Science Foundation; Dr Yu Hongtao, a Harvard-educated cell biologist who received millions in funding from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Maryland.
Recruitment notices advertise high compensation, in line with those at top foreign universities.
Westlake has been perhaps the most successful Chinese university at recruiting overseas talent, but it is far from the only one.
Between 2010 and 2021, nearly 12,500 scientists of Chinese descent left the US for China, according to a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The rate of departure was accelerating: More than half of them left in just the five years between 2017 and 2021.
The trend has only continued in the past few years, said Professor Yu Xie from Princeton University, who co-authored the study.
It is not only Chinese-born scientists who are jumping ship. Former Harvard chemist Charles Lieber, who was convicted in 2023 of failing to disclose payments from a Chinese university, recently joined Tsinghua University.
Chinese scientists have long flocked to American universities, lured by the promise of a world-class education and resources that their home country could not provide.
In the 1980s, Chinese scientists who visited the US would collect disposable test tubes to reuse in China, said neurobiologist Rao Yi at Peking University in Beijing, who studied and worked in the US for two decades.
The admiration continued even as China's economy boomed. In 2020, nearly one-fifth of doctorates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics awarded in the US went to students from China, according to data from the National Science Foundation.
Historically, the vast majority of those doctorates stayed in the US – 87 per cent between 2005 and 2015, the data showed. Many became US citizens, and they have helped the US accumulate patents, publications and Nobel Prizes.
In recent years, more scientists have been returning to China, drawn partly by government recruitment programmes promising them millions of dollars in funding as well as housing subsidies and other perks.
China's spending on research and development is now second only to the US. And Chinese institutions such as Tsinghua and Zhejiang University now routinely rank among the best in the world for science and technology.
The investment is part of a plan to turn China into a scientific superpower, especially in strategically important fields such as artificial intelligence (AI), semiconductors and biotechnology.
'The scientific and technological revolution is intertwined with the game between superpowers,' China's leader Xi Jinping said in 2024.
At the same time, the US has been pushing scientists away for years, in particular by investigating their ties with China.
Protein chemist Lu Wuyuan, formerly at the University of Maryland, was one of those targeted. He was investigated by the National Institutes of Health for allegedly failing to disclose research ties to China – ties he said Maryland knew about. After 20 years at the university, he quit in 2020.
Most of the cases brought under the so-called China Initiative eventually collapsed. Many researchers criticised the campaign as racial profiling.
Dr Lu, who now works at Fudan University in Shanghai, said that many of his friends mused over leaving the US, but most chose to stay because they had settled there.
The Trump administration's assault on research funding may change that.
'If they cut so much funding, I believe that may be the last straw for many people,' Dr Lu said.
Still, China faces its own issues in poaching talent.
It has become harder for Chinese universities to meet and woo overseas scientists, as Chinese scholars have had trouble securing visas to the US to attend academic conferences. Researchers in America also face restrictions in visiting China; Texas, for example, prohibits employees of public universities from travelling to China for work.
The scientists who have returned to China fall largely into a few categories: those who are early in their careers, or who are nearing retirement, or who felt pushed out by investigations. Established mid-career scholars are still reluctant to leave, multiple scientists said.
Dr Rao at Peking University, who was also one of Westlake's co-founders, said that China's progress in recruiting international talent had also been hampered by cronyism and jealousy among domestic colleagues.
'While funding should increase, it is not the key factor at this stage,' Dr Rao said. 'Supporting scientists based on merit and their good science is the key.'
Even at home, scientists are not spared political scrutiny. Chinese universities face limits on free expression, and China's Ministry of State Security has warned that scholars returning from overseas may be spies.
Multiple Chinese-born scientists – both those who had returned to China, and those still in the US – emphasised that they did not want to get entangled in politics. They were just trying to do good work.
The simple fact was, many agreed, that it was increasingly easier to do so in China.
'It's hard to survive in America. And China is developing so fast,' said AI researcher Fu Tianfan, 32, who left Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in December to join Nanjing University.
'Whether it was the best choice,' he said, 'it may take some time to say.' - NYTIMES

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Asean News Headlines as at 10pm on Friday (June 6, 2025)
Asean News Headlines as at 10pm on Friday (June 6, 2025)

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  • The Star

Asean News Headlines as at 10pm on Friday (June 6, 2025)

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'Clash of the Titans:' allies fear fallout in Trump-Musk split
'Clash of the Titans:' allies fear fallout in Trump-Musk split

New Straits Times

time4 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

'Clash of the Titans:' allies fear fallout in Trump-Musk split

HE is almost certainly off the guest list for White House galas, but Elon Musk's astonishing spat with Donald Trump could inflict damage for both men that goes far beyond catchy headlines and an incinerated friendship. On one side, there's the US president – a man who has already shown unprecedented appetite for using the levers of power to go after opponents. On the other: the world's richest man, with a business empire entwined deep into the heart of the US economy and space industry. "Get your popcorn," Chaim Siegel, an analyst at financial services company Elazar Advisors told AFP. "I've never seen two people this big go at it this nasty in all my time in the business. Can't be good for either side." Trump allies worry that the messy breakup could have ramifications for his legacy and Republicans' election prospects, as well as damaging the administration's ties with Silicon Valley donors. Musk is also in jeopardy. Trump has threatened to scrap the tech mogul's lucrative subsidies and federal contracts, potentially devastating Tesla and risking some $22 billion of SpaceX's government income – even if it remains unclear how the US government itself would manage the fallout. The catalyst for the split was Trump's sprawling domestic policy bill, a package that Musk has complained in increasingly apocalyptic terms will swell the budget deficit, undermining the president's agenda. But the issue quickly has become extraordinarily bitter. Musk called Thursday for Trump's impeachment, implying that the Republican was linked to the crimes of financier Jeffrey Epstein, who died by suicide after being charged with sex-trafficking to elite, international clients. The dust-up has rocked to the core the fragile coalition between the populists in Trump's "MAGA" movement and the Musk-friendly "tech bros" whose podcasts and cash helped secure the Republican's second term. Influential figures on the populist side hit back with calls for investigations into South African-born Musk's immigration status, security clearance and alleged drug use. Meanwhile in Congress, Republicans are calling for a ceasefire, worried that the world's richest man will use his deep pockets to exact revenge in the 2026 midterm congressional election. Trump and Musk were never obvious allies, but the flamboyant entrepreneur turned into the Republican's surprise wingman – and mega-donor – during the 2024 election. Musk ended up spending US$290 million to help the campaigns of Trump and other Republicans. He was then rewarded with overseeing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, which embarked on ruthless and, critics say, ideologically driven slashing of the State Department and other bodies. "Without me, Trump would have lost the election," Musk posted on his social platform X at the height of a dust-up that US media labelled the "Clash of the Titans." As president, Trump is arguably the most powerful person in the world. But Musk's megaphone – X – is much bigger than Trump's Truth Social and he is a prolific trash talker, instantly reaching many millions of people. Musk's portfolio of almost 100 contracts with 17 government agencies also gives him enormous power over the federal bureaucracy, including the US space programme. Trump, on the other hand, has ultimate say over those contracts. If Trump heeds his supporters' calls for investigations he could tie Musk down for years, revoking his security clearances and issuing executive orders to gum up his business. Trump, 78, may need to walk a delicate line given the risk that Musk will lobby Congress to scuttle his budget plans. Republican lawmakers – most of whom are fighting elections next year – have welcomed Musk with open arms, nodding approvingly at his calls for federal cuts and grateful for his campaign cash. But when it comes to picking sides, most Republicans who have spoken out on the spat are sticking with Trump. The president has a long history of forcing wavering lawmakers to step back into line. "Every tweet that goes out, people are more in lockstep behind President Trump, and (Musk's) losing favour," Congressman Kevin Hern told political website NOTUS. Musk, who dreams of colonising Mars, responded with a longer view of the situation. "Some food for thought as they ponder this question: Trump has 3.5 years left as President," Musk posted, "but I will be around for 40+ years."

US-China trade talks to resume in seven days: White House
US-China trade talks to resume in seven days: White House

New Straits Times

time6 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

US-China trade talks to resume in seven days: White House

WASHINGTON: Trade negotiations between US and Chinese officials are expected to resume within seven days, following a phone call between President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping. The discussions will place particular emphasis on rare earth minerals, White House Trade Adviser Peter Navarro confirmed on Friday. "We expect that a meeting will take place within seven days," Navarro told reporters at the White House, commenting on the timeline of the next round of trade talks. Navarro stated that Trump has been clear that "the rare earth issue will be key to that negotiation", as reported by Sputnik/RIA Novosti. The US delegation will include Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, according to Navarro. The advisor also mentioned that Thursday's call between Trump and Xi lasted approximately 90 minutes, during which both leaders demonstrated "a very clear understanding" of the expected outcomes of the upcoming discussions. Trump later shared on Truth Social that he had discussed "some of the intricacies" of the US-China trade deal with President Xi. He also announced that he had accepted Xi's invitation to visit China and extended a reciprocal invitation. Following high-level trade and economic talks in Geneva earlier in May, Washington and Beijing agreed to lower reciprocal tariffs by 115 percentage points each for 90 days. The US has reduced tariffs on Chinese goods from 145 per cent to 30 per cent, while China has cut tariffs on American imports from 125 per cent to 10 per cent. Later that month, Trump accused China of "totally violating" the Geneva agreement and remarked that "it is extremely hard" to reach a deal with Beijing.–BERNAMA

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