Who is ahead in the global tech race?

A new Harvard index shows the West´s dominance in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and more is under threat from determined rivals.

Technological prowess stands at the core of economic advancement, geopolitical leverage, and military capability. Despite its crucial importance, accurately gauging which country is ahead in various strategic technologies is fraught with complexity. A recent ranking by Harvard researchers, published on June 5th, seeks to clarify the landscape. Their index examines the technological strength of 25 nations across five key domains: artificial intelligence, semiconductors, biotechnology, space, and quantum technology. Unsurprisingly, the United States emerges as the frontrunner, holding a clear lead across most categories. Nevertheless, its dominance is being steadily eroded as competitors accelerate their own innovation efforts.

Examining the details, the United States retains the top position on the strength of deep investment, world-class research universities, and dynamic private-sector innovation, particularly in artificial intelligence and semiconductors. However, the rankings highlight how other countries—notably China—are narrowing the gap. China´s government-led initiatives, focus on technological self-sufficiency, and vast investments have enabled it to rapidly scale capabilities in semiconductors and quantum technology. In biotechnology and space, traditional powers like the United Kingdom and Germany continue to play influential roles but face mounting pressure from Asia’s rising tech giants.

As technological competition intensifies, the West finds itself in a precarious situation. Its historical lead, underpinned by decades of research and open scientific exchange, is less secure than in the past. Rivals are pouring resources into strategic sectors and demonstrating the willingness to deploy state power behind technological catch-up. The evolving rankings serve as a wake-up call: success in the global tech race is not merely about breakthrough discoveries, but also about sustained, broad-based advancement, national policy, and pragmatic implementation. Whether the United States and its allies can maintain their lead amid determined challengers remains an urgent question for policymakers and industry leaders alike.

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