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China Robotics

China Lays Out Path To Become Robotics Powerhouse by 2025 (nikkei.com) 22

China will work to become a leading global player in robotics by 2025 under a five-year plan announced Tuesday as it ramps up efforts to build a high-tech manufacturing sector resilient to American sanctions. From a report: Coming amid what is expected to be a drawn-out rivalry with the U.S., the plan seeks to help Chinese technology companies compete on the world stage. It was compiled by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and other agencies. The plan targets revenue growth of more than 20% per year for the Chinese robotics industry. Despite reaching the 100 billion yuan ($15.7 billion) mark in 2020, the industry still lags in foundational technologies and manufacturing advanced robots. The government wants to improve the industry's ability to innovate. China will support restructuring efforts and mergers, particularly among large corporations, to create more competitive players. It will also provide financial assistance and strengthen cooperation between industry, academia and government to develop more advanced materials and core components. The plan promotes the diversification of supply chains, which has emerged as a top priority for economic security amid the Sino-American rivalry.
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China Lays Out Path To Become Robotics Powerhouse by 2025

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  • by ickleberry ( 864871 ) <web@pineapple.vg> on Thursday December 30, 2021 @11:27AM (#62128219) Homepage
    From becoming any additional sort of powerhouse. They have enough power already
    • That would require the cooperation of short-sighted corporate nitwits who would gladly use slavery if given the chance. Alternatively, that would require the short-sighted political puppets to revolt against their corporate puppeteers.

    • by znrt ( 2424692 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @01:18PM (#62128509)

      you're about a decade late but don't let that disturb you.

      it's funny how north americans are the only people in the world who never understood, not even after flood levels of ink shed about it, what the trump phenomenon actually meant and displayed in huge, flickering neon letters: decadence.

      well, welcome to "the rest of the world".

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      As long as that's by competing.

    • No.

      Our failure is in focusing on preventing others from accomplishing things. Instead we need to focus on accomplishing more than they do.

      Focus on growth, vs on holding back others.

  • The most important type of robotics to be built it the foreseeable future is self-driving cars. They're a tough enough problem that if you can make them, you're most of the way to doing anything else, such as military or assembly-line applications, but (unlike researching military autonomy directly) the economics of self-driving cars actually make sense - consumers will provide the money to develop the tech instead of having to feed it with tax money.

    With all the money in the self-driving sector, I don't

    • Why is that? People will still need to spend time in the car regardless they are driving or not. I am not saying it isn't important... but most important?
      • Name something else that wastes so many hours and costs so many lives every year, that might be fixed by robotics in the next decade.
        • by Anonymous Coward
          Manual labor.
  • by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @11:43AM (#62128247)
    Even if the US “wanted” to be the future robotic manufacturing powerhouse, the corporate oligarchy in their almighty quest for profit would outsource the manufacturing to China anyway. And in doing so betray American workers, whimsically hand over trade secrets by investing in a country with no intellectual property, child labor, wage an hour or environmental protection laws. The net result is greater wealth disparity and a more power Chinese sphere of influence.
    • So... old thing I moved to China huh?

      I for one welcome our new robotic Chinese overlords.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @01:38PM (#62128579) Homepage Journal

      The cheap Chinese labor bonanza is over. Chinese labor is not the bargain it used to be, and businesses -- even Chinese businesses -- are looking to move manufacturing to places with cheaper labor, like Vietnam, India, and Mexico. Some Chinese businesses are even looking at offshoring to cheap labor US states, where the relative lack of corruption and favoritism offer huge advantages. A Chinese business operating in the US can expect to be treated completely equally to locally owned businesses under the law, which is something you don't often get in low-wage countries.

      Of course Chinese businesses might be less inclined to look outside of China if there was a pro-business climate in China, but the pendulum has swung -- and continues to swing -- away from the pro-business Shanghai faction of the Party towards Xi's more Maoist party faction. Some of the things Xi's faction are doing actually make sense, but he's doing them with dangerous indifference to their immediate economic impacts. China has one of the highest savings rate in the world, roughly 45% of GDP, but 75% of that is invested in a real estate market where projects are often never completed so that new projects to sell to new investors can be started. For years nearly 1/3 of China's immense economic output has been pumped into a potentially world-shaking real estate bubble, and this *should* have been stopped years ago. A rational leadership would be looking to engineer a gentle deflating of the bubble, but Xi appears determined to pop the bubble, immediate consequences be damned.

      This isn't an isolated example of consequence-blindness. In an Old-Lady-Who-Swallowed-the-Fly scenario, the government curbed Australian coal imports because of Australian comments mildly critical of its handling of COVID, then had to impose price controls on coal-generated electricity. That resulted in rolling blackouts just as China was trying to export its way out of a COVID-driven economic slowdown. More recently they've shut down steel production near Winter Olympic venues, with potentially disastrous effects on Chinese and global supply chains in the upcoming months. China is a terrible place to do business right now.

      China certainly has the human talent and ingenuity to become a powerhouse in anything. If it were governed even moderately competently, it would inevitably become a world leader in any number of fields without even trying. If its immense savings were invested in innovation businesses rather than culturally-perceived-as-safe real estate, the transformation would be staggering. But you can't trust your savings to businesses in China because either those businesses are buddy-buddy with corrupt officials or they're the target of corrupt officials.

    • China has much lower wealth disparity than the USA. Also, an actual healthcare system (as opposed to the “wealthcare” system the USA has).
      I’m not a fan of planned economies, but the American system of anything for short term profit, and if in doubt, sue - certainly isn’t very efficient. Wonderful stuff has appeared, but the lot of the common man has not improved much (real wages haven’t moved in decades).
      It’ll be interesting to see this play out. The ussr eventually colla

  • The greatest human migration in history has ended because there are no more peasants to move from the villages to the cities. There aren't any more minorities to enslave . The population looks like it's been contracting for a few years. So robots are the only answer to the coming labour shortages.
  • Ask Jack Ma what happens to successful business people who become too influential in China. The government giveth and the government taketh away. Innovators beware . . . and consider coming to America- we have cookies !

  • I believe them, and I think they'll do it. Ethics, morality, legality aside... that sort of dedication to a declared purpose gets things done.

    I don't believe the long term technical future is centered in North America. We had a good run.

"An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup." - H.L. Mencken

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