One warning that ought to be ringing every American policymaker’s phone is that America is on the verge of losing the international AI race to China. Former Google CEO and current tech policy big name Eric Schmidt is talking about something other than research breakthroughs here, something rather more central to the country’s competitiveness.
Schmidt’s warning cuts to the heart of a fundamental difference between how America and China approach AI development. While the US continues to lead in groundbreaking research, with powerhouses like Google, OpenAI, Meta, and Microsoft pushing the boundaries of what’s possible, there’s a growing gap in how quickly these innovations actually get deployed in the real world.
Why China is Outpacing the US in Large-Scale AI Rollout?
Just imagine this: America boasts the best labs, but China holds the best assembly line. American companies do best at creating the next-gen AI platforms, next-gen robotics, next-gen algorithms. But where it comes to rolling this technology out to full potential across entire industry sectors as well as the systems of government, China is racing forward full speed.
It comes down to coordination and commitment. China has AI as the foundation of the country’s national development strategy, supported by the government to be implemented rapidly on a very big scale.
Chinese firms are not merely toying around with facial recognition technologies; they’re rolling them out across the country. They’re not merely pilot-testing autonomous vehicles – they’re designing the full smart city infrastructure around them.

At the same time, America’s strategy is haphazard. Startups receive incredible funding, innovation comes from private firms, yet there is no coordinated national strategy that holds it all together. Regulators and red tape too often frustrate the transition from research laboratory to real-world product.
Schmidt observes that China’s coordinated strategy enables them to roll out AI technologies in the military, manufacturing, health care, and schools all at once. When Beijing determines that AI is a priority, the whole nation shifts that way. We see huge investments pouring into research, talent building, and sectoral integration, so that AI progress gets rapidly scaled up quickly.
It is about more than having slick tech, it is about competitive advantage. As the military, economic, and even infrastructure competitiveness converge around artificial intelligence, the country best positioned to harness these instruments stands to benefit hugely on many dimensions.
Schmidt Proposes Industry-Government Collaboration for Strategic AI Deployment
Schmidt does not plan to abandon the innovation-driven strategy America has, nor merely tighten up harder, as some would like. Rather, he proposes greater industry-government collaboration, a budget specifically devoted to AI adoption (not research), and regulations facilitating responsible, rapid rollout.
We need to shift the spotlight away from developing newer AI capabilities to actually implementing them strategically in key areas like defense, cybersecurity, infrastructure, and next-generation manufacturing. We need to do this; otherwise, America will be developing planet-altering technologies that other countries do a better job at executing.
This is no longer merely a theoretical issue of technological dominance. Schmidt’s warning is a symptom that there is rising awareness that AI competition is as much about national security as economic survival. Successful nations that use AI throughout their economies, as well as through their military, will be hugely ahead of those that do not.
America’s challenge is balancing innovative advantage while building the institutional capability to convert breakthroughs into broadly based strategic benefit.
China demonstrated that concerted national will can do the unthinkable to spread AI deployments on a historically unprecedented scale. Whether the US is capable of discovering its own secret sauce that would enable it to keep up that tempo without losing the entrepreneurial spirit behind American innovation remains to be seen.
Schmidt’s warning is timely, yet non-pessimistic: America still has time to change, provided policymakers grasp that the AI race is won, not by being first to invent, but rather by being best at execution.




