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Everything about China, good and bad, is big: its population, its
cities, its Miracle-Gro economy, its trade volume, its
piracy problem, its Internet-censorship effort. China today
is the dragon in the living room of the world market. And
everyone in that market has to come to terms with it.
Nowhere is this more apparent than in technology. It's as if the
entire Chinese economy is obeying Moore's Law. China's
seemingly instantaneous transformation from impoverished
agrarian state to on-the-move superpower is being driven
by its embrace of all things technological—the Internet,
wireless communications, consumer electronics, computers,
automobiles, digital television, and nuclear energy.
Other countries—India, South Korea, Taiwan—have relied
heavily on technology to grow and develop. But none of
them had quite the same wealth of technical talent as China
has accumulated in the past quarter century. As Bill Gates,
Microsoft Corp.'s chair, pointed out earlier this year
in a widely reported speech about the obsolescence of American
high school education, "China graduates twice as many students
with bachelor's degrees as the U.S., and they have six
times as many majoring in engineering." This year China
will graduate more than 300 000 engineers, so many that
it has a glut of technological talent. All the current
members of China's Politburo Standing Committee, the highest
tier in the Communist Party, are engineers. Can the United
States make a similar claim about its political leadership
or the size of its technology workforce?
No single report can capture the China story. But in "China's Tech
Revolution," we have showcased some of its key industries,
people, and places to demonstrate the speed and extent
of China's surge into the technologies that will fuel economic
power in the 21st century.
For example, nearly all of China's industrial development has
occurred along its eastern coast, but recently the central
government has been pushing investors westward. In the
special report's introductory article, IEEE Spectrum's
Jean Kumagai and Marlowe Hood explain how this "Go West" policy
has, in a few short years, put the high-tech boomtown of
Chengdu on the map. Steven Cherry reports on China's massive
effort to upgrade its Internet and the government's simultaneous
attempt to censor the information flowing through that
network. Peter Fairley looks at how electric bikes are
playing an insurgent role in China's burgeoning car culture.
Tekla S. Perry discusses how the 2008 Olympics, to be held
in Beijing, will make digital TV commonplace in China—long
before it takes hold in the United States. And Linda Geppert
visits China's Semiconductor Manufacturing International
Corp., which is using engineers from Taiwan to take on
the formidable Taiwanese semiconductor industry.
The biggest question now, for China and the world, is how China
will handle the downside of runaway growth. China is beginning
to grapple with the problems that Western economies took
on years ago—exploited workers and labor unrest, choking
pollution, chronic energy shortfalls, massive intellectual
property theft, and volatile relationships with many of
its main trading partners, to list but a few of the issues.
The Middle Kingdom's rise has alarmed and mesmerized all of
us. "If you took a survey of all the CEOs in the world
and asked them, 'What is the one factor that is going to
change your business in the next decade?' the plurality
answer would be 'China,'" says Donald H. Straszheim, an
institutional investment consultant and former chief economist
for Merrill Lynch. Read this issue to find out why.