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Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt's China alarm, China has already become a peer of the U.S.
Margaret Harding McGillApril. 1 2022
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photo: John Lamparski/Getty Images
Eric Schmidt has taken on big challenges before, fighting Microsoft when he led Novell and taking on Brussels when he was CEO at Google. Today, the billionaire is focusing his energy on rousing the U.S. to fight what he sees as its biggest tech struggle yet: competition with China.
What they're saying: "We have to do whatever it takes," he told Axios in an interview in Washington D.C. on Wednesday.
In Schmidt's eyes, China has already become a peer of the U.S. and has a clear plan for how it wants to dominate critical fields, from semiconductors to AI, and clean energy to biotech.
- The U.S., meanwhile, has been slow to formulate a response and even slower to take action.
- In the long term, he envisions a separate four-year university, but initially the program could launch at existing universities who teach an agreed-upon curriculum, similar to the military's ROTC.
- "The fact of the matter is, the antitrust issue is a domestic issue. The real issue is we need to compete against China and win," he said. "I want all of the conversation to be with the tech industry — what does it take to produce globally strong platforms? What is it going to take?"
- He's not opposed to reining in the industry's excesses, which he admits exist. But he argues that legislation should focus on addressing specific harms rather than looking to break up companies.
- Schmidt also said Europe's proposals on regulating artificial intelligence "need to be re-done," and in general says he is opposed to regulating AI and other advances to solve problems that have yet to appear.
Meanwhile, when it comes to Ukraine, Schmidt said it is a reminder that war is "much deadlier" than many people realize and pointed out how much worse it would be if, say, the U.S. were in an armed war with China over Taiwan.
- "It would be much much worse if it were the U.S. and China. It would be so horrific."
- In the Ukraine conflict, Schmidt also sees a reminder of the U.S.'s critical dependence on Taiwan, especially for leading edge semiconductors, where TSMC provides half of the global supply.
- He said China has not only laid out a strategy for global leadership in those areas, but is taking action.
- "The US should say that, with Western values, we should compete," Schmidt said.
- Where possible, he said, the U.S. and China should remain in dialogue. "This closing down of science has a lot of negative repercussions," he said. "We're safer when we talk to each other. We're safer when we recognize the shared humanity."
- Eric Braverman, CEO of Schmidt Futures, noted that OSTP is authorized by statute to seek outside expertise.
- "Congress, in its wisdom, created a mechanism by which philanthropies and others can provide that talent without any control," Braverman told Axios.
"Whatever it takes": Schmidt sounds alarm on China tech competition
The former Google CEO sees every issue on tech's world stage through the lens of China's rise to power.
www.axios.com