America has many advantages in this race — which is how it has managed to stay ahead, even as Beijing embarked on its long-term strategy to overtake it. But in the past six months, the Trump administration has systematically begun to dismantle many of them.
Let’s take partnerships: The biggest advantage for the U.S. is that it has allies, while China has clients. Collectively, the U.S. and its allies can outcompete, outspend, out-innovate, out-trade, out-finance and out-attract others to its side. But Washington’s allies in North America, Europe and Asia increasingly — and rightfully — fear that the current “America First” policy is putting them last. They’ve been told to defend themselves, to pay 15 percent or more in tariffs and, in the case of Canada and Denmark, to cede territory. As a result, they’re turning toward each other and reducing their military, economic and political ties to Washington.
And that’s not all. The Trump administration is also pursuing funding policies around universities and immigration that directly undercut America’s ability to compete with China. For 80 years, federal research dollars funded scientific and technological breakthroughs like the internet, genetic sequencing, space exploration, vaccines, cancer cures and much more. The country’s modern research universities led the way in spurring these innovations, drawing talent from across the globe to benefit from and contribute to its ecosystem of innovation.
But Trump has now cut federal funding for basic research by a third, blocked research grants to top universities for purely ideological reasons and tightened immigration for international students and scholars. One poll suggests that 75 percent of scientists in the U.S. today are looking to leave the country and work elsewhere.
It’s hard to underestimate the damage these policies are doing to U.S. competitiveness. To give just one example, many of the country’s closest allies are now offering lucrative grants and research opportunities to entice the talent pool at the core of America’s success as a global innovation machine.
This isn’t just shooting yourself in the foot — it’s shooting yourself in the head. And unless Washington rectifies the situation swiftly, it will find not just Beijing but other parts of the world passing it by.