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Oxford Debate LIVE: Will Innovation Made in China Change the World?

Mon Apr 7, 2025 18:30 - 20:00 CEST Kraftwerk, Selnaustrasse 25, 8001 Zürich

Oxford Debate LIVE: Will Innovation Made in China Change the World?

Mon Apr 7, 2025 18:30 - 20:00 CEST Kraftwerk, Selnaustrasse 25, 8001 Zürich

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China's patent applications have surpassed every other country for over a decade and the speed in which technology out of China impresses the world has picked up in the last few years. Its factories churn out cutting-edge electric vehicles packed with futuristic features – so advanced that European carmakers are now partnering with Chinese firms to gain access to their technology. A complete reversal of the old playbook. In renewable energy and green tech, China has leapfrogged to the world leader in both production and innovation.

Then came the DeepSeek moment: an AI breakthrough from a little-known Chinese company, proving that China can build models on par with America's best – at a fraction of the cost. And all this despite restrictions on high-tech imports from the West.

Time and again, China’s innovations catch businesses, governments, and analysts in Europe and the U.S. off guard. With massive investments in quantum computing, biotech, and nuclear technology, what's next?

Can China lead the world in technology by leveraging its talent, capital, scale, and rapid adoption? Can a state-driven model fuel true innovation through policies and subsidies in China – or the West, for that matter? How effective can export controls be? And what will be the defining factors for innovations to become part of our daily lives?

This Oxford Debate, held live in Zurich, takes on the motion: "Innovation Made in China Will Change the World."

Join us to hear the arguments – and decide for yourself

Nico Luchsinger, Executive Director at Asia Society Switzerland, will moderate the debate with TOY Senior Fellow John Lee, MERICS' Senior Analyst Antonia Hmaidi, Yuka Kobayashi, British Academy Global Innovation Fellow DGAP, and former Financial Times' Beijing bureau chief, James Kynge.

Location

Kraftwerk, Selnaustrasse 25, 8001 Zürich