As China pushes forward efforts to become a high-value economy, it will retain โ€œunswervingโ€ focus on strengthening scientific research capacity to catch up with the US to be โ€œa country of innovators,โ€ said Wang Zhigang, head of Chinaโ€™s Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) on Monday.

โ€œFundamental research capabilities have been one of our weaknesses and should see more emphasis across the technology landscape,โ€ Wang said on Monday in a press conference during the Two Session meetings in Beijing. Shoring it up will be โ€œone of the main national strategies in technological developmentโ€ in the coming days, he added.

Chinaโ€™s total spending on research and development (R & D) rose a robust 11.6% year-on-year to RMB 1.96 trillion (around $293 billion) in 2018, of which about 5% was fundamental research, according to the National Bureau of Statistics this month.

Chinese investment toward fundamental research still lags that of developed countries, which is on average 15% to 20%, reported state-owned media Xinhua in October, citing Zhang Peng, a government official from the state statistics bureau.

Wang pointed to R & D spending as an indicator for productivity growth, saying that China should take note of โ€œhuge inputsโ€ from the US federal government on fundamental research. โ€œHowever, we have been witnessing good momentum in investment growth from local high-tech firms, which are placing basic subjects such as mathematics as their key focuses.โ€

Chinese tech companies have been ramping up investment in developing core technologies. E-commerce giant Alibaba launched in October 2017 a global research program, Alibaba Academy for Discovery, Adventure, Momentum, and Outlook (or DAMO Academy), with R & D investment of more than $15 billion over three years. The company then launched a chipmaking subsidiary, Pingtouge, in late September, with plans to launch its first quantum computing chip in the next two to three years.

A recent study from PwC showed that corporate research spending for publicly listed companies in China grew 34% in 2018 compared with a year earlier. This growth outpaced all other regions, including companies headquartered in North America, which increased spending 8% year-on-year. Total investment value from US companies still tops the list, but the number of Chinese companies added to the list grew 16%, the biggest increase during the year. The three Chinese companies investing the most in R & D in 2018 were Alibaba ($3.6 billion), Tencent ($2.7 billion), and Shenzhen-based telecommunications firm ZTE ($2 billion).

Jill Shen was TechNode's auto tech reporter until August 2025. She currently covers Chinese AI and EV as a freelancer. Connect with her via e-mail: jill_shen_sh@icloud.com or Twitter: @jill_shen_sh

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