
By: Dan Ciuriak (Center for International Governance Innovation)
International institutional frameworks are creatures of their age — they reflect the political power relationships and technological and economic conditions of the day.
Three technological breakthroughs in the late 2000s — deep learning through stacked neural nets; the introduction of the iPhone; and the application of graphics processing units, or GPUs, to neural nets — sent the amount of data collected globally soaring while enabling the tools to exploit that data. Those breakthroughs transformed data into the “new oil” — the essential capital asset of what would eventually be recognized as the data-driven economy.
The implications for international governance were profound.
For one thing, the new technological conditions changed the terms for great-power rivalry. Whereas China entered the global knowledge-based economy some 30 years behind the United States (and remains at a distant remove, competitively speaking, in capturing international payments for intellectual property [IP]), it entered the data-driven economy more or less contemporaneously with the United States and, due to its size, with considerable advantages in terms of the amount of data it could capture.
The US-China relationship had by then changed from one of tacit alliance under the George W. Bush administration, to one of “frenemies” under the Obama administration (with its IP-focused “pivot to Asia” through entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, and the militarization of this pivot through its new “Air-Sea Battle” doctrine). When China surged into the lead in fifth-generation or 5G telecommunications networks, a critical area in the contest for dominance of the new general-purpose technologies built on the nexus of big data, machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI), the relationship was further transformed. Under the administration of Donald Trump, and since then under President Joe Biden, the dynamic deteriorated to one of all-out economic war…
Featured News
Charter to Acquire Cox Communications in $35 Billion Deal
May 22, 2025 by
CPI
FTC Targets Media Watchdog Over Alleged Collusion Against Musk’s X
May 22, 2025 by
CPI
FTC Drops Antitrust Case Accusing Pepsi of Squeezing Small Retailers
May 22, 2025 by
CPI
Shein Warns of Higher Costs for French Shoppers Amid EU Fee Proposal
May 22, 2025 by
CPI
DOJ Opens Antitrust Probe of Google’s AI Partnership with Character.AI
May 22, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Industrial Policy
May 21, 2025 by
CPI
Industrial Strategy and the Role of Competition – Taking a Business Lens
May 21, 2025 by
Marcus Bokkerink
Industrial Policy, Antitrust, and Economic Growth: Some Observations
May 21, 2025 by
David S. Evans
Bolder by Design: Crafting Pro-Competitive Industrial Policies For Complex Challenges
May 21, 2025 by
Antonio Capobianco & Beatriz Marques
Competition-Friendly Industrial Policy
May 21, 2025 by
Philippe Aghion, Mathias Dewatripont & Patrick Legros