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While Others Studied AI, China Deployed It

The global AI conversation has long been framed around American platforms and European regulation. That framing is increasingly inadequate.

According to the latest market study by IDC, China has not only matched the pace of AI adoption elsewhere; it has structurally outpaced most other markets and is accelerating further.

For technology leaders and corporate strategists watching from the sidelines, the window for comfortable observation is closing. China's AI lead is no longer a forecast. It's a fact.

Artificial Intelligence Market Development

The headline figure from IDC's research is striking: global enterprise AI spending will reach $940 billion in 2026, growing to $2.1 trillion by 2029, with China among the fastest-growing markets worldwide.

But the raw scale of the numbers only tells part of the story. What distinguishes China's position is the phase of the cycle it has entered.

According to IDC, the first phase of the AI Supercycle was about computing power, foundational models, and infrastructure. The second phase, now underway, is about enterprise applications, Agentic AI, and intelligent services at scale.

China's Strategic Competitive Advantage

Several data points from the IDC research are worth examining in detail, because they illustrate the breadth of China's advantage across multiple technology segments.

China's Model-as-a-Service market will hit 40,000 trillion Token calls in 2026, with revenue reaching approximately 18.6 billion RMB, representing a 1,154.9 percent CAGR from 2024 to 2030.

Over 60 percent of leading Chinese enterprises have already integrated generative AI into core business processes. That level of enterprise penetration is not a forecast; it is the current baseline from which further growth compounds.

In robotics and physical AI, the numbers are equally dramatic.

Spending on embodied intelligence in China is forecast to grow from $1.4 billion today to $77 billion within five years, a 94 percent CAGR, placing China on track to become the world's largest robotics market by 2029.

For context, that trajectory puts the embodied intelligence sector on a curve that most Western industrial economies will struggle to shadow, let alone match.

At the infrastructure level, a conceptual shift is reshaping how competitive advantage is measured. Raw compute performance, measured in FLOPS, no longer tells the story.

The metric that matters now is "Tokens per watt," reflecting how efficiently a system generates useful AI output per unit of energy.

By 2027, inference will account for over 70 percent of intelligent computing demand, with optimized edge infrastructure growing faster than core data centers.

The implication is significant: the competitive race is no longer about who builds the biggest data center, but who builds the most efficient Applied-AI delivery architecture.

Industrial AI and the End of the Pilot Era

Across Chinese manufacturing, one of the clearest signals of maturity is that pilot programs have given way to production-scale deployment.

Enterprises are integrating AI into production, supply chain management, operational decision-making, and after-sales service, driving end-to-end value chain upgrades.

The generational shift in industrial software is meaningful here: traditional enterprise systems were designed to record and control; the new generation adds perception, prediction, and collaborative execution.

This matters because Industrial AI deployed at scale produces a self-reinforcing advantage. More operational data produces better models; better models produce more efficient operations; more efficient operations generate more revenue to fund further AI investment.

Companies that have already completed this loop are difficult to displace.

The AI Policy Tailwind and Its Strategic Implications

No analysis of China's AI trajectory is complete without acknowledging the structural role of state strategy. 

Three priorities define China's digital economy under the 15th Five-Year Plan, which began in 2026: business opportunity creation, digital sovereignty, and global capability restructuring.

Unlike technology policy frameworks in many markets, China's Five-Year Plan creates coordinated investment across government, industry, and research institutions simultaneously, compressing the cycle between research and commercial deployment.

The strategic shift among Chinese companies is clear: the focus is moving from product exports to capability, platform, and ecosystem exports. Those that build AI-native platforms first, deepen industry scenarios, and expand developer ecosystems are best positioned to win the next growth cycle.

The implications for multinationals operating in or competing with China are significant. This is no longer a story about price competition in hardware; it is a story about platform lock-in and ecosystem depth in AI-native markets.

Outlook for Competing with Chinese AI Supremacy

For C-suite leaders, three priorities emerge from the IDC research data.

First, treat the Token economy seriously. As Tokens become the defining unit of enterprise AI cost and value, technology investment decisions that were previously structured around compute capacity need to be restructured around inference efficiency and unit economics.

Second, assess exposure to China's robotics and embodied intelligence sector, whether as a competitor, a customer, or a supply chain participant. The 94 percent CAGR in embodied intelligence is not a niche opportunity; it is a category reshaping global manufacturing competitiveness.

Third, and perhaps most consequentially, resist the temptation to treat China's AI market as a separate regional story. IDC CEO Lorenzo Larini put it directly: China is a technology force actively shaping how the world moves, not a market you can afford to observe from a distance.

The AI Supercycle is global. But its center of gravity, at least for now, sits firmly in Beijing, Shenzhen, and Hangzhou. That being said, I believe understanding that shift is not merely useful for AI technology strategists. It is becoming a prerequisite for sound business judgment at the highest level.

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