How AI Is Making China More Directly Relevant to Students' Future Pathways
From a leader's "core curriculum" issue to a strategic advantage for American students
Back in 2013, Stephen A. Schwarzman said, "In the 21st century, China is no longer an elective course. It's core curriculum." In the AI era, that relevance now reaches further. China is no longer only something future diplomats, policymakers, or global business leaders may need to understand. As AI reshapes how industries coordinate, how competition works, and how future pathways form, better understanding of modern China is becoming more directly relevant to American students' academic, professional, and long-term strategic decisions. This is why stronger understanding of modern China is increasingly becoming a strategic advantage.
China matters in a new way in the AI era.
In the past, understanding China most obviously mattered to future diplomats, policymakers, and global business leaders. Today, that relevance is becoming more direct for American students themselves. AI is changing not only tools, but how industries evolve, how opportunity structures form, and how national systems shape personal future pathways.
That is why China is no longer only a political headline or a topic for abstract global awareness. It is becoming more directly relevant to American students' academic, professional, and long-term strategic decisions.
AI is amplifying China's relevance through two forces at once.
First, AI is making more high-value industries globally coordinated and more directly shaped by U.S.–China dynamics.
Second, AI is pushing competition more strongly toward system-based competition, where national systems shape industries, industries shape opportunities, and those opportunities shape individual future pathways.
This also means AI competition is increasingly not only about models. It is increasingly about which systems can better integrate technology, capital, talent, infrastructure, and execution into real-world advantage.
This is no longer abstract. Reuters cited a U.S. advisory-body report saying that about 80% of U.S. AI startups now use Chinese open-source AI models. Reuters also reported that China is embedding AI across broad parts of its economy, including manufacturing, logistics, and robotics.
Together, these signals point in the same direction: AI is making China more directly relevant to the industries and systems American students will increasingly need to understand.
As China becomes more directly relevant to the systems and opportunity structures shaping future pathways, demand for stronger understanding rises.
But structured supply remains limited. Most U.S. schools still do not systematically teach modern China. As demand rises while structured supply remains limited, better understanding of modern China becomes not just useful knowledge, but a strategic advantage — increasingly, a strategic advantage for future pathways.
This does not mean students need one fixed conclusion about China. It means they increasingly need better understanding of modern China as a real-world system that affects industries, universities, firms, and opportunity formation.
Taken together, the first three AI-driven structural shifts point to two things American students increasingly need:
Next Step
If this Part resonates with you, join the SEE China Information Session, read the full story online, or stay tuned for the next Part in this series, where we explain why U.S. schools and common alternatives are often not enough to provide these two things.
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