The digital age has birthed a new kind of superpower rivalry, where technological primacy is the ultimate source of power projection. The United States and China stand at opposite corners of this digital arena, competing across domains such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, data governance, and digital infrastructure. This rivalry is marked by paradox: both sides depend on each other for markets, talent, and innovation, yet each seeks dominance in global digital governance. This article argues that US–China competition over digital infrastructure, technological standards, and data sovereignty is fragmenting the global digital order, undermining cooperative governance, disrupting global value chains, and fueling new dependencies among third countries. Drawing on international relations theory, extensive primary data, and case studies of China’s Digital Silk Road and US strategic initiatives, the paper examines the strategic dynamics, the risks of decoupling, and the implications for global governance, technological innovation, economic development, and security.
Jorge Navarro Lucio (Fri,) studied this question.