Business | Party-state entanglement

China is catching up with America in quantum technology

But its state-heavy innovation model comes with risks

Illustration of 2 spheres of binary numbers, sat on 2 sides of a see saw, the larger one has an eagle's head and the smaller has a dragon's, but there is money being placed on the dragon ball.
Illustration: Satoshi Kambayashi
|Hefei

In a SMALL shop in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei, one of the rarest pieces of technology in the world is on display. The quantum computer in the showroom of Origin, a Chinese startup, looks ready to be plucked from the shelf and fired up. Only 20 such devices are produced globally each year. It is unclear what in the showroom is for sale, but none of it is supposed to be seen by foreigners. During your correspondent’s visit, which was agreed on in advance, the company panicked at the sight of a foreigner, abruptly cancelled interviews and notified the police.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Party-state entanglement”

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