The New York Times had an article that has set off alarms in higher education circles in the US that, according to some global rankings, China’s universities are rapidly advancing the amount and quality of their scientific research output, leaving US universities behind.
Look back to the early 2000s, and a global university ranking based on scientific output, such as published journal articles, would be very different. Seven American schools would be among the top 10, led by Harvard University at No. 1.
Only one Chinese school, Zhejiang University, would even make the top 25.
Today, Zhejiang is ranked first on that list, the Leiden Rankings, from the Centre for Science and Technology Studies at Leiden University in the Netherlands. Seven other Chinese schools are in the top 10.
…According to Mark Neijssel, director of services for the Centre for Science and Technology Studies, the Leiden rankings take into account papers and citations contained in the Web of Science, a database set of academic publications which is owned by Clarivate, a data and analytics company. Thousands of academic journals are represented in the databases, many of which are highly specialized, he said.
The research output of Harvard and other US universities has not declined. It has grown but the Chinese universities are growing faster. This is because China has put great emphasis on scientific research, seeing it as the foundation of its technological base for its growth as a world power.
President Xi Jinping, in a speech in 2024, praised his country’s advances in fields such as quantum technology and space science. He cited a breakthrough by researchers at Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, who developed a method to synthesize starch from carbon dioxide in the lab, which could possibly lead to industries making food from the air, without needing acres of plants dependent on land, irrigation and harvesting.
…China has been pouring billions of dollars into its universities and aggressively working to make them attractive to foreign researchers. In the fall, China began offering a visa specifically for graduates of top universities in science and technology to travel to China to study or do business.
“China has a boatload of money in higher education that it didn’t have 20 years ago,” said Alex Usher, president of Higher Education Strategy Associates, a Toronto education consulting company.
Mr. Xi has made the reasons for the country’s investments explicit, arguing that a nation’s global power depends on its scientific dominance.
“The scientific and technological revolution is intertwined with the game between superpowers,” he said in a speech in 2024.
President Trump’s administration has taken the opposite tack, aiming to cut billions of dollars in research grants for U.S. universities.
Trump officials have argued that the cuts are meant to eliminate waste and reorient research away from themes of diversity and other topics that they see as too political.
It should be noted that there is a significant time lag, of the order of five years or so, between investment in scientific research and its visible payoff in terms of research publications. So what we are seeing cannot be attributed to Trump alone but more to the long-term investments of the Chinese government. But what is clear is that Trump’s current policies, such as attacking the autonomy of universities, threatening them if they do not bow to his will, and making massive cuts in research grants, will make things much worse, though its effects will only be seen down the road in a few years.
One of the key factors is the number and quality of graduate students and post-doctoral fellows who do so much of the actual research. It used to be that they would want to come to the US and so the US universities had the pick of the crop but that is no longer true.
Harvard and other leading U.S. universities face a fresh set of stressors from the Trump administration’s cuts to science grants, as well as from travel bans and an anti-immigration crackdown that has swept up international students and academics.
The number of international students arriving in the U.S. in August 2025 was 19 percent lower than the year before, a trend that could further hurt the prestige and rankings of American schools if the world’s best minds choose to study and work elsewhere.
It takes decades of painstaking effort to build up research programs but they can be destroyed much more quickly. US universities were not always leaders. German universities produced some of the best research but just within one decade in the 1930s, Nazi policies of pogroms and death camps aimed at Jews and their general suppression of intellectual freedom drove many of their best scientists and other intellectuals out of the country. A lot of them ended up in the US and helped create the rich scientific infrastructure here. The current Trump administration may achieve the dubious distinction of producing a greater degradation of US research within an even shorter time than the Nazis did.
I want to be clear that I am not concerned that US universities are no longer seen as the world leaders in scientific research. I am not a fan of global ranking systems which can be gamed. Furthermore, the jingoistic desire that is so common in the US to be seen as the winners in every sphere is something I abhor. Scientific research, because it is published openly, benefits everyone, irrespective of the source, so we should welcome Chinese investments in this area. Of course, the technological benefits are not as freely shared and so US economic competitiveness may well be adversely affected.
What really concerns me is that the anti-science, anti-intellectual climate that is currently prevalent at the highest levels of the US government does not bode well, not just for the US, but for the creation of new knowledge globally.

“The current Trump administration may achieve the dubious distinction of producing a greater degradation of US research within an even shorter time than the Nazis did.”
I’m not sure I fully agree with this statement…. Trump’s first term started about a decade ago, which is about the time the Nazi’s needed to destroy German science.
He’s certainly doing his best to beat Hitler in evilness and everything else though.
No doubt Trump believes that only white, native English speakers are capable of scientific research.
The EU is offering funding to researchers fleeing from Trump.
https://www.erasmusmagazine.nl/en/2025/05/08/new-super-grant-aims-to-lure-americans-to-the-eu/
When they settle here, they may stay permanently. Just like a century ago, when researchers fled the Nazis, and stayed in the US.
I rhought the eight years under Dubya was the point in history when the American century that started with the aggressive politics of MacKinley ended, and we would see USA limp along,
not quite declining as fast as the colonial powers but roughly parallel with China gradually losing economic hegemony over the next generation.
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I did not expect anything like Trump, as I assumed the US political class / oligarchy would have enough insight and self-preservation instinct to not back another strutting Italian loudmouth.
I failed to take into account that they do not merely use the noise of Fox News, Sinclair Media etc. as propaganda to fool the rubes -- they seriously believe this sh*t!
This is what an ex-Republican writer described as “epistemic closure” -- they are as ignorant as the peons they manipulate! This is scary.
Addendum -- the thread is about science, but the priority for science is determined by politics.
For instance the boards in charge of US universities are increasingly recruited from private enterprise and science viewed as a product to be viewed by the number of research papers and judged on a short time horizon.
I could write a long list of successful researchers who barely managed to
get funding for some blue-sky research that later became a breakthrough.
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The Sputnik craze in 1957 shocked USA to give priority to education and science, providing dividends for decades after.
Starting with Reagan, everything became an issue of cutting taxes. We see the result as other nations are catching up.
It’s happening already.
According to this:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-04048-7
China is ahead in 66 scientific/technological domains to the US’s 8, so that ship has probably sailed by now. It should be a Sputnik moment for the American science establishment, but the voting public has decreed that a puling, squalling man-baby is a good choice to navigate these difficult times.
At this point, the Latin phrase “cupio dissolvi” is quite appropriate, also because normal US citizens mostly do not have any sense of how much and how fast their country is sinking.
Mr Singham is looking in the wrong direction.
Mr Singham is a theoretician and thus biased in favor of Pure Science at the expense of Applied Science (aka Engineering).
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WW2. The USA succeeded and Germany failed because the USA saw the nuclear bomb as an engineering issue while Germany saw it as a scientific issue.
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While Singham is dazzled by Chinese Science, I am looking at the Chinese landscape of tofu-dreg projects.
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President Trump is correct to focus on rebuilding manufacturing might in the USA.