Academic Corruption Undermines China's Technological Success
from the how-many-engineers-per-year? dept
Earlier this week, a top Chinese researcher resigned when it was revealed that he had faked research, and that a breakthrough chip of his was a fraud. This coincides with the results of a new study showing rampant research fraud among the ranks of China's top academics. A government study, which looked at 180 PhD candidates, found that 60% had engaged in some form of plagiarism or bribery. This isn't the first time there have been warnings of this nature. All of this casts some doubt on the idea that the US is falling dangerously behind academically, and that we can't keep up with the vast number of engineers that the China churns out every year. It also suggests that companies may regret poorly thought out development of new global R&D centers, just as other forms of outsourcing have proved costly. This is not to say that companies shouldn't go global to find talent, or that the gains in science and technology in China haven't been staggering, but the hype should be tempered with reality, and at the moment the Chinese academic system has some problems to work out.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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The best palce to find "foreign" talent is here in
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Chinese domestic use
Ten years ago, people thought software development would move to Russia because of the large pool of good mathematicians available at low wages. It did not happen. The same is likely to be the case with concerns about technical jobs fleeing to India or China.
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culture
From the street vendors selling duck and promoting it with pictures of donald duck (i'm sure disney has no donald duck brand duck meat), to the fake KFC, to the fake clothing and electronics, poor construction methods and building materials (very little for building codes or enforcement).. all the way up to education.
This is much different than here where (usually) people play by the rules and laws and where quality and being the best carries a lot more weight.
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Local Knowledge
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Infrastructures
But the government is slowly addressing these issues. Despite recent news of censorship of the Chinese Internet, China as a whole has already come a long way. It is a much more "free" society than before. People buy condos and watch American movies just like many other places. On a day to day level, it is hardly noticeable that it is a "communist" nation. The country is actively trying to solve rampant software piracy and other "negative" issues. For it's own economic interests, I definitely see China becoming more "democratic". Only then will such a society support a booming economy.
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Foreign "engineers"
In most Asian classrooms, asking questions is considered "bad manners" -- you are supposed to just accept whatever the teacher says. The same mentality carries over into the workplace, where the boss's word is the word of God. Chinese workplaces/universities are either ruled by this rigid hierarchy (if they have a strong leader), or a free-for-all Machiavellian environment where nobody talks to each other and they cheat as much as possible. In other cases (like Japan or India), everyone wants to avoid "hurt feelings", so everyone agrees to be mediocre/wrong together.
Not to say that American workplaces are always the best -- plenty of workplace bullying here, along with a lot of spinning wheels in the mud over "global competitiveness" or whatever. The "global competitiveness" rhetoric is often used as an excuse to treat employees poorly while bosses give themselves big salaries.
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aoc gold
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I also wanted to be an engineer
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