// Global Analysis Archive
An ITIF report argues the United States risks growing dependence on China across critical advanced industries, potentially shifting global techno-economic power. It calls for system-level policy transformation—beyond incremental measures—across R&D, finance, manufacturing, trade, and regulation to avoid a decisive strategic setback.
As geopolitical rivalry pushes innovation battles inside national markets, Asian firms are increasingly using IP enforcement and non-competes to defend position against domestic rivals. The resulting legal overhang can deter startups, entrench incumbents, and even drive top talent abroad—weakening the industrial base policies aim to protect.
A State Council guideline calls for deeper military-civil integration by sharing innovation infrastructure, commercializing defense technologies, and encouraging private capital into defense-adjacent industries. The strategy targets space, cyberspace, and maritime sciences to drive supply-side reform, but faces governance and geopolitical risks tied to dual-use technology controls.
China’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting RMB 140 trillion expected output, strategic technology advances, and targeted social support measures. It also signals a 2026 pivot into the 15th Five-Year Plan with continued reform and opening, stronger Party discipline messaging, and an outward agenda centered on climate commitments and global governance initiatives.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and highlights an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output alongside advances in AI, chips, space, energy, and defense capabilities. It sets priorities for 2026–2030 focused on high-quality development, deeper reform and opening-up, targeted social support, and an active global governance and climate posture amid heightened international turbulence.
In a December 31, 2025 New Year message, Xi Jinping framed 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and set expectations for the 15th Five-Year Plan starting in 2026. The speech emphasizes technology self-reliance, targeted social welfare measures, disciplined Party governance, and an outward-facing agenda on climate and global governance amid heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, and major national projects. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted welfare measures, and a more assertive global governance narrative alongside firm positions on Hong Kong, Macao, and cross-Strait reunification.
A December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets direction for the 15th, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, social welfare measures, and Party governance. The message also reinforces sovereignty narratives on Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan while promoting multilateral engagement and updated climate commitments.
The source frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 GDP of about RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation capacity. It signals 2026 priorities around high-quality development, AI and domestic chips, major national projects, targeted social support, and continued opening and global governance initiatives.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with a focus on high-quality, innovation-led development. The message also underscores sovereignty narratives, Party discipline priorities, and an expanded international governance agenda amid global instability.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets 2026 as the start of a new planning cycle focused on high-quality development, reform and opening up, and common prosperity. It highlights AI and chip progress, flagship infrastructure and defense milestones, targeted social measures, and an outward agenda on climate and global governance alongside firm sovereignty messaging.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals policy continuity into 2026–2030 centered on high-quality development, innovation, and social welfare measures. It also reiterates China’s openness and climate commitments while emphasizing governance discipline and core national unity positions.
Xi Jinping’s year-end message frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output and highlighting AI, domestic chip R&D, and major national projects. It signals 2026 priorities for the 15th Five-Year Plan centered on high-quality development, targeted social support, sovereignty messaging, and continued global governance and climate positioning.
President Xi’s year-end address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals continuity into the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, AI and domestic chip breakthroughs, and targeted social support. The message also highlights major infrastructure and defense milestones, renewed climate commitments, and a global governance initiative amid heightened geopolitical turbulence.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected economic output of RMB 140 trillion and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chips, and major national projects. It sets a forward agenda for the 15th Five-Year Plan focused on high-quality development, social welfare measures, openness, climate commitments, and an expanded global governance posture.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects economic output near RMB 140 trillion, emphasizing innovation, major projects, and improved social measures. It also reiterates opening-up and climate commitments while reinforcing governance discipline and core positions on Hong Kong/Macao and cross-Strait reunification.
President Xi’s Dec 31, 2025 New Year message frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan with expected 2025 output near RMB 140 trillion and highlights AI, domestic chip progress, major infrastructure, and targeted social supports. It sets priorities for the 15th Five-Year Plan period while emphasizing openness measures, climate commitments, and continuity in national unity and Party-led governance.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects 2025 economic output at roughly RMB 140 trillion, while prioritizing AI, domestic chips, major infrastructure, and social welfare measures. It also signals continuity in global governance and climate positioning alongside firm national unity messaging as China enters the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026–2030).
A December 31, 2025 message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, emphasizing economic scale, innovation breakthroughs, major national projects, and targeted social support measures. It also reiterates sovereignty positions and outlines an external posture centered on multilateral engagement, climate commitments, and a proposed Global Governance Initiative.
The Dec 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th FYP period, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, major national projects, and targeted welfare measures. It also reinforces themes of openness, climate commitments, governance discipline, and sovereignty-focused messaging amid global turbulence.
The Dec. 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals continuity into the 15th, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, major national projects, and targeted social welfare measures. It also highlights climate commitments, Hainan trade facilitation, and a global governance agenda alongside firm sovereignty-related messaging.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It sets 2026 as the start of the 15th Five-Year Plan with priorities on high-quality development, reform and opening, targeted social support, climate commitments, and an active global governance agenda.
The 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful conclusion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion and advances in AI, chips, space, energy, and defense modernization. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted social support, cultural confidence, and an active global governance agenda.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion, advances in AI and domestic chips, and major infrastructure and defense milestones. It sets priorities for 2026 as the opening year of the 15th Five-Year Plan, emphasizing high-quality development, deeper reform and opening up, targeted social support, and an active global governance and climate posture.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and highlights expected 2025 GDP of around RMB 140 trillion alongside advances in AI, chips, and major national projects. It sets priorities for 2026–2030 focused on high-quality development, targeted social support, continued opening-up, and an active global governance agenda amid persistent security and sovereignty messaging.
An ITIF report argues the United States risks growing dependence on China across critical advanced industries, potentially shifting global techno-economic power. It calls for system-level policy transformation—beyond incremental measures—across R&D, finance, manufacturing, trade, and regulation to avoid a decisive strategic setback.
As geopolitical rivalry pushes innovation battles inside national markets, Asian firms are increasingly using IP enforcement and non-competes to defend position against domestic rivals. The resulting legal overhang can deter startups, entrench incumbents, and even drive top talent abroad—weakening the industrial base policies aim to protect.
A State Council guideline calls for deeper military-civil integration by sharing innovation infrastructure, commercializing defense technologies, and encouraging private capital into defense-adjacent industries. The strategy targets space, cyberspace, and maritime sciences to drive supply-side reform, but faces governance and geopolitical risks tied to dual-use technology controls.
China’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting RMB 140 trillion expected output, strategic technology advances, and targeted social support measures. It also signals a 2026 pivot into the 15th Five-Year Plan with continued reform and opening, stronger Party discipline messaging, and an outward agenda centered on climate commitments and global governance initiatives.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and highlights an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output alongside advances in AI, chips, space, energy, and defense capabilities. It sets priorities for 2026–2030 focused on high-quality development, deeper reform and opening-up, targeted social support, and an active global governance and climate posture amid heightened international turbulence.
In a December 31, 2025 New Year message, Xi Jinping framed 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and set expectations for the 15th Five-Year Plan starting in 2026. The speech emphasizes technology self-reliance, targeted social welfare measures, disciplined Party governance, and an outward-facing agenda on climate and global governance amid heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as a successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, and major national projects. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted welfare measures, and a more assertive global governance narrative alongside firm positions on Hong Kong, Macao, and cross-Strait reunification.
A December 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets direction for the 15th, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, social welfare measures, and Party governance. The message also reinforces sovereignty narratives on Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan while promoting multilateral engagement and updated climate commitments.
The source frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected 2025 GDP of about RMB 140 trillion and advances in innovation capacity. It signals 2026 priorities around high-quality development, AI and domestic chips, major national projects, targeted social support, and continued opening and global governance initiatives.
Xi Jinping’s year-end address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th Five-Year Plan with a focus on high-quality, innovation-led development. The message also underscores sovereignty narratives, Party discipline priorities, and an expanded international governance agenda amid global instability.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets 2026 as the start of a new planning cycle focused on high-quality development, reform and opening up, and common prosperity. It highlights AI and chip progress, flagship infrastructure and defense milestones, targeted social measures, and an outward agenda on climate and global governance alongside firm sovereignty messaging.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals policy continuity into 2026–2030 centered on high-quality development, innovation, and social welfare measures. It also reiterates China’s openness and climate commitments while emphasizing governance discipline and core national unity positions.
Xi Jinping’s year-end message frames 2025 as a successful close to the 14th Five-Year Plan, citing an expected RMB 140 trillion economic output and highlighting AI, domestic chip R&D, and major national projects. It signals 2026 priorities for the 15th Five-Year Plan centered on high-quality development, targeted social support, sovereignty messaging, and continued global governance and climate positioning.
President Xi’s year-end address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals continuity into the 15th, emphasizing high-quality development, AI and domestic chip breakthroughs, and targeted social support. The message also highlights major infrastructure and defense milestones, renewed climate commitments, and a global governance initiative amid heightened geopolitical turbulence.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected economic output of RMB 140 trillion and highlighting advances in AI, domestic chips, and major national projects. It sets a forward agenda for the 15th Five-Year Plan focused on high-quality development, social welfare measures, openness, climate commitments, and an expanded global governance posture.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects economic output near RMB 140 trillion, emphasizing innovation, major projects, and improved social measures. It also reiterates opening-up and climate commitments while reinforcing governance discipline and core positions on Hong Kong/Macao and cross-Strait reunification.
President Xi’s Dec 31, 2025 New Year message frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan with expected 2025 output near RMB 140 trillion and highlights AI, domestic chip progress, major infrastructure, and targeted social supports. It sets priorities for the 15th Five-Year Plan period while emphasizing openness measures, climate commitments, and continuity in national unity and Party-led governance.
The address frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and projects 2025 economic output at roughly RMB 140 trillion, while prioritizing AI, domestic chips, major infrastructure, and social welfare measures. It also signals continuity in global governance and climate positioning alongside firm national unity messaging as China enters the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026–2030).
A December 31, 2025 message frames 2025 as the successful completion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, emphasizing economic scale, innovation breakthroughs, major national projects, and targeted social support measures. It also reiterates sovereignty positions and outlines an external posture centered on multilateral engagement, climate commitments, and a proposed Global Governance Initiative.
The Dec 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and sets the tone for the 15th FYP period, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, major national projects, and targeted welfare measures. It also reinforces themes of openness, climate commitments, governance discipline, and sovereignty-focused messaging amid global turbulence.
The Dec. 31, 2025 address frames completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and signals continuity into the 15th, emphasizing innovation-led high-quality development, major national projects, and targeted social welfare measures. It also highlights climate commitments, Hainan trade facilitation, and a global governance agenda alongside firm sovereignty-related messaging.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting an expected RMB 140 trillion economy and advances in AI, chips, major infrastructure, and defense modernization. It sets 2026 as the start of the 15th Five-Year Plan with priorities on high-quality development, reform and opening, targeted social support, climate commitments, and an active global governance agenda.
The 2026 New Year message frames 2025 as the successful conclusion of China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, citing expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion and advances in AI, chips, space, energy, and defense modernization. It signals continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan with emphasis on high-quality development, targeted social support, cultural confidence, and an active global governance agenda.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan, highlighting expected GDP of RMB 140 trillion, advances in AI and domestic chips, and major infrastructure and defense milestones. It sets priorities for 2026 as the opening year of the 15th Five-Year Plan, emphasizing high-quality development, deeper reform and opening up, targeted social support, and an active global governance and climate posture.
The message frames 2025 as the successful completion of the 14th Five-Year Plan and highlights expected 2025 GDP of around RMB 140 trillion alongside advances in AI, chips, and major national projects. It sets priorities for 2026–2030 focused on high-quality development, targeted social support, continued opening-up, and an active global governance agenda amid persistent security and sovereignty messaging.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-679 | ITIF Warns U.S. Must Rebuild Techno-Industrial Power to Avoid Strategic Dependence on China | US-China Competition | 2026-02-04 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-96 | Asia’s IP Crackdowns Risk Backfiring: When Trade-Secret Wars Undermine Innovation | Intellectual Property | 2026-01-23 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-28 | Beijing Accelerates Military-Civil Tech Transfer to Forge New Growth Engines | Military-Civil Fusion | 2026-01-19 | 2 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-155 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-First Growth and a Disciplined Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-12-22 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1238 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Strong Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-12-18 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-674 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Address Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Pivot Toward Innovation, Welfare Support, and Global Governance Messaging | China | 2025-12-15 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1271 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Social Stabilizers, and Global Governance | China Policy | 2025-12-15 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-666 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Address Signals 15th FYP Priorities: Innovation, Sovereignty, and Managed Opening-Up | China | 2025-12-13 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-487 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-First Growth and a Managed Transition to the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-12-06 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1307 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Cohesion, and Global Governance | China | 2025-12-04 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-300 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Major Projects, and Governance Continuity | Five-Year Plan | 2025-11-16 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-856 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Continuity Into the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-11-16 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-119 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Stability, and Global Governance | China | 2025-11-13 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-344 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation Push, Strategic Capability-Building, and Policy Continuity into the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-11-05 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-703 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Welfare, and Global Governance | Five-Year Plan | 2025-11-02 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1003 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Social Support, and Global Governance | Five-Year Plan | 2025-10-26 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-216 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Strong Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-10-08 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1269 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Disciplined Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | China Policy | 2025-10-05 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1042 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Address Signals Innovation-Led Growth and Governance Agenda as China Enters the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-09-27 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1358 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th FYP Priorities: Innovation, Social Support, and Strategic Openness | Five-Year Plan | 2025-09-22 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1239 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Major Projects, and Managed Openness | China Policy | 2025-09-21 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-120 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Pivot: Innovation, Welfare Targeting, and Global Governance Push | Five-Year Plan | 2025-09-18 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-769 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals 15th Five-Year Plan Priorities: Innovation, Major Projects, and Governance Continuity | Five-Year Plan | 2025-09-17 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-342 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Mobilized Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | Five-Year Plan | 2025-09-17 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1313 | Xi’s 2026 New Year Message Signals Innovation-Led Growth and a Strong Start to the 15th Five-Year Plan | China | 2025-08-12 | 0 | ACCESS » |