Opinion | China-UK cooperation vital in ensuring the AI era puts people first
Britain has every reason to enter this new era with confidence. It has contributed to much of the modern world’s foundations. In 1687, Isaac Newton published Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, helping establish the scientific world view that made modern engineering and the Industrial Revolution possible. In 1776, Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations, giving the industrial age one of its most influential economic models: division of labour, specialisation, markets, trade and capital accumulation.
This history matters. The AI era needs both technological confidence and viable economic systems. Britain has helped provide both. It should not see the AI age only as a challenge from larger markets or faster-moving competitors. It should see it as another moment when its strengths in science, political economy, law, education and governance can help shape the rules of a new era.
Clearly, both countries have a role to play. The real question is whether Britain or China can cooperate on problems that neither country can solve alone.









