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To discuss America’s comparative advantages in national competition and the structural forces that drive (and limit) innovation, ChinaTalk interviewed Kumar Garg. 

Formerly an Obama official in the Office of Science and Technology Policy, Kumar spent several years at Schmidt Futures focusing on science and technology philanthropy. He has been a mentor and cheerleader for ChinaTalk over the years, and he is the president of the newly established Renaissance Philanthropy.

We discuss:

  • The inspiration behind Renaissance Philanthropy and its focus on mid-scale, field-transforming ideas
  • Strategies for identifying underexplored, high-impact projects — including weather forecasting, carbon sequestration, and datasets on neurocognition
  • Structural challenges for R&D funding at the level of government and universities
  • The role of focused research organizations like OpenAI in accelerating progress and understanding long-term drivers of productivity
  • A wide angle-view of US-China competition and strategic innovation
  • The underresearched importance of alliance management.

Outro music:

Song 1 - If ye love me - Thomas Tallis and the Cambridge Singers

Song 2 - Recercare (I) - Francesco Spinacino and Robert Meunier 

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices


Jordan Schneider is the host of the ChinaTalk podcast and newsletter. He previously worked at Kwai, Bridgewater and the Eurasia Group. His Chinese landscape paintings "show promise."

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