Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent made the Trump administration’s AI risk hierarchy explicit on June 24 at the Economic Club of New York. His framing: ‘The biggest risk to AI is China getting ahead of us.’ That ranking places geopolitical competition above both safety hazards and job displacement, the two concerns that have dominated most domestic AI policy debate over the past two years. Bessent also clarified his own role: ‘I am one of the point people on our AI policy. I am the point person in terms of the economic relationship with China.’ That dual portfolio is significant. It means AI policy and trade/economic policy toward China are being managed as a unified track in this administration, not as separate domains with different principals. His rationale for why bilateral AI governance talks are happening at all: ‘The reason the Chinese are willing to have a discussion on AI is because we are ahead, so we have to stay ahead.’ Those talks were agreed upon after Trump and Xi’s May summit in Beijing. China’s foreign ministry described both countries as ‘leading AI powers’ requiring collaborative development, which is a different framing than Bessent’s competitive one. The gap between those two characterizations will matter when the talks get to specifics. Our coverage: https://aiweekly.co/alerts/bessent-says-china-getting-ahead-in-ai-is-americas-top-risk submitted by /u/Justgototheeffinmoon
Originally posted by u/Justgototheeffinmoon on r/ArtificialInteligence
