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    Home»World Economy»The AI Arms Race Is Replacing Globalization
    World Economy

    The AI Arms Race Is Replacing Globalization

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJune 30, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Everyone is talking about artificial intelligence as though it is simply the next technology boom. They are missing the bigger picture. The country that controls the chips, the data centers, the electricity, and the manufacturing capacity will hold the strategic advantage for decades. This is no different than steel before World War I or oil during the twentieth century. Nations are no longer competing over cheap labor. They are competing for technological dominance.

    South Korea has now announced one of the largest industrial investment programs in modern history. President Lee Jae Myung unveiled a national strategy centered on semiconductors, physical AI, and AI data centers, with more than $576 billion in planned investment. At the center of that plan are Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, the world’s two dominant memory-chip manufacturers, which together produce roughly two-thirds of the global memory chip market. Samsung alone plans domestic investments totaling 2,450 trillion won through 2040, while SK Group is committing roughly 2,100 trillion won across semiconductor and AI projects.

    People still think this is about ChatGPT and faster computers when the scope for power is greater than one could imagine. Every AI system requires enormous computing power, advanced memory chips, electricity, cooling infrastructure, and secure data centers. Those same technologies are indispensable for military intelligence, autonomous weapons, cyber warfare, robotics, satellite systems, and surveillance. South Korea understands that whoever controls AI hardware controls the future. Europe, meanwhile, continues regulating everything while others are building it.

    This is exactly what the computer has been projecting. Globalization is breaking apart. Governments are abandoning the fantasy that everyone can depend on everyone else. The United States is racing to secure critical minerals. China continues investing aggressively in semiconductors despite sanctions. Japan is rebuilding its industrial base. Now South Korea is making perhaps the largest strategic industrial commitment in its modern history. These are not isolated announcements. They are all preparing for the same world, one defined by geopolitical confrontation rather than free trade.

    Investors also need to understand what this means for capital flows. Capital always moves toward strategic industries during periods of geopolitical uncertainty. In previous generations that meant railroads, oil, automobiles, or aerospace. Today it means semiconductors, AI infrastructure, energy production, and critical minerals. This is why companies such as Samsung and SK Hynix have become some of the most valuable corporations in the world. AI is no longer a speculative theme. It has become strategic infrastructure. Only a week ago, SK Hynix overtook Samsung as South Korea’s most valuable listed company, driven by surging demand for AI memory chips.

    Our computer has warned repeatedly that the sovereign debt crisis and the War Cycle are converging. Nations preparing for geopolitical conflict invest first in production capacity. They secure energy supplies. They stockpile strategic resources. They build semiconductor fabs. They expand defense manufacturing. South Korea’s announcement is another confirmation that governments are preparing for a very different world than the one politicians continue describing to the public. The AI race is no longer about innovation alone. It has become the latest front in the global economic war, and that trend will only accelerate into the Panic Cycle and beyond.



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