ANN/CHINA DAILY – Chinese enterprises are planning to increase investment in artificial intelligence (AI) as it is increasingly perceived as one of the drivers in revenue growth and business transformation and integrated into the real economy, according to a new report from global consultancy Accenture.
The report said 34 per cent of surveyed Chinese companies used more than 30 per cent of their tech budgets for AI projects in 2021. By 2024, the per centage of companies investing over 30 per cent of their tech budgets in AI is expected to increase to 64 per cent.
AI has become an important competitive advantage for enterprises. Research has found that 13 per cent of surveyed Chinese enterprises have used AI to outpace their competitors.
This group is dubbed “AI Achievers”, with a score of 64 on the maturity scale, almost double that of others and correlating with 50 per cent higher revenue growth than their peers.
AI maturity is the degree to which companies outperform their peers in a combination of AI-related foundational and differentiating capabilities, which include cloud computing, data and AI algorithms, as well as AI strategy, talent and innovation culture, Accenture said.
The report estimated the proportion of “AI Achievers” will increase rapidly to 34 per cent by 2024. In addition, more than half of the surveyed Chinese enterprises are “AI Experimenters”, who have barely scratched the surface of AI’s potential and lack mature AI strategies and related capabilities.
Although some industries like high-tech are currently far ahead in their AI maturity, the gap will likely narrow considerably by 2024.
There is enormous room for growth in AI adoption across all industries and opportunities for those companies that choose to seize it, the report noted.
For instance, the automotive sector is betting on a big surge in sales of AI-powered self- driving vehicles, while aerospace firms anticipate continued demand for AI-enabled remote systems.
The life sciences industry will expand its use of AI in efficient drug development.
The research surveyed 250 Chinese companies in 17 industries, including retail, telecommunications, chemicals, energy, financial services and healthcare between July and September, with their sales revenue surpassing USD1 billion in 2021.
“We believe every part of every business must be transformed by technology, data and AI, in some cases resulting in total enterprise reinvention,” said Sanjeev Vohra, global lead for applied intelligence at Accenture.
“Adopting AI at scale and embedding it deeper in all aspects of business is no longer a choice but a necessity and opportunity facing every industry, organisation and leader,” Vohra added.
AI, a key technology for driving digital transformation, is playing an increasingly important role in accelerating China’s push for industrial upgrading and promoting the in-depth integration of the digital economy and the real economy.
China has issued a plan setting benchmarks for its AI sector, with the value of core AI industries predicted to exceed CNY1 trillion (USD143.6 billion), making China one of the global leaders in such innovation by 2030.
According to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the value of China’s core AI industries exceeds 400 billion yuan and the number of related enterprises stands at more than 3,000, with breakthroughs being made in key core technologies such as smart chips and open-source frameworks.
An increasing number of Chinese companies will achieve digital transformation with the help of data and AI, said chief data scientist Chan Tzeh Chyi at Accenture Greater China.
He added that business executives should accelerate steps to promote the large-scale use of AI, prioritise long and short-term AI investment and allow AI to better integrate into enterprises’ overall strategies.
Director-general of the Information Consumption Alliance Xiang Ligang underscored the significance of developing digital technologies represented by AI, which will inject fresh impetus into the country’s economic growth and speed up digital and intelligent upgrades in enterprises.
The in-depth integration of digital technologies with the real economy will further reinforce China’s advantages in global supply chains, he said.