AI research is a global endeavor. While the US and China attract considerable attention for their contributions to AI, countries worldwide are experimenting with this technology, discovering new breakthroughs, and attracting the attention of private investors.
Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence Report 2023 estimated that global AI private investment in AI reached $91.9 billion in 2022, yet this is just the tip of the iceberg. Goldman Sachs forecasts that global AI investment will reach $110.2 billion in 2023 and grow to $158.4 billion in 2025. The IDC forecasts $632 billion worldwide in 2028.
AI startups raised $42.5 billion in funding across 2,500 equity rounds, with generative AI attracting 48% of all investment. Companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Inflection AI were some of the most sought after providers.
This article will examine the top 10 leading countries in AI based on rankings from the Global AI Index, Mirae Assets’s Global X AI investment survey, Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence Index Report, and findings from CBInsights to give our verdict on their performance.
The rankings in this article are loosely based on the overall innovation in the country’s AI research and development, startup community, the value of private investment, and government spending as we see it as of October 2024.
As of October, the US is the most prolific country in AI research, with Macro Polo finding that almost 60% of “top-tier” AI researchers work for American universities and companies and Mirae Assets suggesting that $249 billion in private funding has been raised to date.
Silicon Valley alone is home to some of the industry’s most prominent vendors, including OpenAI, Google, Meta, and Anthropic. These companies have contributed to leading products, including GPT-4, DALL E-3, Gemini, Llama 2, and Claude 3.
At this stage in the market’s development, GPT-4 is undoubtedly the golden goose of the AI race, with an estimated 180 million weekly active users.
AI investment in the region is extremely strong — with the U.S. raising $31 billion in funding across 1,151 deals in 2023. The top 3 deals belonged to Anthropic, Lightmatter, joint third to GreyOrange and xAI.
The next most significant contributor to AI research is China, which has 11% of top-tier AI researchers (Macro Polo), 232 AI-related investments in 2023, and has raised $95 billion in private investment between 2022 and 2023, according to Mirae Assets.
Companies like Tencent, Huawei, and Baidu lead the country’s AI innovation with new releases, including Tencent’s Hunyuan’s large language model (LLM), a Chinese alternative to ChatGPT, Huawei’s Pangu, an LLM with 1.085 trillion parameters, and Baidu’s Ernie AI model, which the organization claims offers capabilities on par with GPT-4.
The Chinese government is also investing heavily in the AI arms race. IDC expects China’s investment to reach $38.1 billion in 2027, the equivalent of 9 percent of the world’s total.
For years, the UK has remained one of the leading contributors to the AI race. In fact, according to the International Trade Administration (ITA), the UK is the third largest AI market in the world after the US and China, sitting on a current valuation of $21 billion, which it estimates will reach $1 trillion by 2035.
The country boasts a wide range of AI startups in the region, including the leading AI development lab, DeepMind, behind AlphaGo and AlphaFold, and Darktrace, which uses AI to offer enterprises the ability to detect cloud-based threats in real time.
Government spending on research and development is also on the rise. Under the former Conservative government, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak reportedly planned to increase taxpayer spending on chips and supercomputers to £400 million, including a £100 million investment in a supercomputer facility located in Bristol in partnership with Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Bristol University.
The new Labour government is looking at a $10billion AI data center, said to create 4,000 jobs in the north of England, suggesting the UK continues to see the importance of AI.
Leaders from the UK gave their thoughts about the future of AI at Davos in January, acknowledging its power while urging for global safeguards.
Israel’s local tech scene has established itself at the forefront of AI development, achieving $11 billion in private investment between 2013-2022 (Mirae Asset), the fourth highest in the world.
According to Ctech, as of 2023, there are 144 generative AI-related startups in the country, with total investment in the sector reaching $2.3 billion. The Israeli government has also released plans to invest $8 million to advance the development of AI apps in Hebrew and Arabic.
The region is home to established AI-driven organizations, including Deep Instinct, the cybersecurity platform that created AI writing assistant Wordtune, AI21 Labs, and enterprise security AI provider SentinelOne.
Canada has quietly emerged as a top 5 player in the international AI research scene. Between 2022 and 2023, $2.57 billion was invested in AI research in the country, as total AI investment reached $8.64 billion.
The Government of Canada has also committed to investing in the development of responsible AI across the country, investing over $124 million in the Université de Montréal in June 2023 via the Canada First Research Excellence Fund.
Some of the top AI companies active in the country include enterprise LLM provider Cohere, generative AI platform Scale AI, and AI search provider Coveo.
France is not only one of the most significant economic powers in the European Union but also the region’s leading contributor to AI research, with 338 startups and $7 billion in private investment from 2013 to 2022 (Mirae Asset).
More recently, CB Insights revealed that France raised roughly $1.5 billion in 2023 across 70 deals. with top beneficiaries, including Mistral AI, Braincube, and HarfangLab.
Government spending on AI is also expanding, with French President Emmanuel Macron committing to investing €500 million or approximately $533 million in funding to create new AI “champions.”
The country hosts a diverse range of AI startups, including open-source AI hosting platform Hugging Face, Mistral AI, the open-source Mistral 7B LLM creator, and AI cybersecurity provider Armis.Kanpur Stock
India is the largest country in South Asia and the region’s most significant contributor to AI research. Last year, India raised $3.24 billion, making it the 5th country with the most AI investment. India is also estimated to have the highest penetration rate of AI skills among all G20 and OECD countries.
The country’s Minister of State for Electronics and Information Technology, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, recently announced that the Indian government will launch the India AI program soon to help encourage growth in the local AI startup ecosystem.
Some key Indian AI startups to watch include conversational AI platform Avaamo, AI health check platform HEAPs, robotics and AI smart screening provider SigTuple, and AI-driven automation platform Yellow.ai.
As one of the largest economies in Southeast Asia, Japan has also played a critical role in developing AI internationally. Mirae Assets estimates that Japan is home to 294 AI startups and has obtained $4 billion in private investment in AI between 2013 and 2022.
CB Insights estimates that Japan raised $184 million in AI-related funding in 2023 across 115 deals. The countries with the most investment that year included Edgecortix, FastLabel, and Galapagos.
The country has also released plans to invest 2 trillion yen or $13 billion into the development of semiconductors and generative AI as a whole, so there is potential for the nation to become a bigger player in the market in the future.
Notable AI startups based in Japan include leading robotics provider SoftBank Robotics, deep learning and autonomous vehicle vendor Preferred Networks, and AI healthcare and symptom checker Ubie.
According to Mirae Assets, Germany is another significant player in the global AI market. It features 245 startups and obtained $7 billion in private investment in AI between 2013 and 2022.
CB Insights found that the country raised over $1.4 billion across 71 deals in 2023. Top-funded companies included Aleph Alpha, Orbem, and Neura Robotics.
The German government is also planning to invest, back in August announcing it would double funding for AI research and pledging almost €1 billion towards developing AI solutions.
AI startups based in Germany include autonomous drone and air mobility provider Volocopter, multimodal LLM developer Aleph Alpha, deep learning translation company DeepL, and conversational AI platform Parloa.
Lastly, Singapore is one of the top AI countries in Southeast Asia, with a modest ecosystem of 165 AI startups and $5 billion in AI investment generated between 2013 and 2022 (Mirae Assets).Varanasi Wealth Management
In 2021, the Singapore government committed to investing roughly SGD500 million or $362 million in AI for five years as part of its National Artificial Intelligence Strategy. The country has also established a National AI office to collaborate with startups and research institutions in the region to help prompt growth.
Notable AI startups in Singapore include remote patient monitoring provider Biofourmis, data intelligence platform Near, conversational AI platform Active.Ai, and AI-based accounting platform Osome.
While Singapore is not top of this list, it ranks very high as a cryptocurrency and blockchain hub, and may be a natural home for companies at the nexus between these two technological advancements.
Examining the top 10 countries in technology and AI, the US and China stand at the forefront of the AI arms race — but the amount of research worldwide shows that developing AI-driven solutions is very much an international game.
From Israel in the Middle East to the UK, France, and Germany in Europe, to India, Japan, and Singapore in Asia, significant contributions to this technology are occurring all over the globe.
Varanasi Investment