Translation resultU.S. to invest roughly 3 trillion KRW (about 2.25 billion USD) in nine quantum computing firmsThe Donald Trump administration’s decision to direct roughly 3 trillion KRW—about 2.25 billion USD—into the quantum computing sector is widely read as an effort to secure leadership in the next wave of strategic technology, following the race over artificial intelligence as U.S.–China tech competition intensifies. Policymakers framed the move as a defensive step: if quantum supremacy slips away, national security could be threatened.On the 21st (local time), the Commerce Department announced roughly 3 trillion KRW (about 2.25 billion USD) in support for nine companies. The awards span infrastructure and equipment providers such as IBM and GlobalFoundries, hardware firms at different stages of commercialization including Rigetti, Quantinuum, and D‑Wave, and earlier‑stage developers like Atom Computing, PsiQuantum, Inflection, and Dirac. The program spreads funding across the still‑immature quantum ecosystem, where standardized platforms do not yet exist.As part of the initiative, the U.S. government will obtain about a 1% stake in GlobalFoundries. Some startups, including D‑Wave, agreed to transfer equity to the government in exchange for support. The Commerce Department said it may name additional recipients later.Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in a statement that the Trump administration is “moving into a new era of innovation through investments in quantum computing.” He added that the funding will “create thousands of high‑paying jobs and strengthen America’s quantum capabilities.”Selected companies welcomed the backing. D‑Wave CEO Alan Baratz called the decision “a transformative moment for the entire U.S. quantum computing industry.” IBM described the package as “a landmark support to establish the United States as a hub for quantum wafer production.” Yahoo Finance noted that, despite lingering doubts about near‑term commercialization, quantum technologies are joining semiconductors, steel, nuclear, and rare earths on the administration’s list of strategic investment priorities.Quantum computers leverage quantum mechanics to process 0 and 1 simultaneously, enabling them to perform complex calculations that classical machines cannot handle efficiently. Under certain conditions, they can surpass traditional supercomputers and are viewed as central to next‑generation advances in drug discovery, cryptography, and materials research. IBM has estimated quantum computing could create up to $850 billion in economic value by 2040. Last month, McKinsey argued that quantum computing has reached a “commercial inflection point,” reporting that investment rose to $12.6 billion in 2025, a 6.3‑fold increase year over year.Critics contend the government risks overreach by stepping in where private capital is already active. Venture capital supplied more than $2.7 billion to the quantum sector last year, and libertarian think tank the Cato Institute questioned whether the government should become a shareholder in an industry that is already attracting heavy private investment.Still, U.S. officials cite China’s rapid, centrally coordinated push as a key rationale for moving quickly. While the United States remains a leader in core quantum research, China has pursued a state‑directed industrial strategy in quantum technologies for about a decade. Beijing elevated quantum to a core national priority in its 15th Five‑Year Plan released in March. Origin Quantum, a spin‑off from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), operates a 72‑qubit commercial processor called “Origin Wukong” and recorded more than 20 million cloud accesses from 145 countries in its first year—an example Washington points to in arguing for accelerated strategic investment.
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