TLDR: China and the Global South are dramatically improving their research quality and quantity, while US research is falling behind because private companies don't want to fund it and the education required to do it.
As the Global South develops to match/exceed the West, I expect countries' research outputs to be near-proportional to their population sizes. China has yet more room to grow to 4x the US's research output to match their population.
It will be an incredible day when China and India make 4x as much research as the US, while Indonesia matches or exceeds the US. If the Global South can form larger collaborative research blocks, we could see country blocks outcompeting the US in research on every level.
I think it's also important to point out that public sector science is terribly underfunded and so vulnerable to political fuckery, i.e. a newly-elected or appointed official taking drastic measures to cut off publicly funded research in ways that just be happen to make it easier for corporations to get away with pollution. In all the publicly funded labs I worked for, it was a nightmare to procure new but necessary equipment/gear because of 1) not enough funding and 2) bureaucratic BS that's so clearly just a way to reduce how much money/support is being doled out, no different than other forms of means testing.
definitely a name i'd have opted to hyphenate if i were in her shoes.
Kinda unfortunate to hear as someone who wants to pursue plant science in USonia , but alas, it's one of the many symptoms of a crumbling empire.