Quantum computing is moving from a qubit-centric race toward building the infrastructure, partnerships and workforce needed to scale systems into operational industries.
That shift reflects a tougher engineering reality: useful machines now depend on tightly integrated control systems, software, cryogenics, AI accelerators, HPC, cloud and automated error-correction layers—not just better processors.
The US, UK and Europe are responding with hubs and national strategies, from Chicago’s Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park to the UK’s National Quantum Technologies Programme and the EU’s proposed Quantum Act.
Partnerships are becoming central because no company can build every layer alone; Quantum Machines cited recent work with NVIDIA and other quantum firms on low-latency quantum-classical architectures.
Over the next decade, the report argues, leadership may hinge less on the single best qubit and more on the regions that assemble the deepest talent pools and strongest hybrid computing ecosystems.