Sunday, February 23, 2025

COMMENTS: China's manuafacturing dominance: How it's beating the world in AI, EVs, and ....more

 

I’m proud of China! No fluff and arrogance, They deserve where they are today because of hard work and dedication.
74
China's rise is unstoppable...!! Respect!!
10
A true to fact report. Thank you Mr. Mush. I had been to China about five times and I can see the big changes in years. Truly phenomenal!
19
"CCP is the most meritocratic, most qualified government in the world today" - Kishore Mahbubhani, former UNSC Pres.
89
Some factors cannot be ignored, such as the rise of patriotism, overall improvement of social security n living environment, traditional values of Confucianism, might support Chinese elites’ return to their country to support research development
25
Many more DeepSeek moments to come.
40
1. People should not be shocked by China's manufacturing dominance. 2. China's 56 ethnic groups are firm believers in the Chinese saying " SILLY OLD MAN CAN REMOVE MOUNTAINS ( 愚公移山 )" . They have strong resolution , enormous capabilities , and creativity to overcome / remove all obstcles / mountains in relatively short period of time , especially with the strong support of the far-sighted , pragmatic and effective government leadership.
Show less
15
Elon is one ,who is strong, brave , and clear-minded ,daring to to face and tackle the problems and corruption of the US government.
13
Science and Civilisation in China (1954–present) is an ongoing series of books about the history of science and technology in China published by Cambridge University Press. It was initiated and edited by British historian Joseph Needham (1900–1995). China has several thousand years of tech experience while the West only has several hundred years since the end of the Dark Age.
21
electric car in china already takes 10-15mins to fully recharged
25
❤❤❤that’s amazing great job ❤❤
3
Some world leaders would get a heart attack after reading what you said about China.😆😅😅
7
Let’s make this right guys. It’s CPC, not CCP. Thanks. You wouldn’t want your name to be deliberately spelt wrong by your unfriendly neighbors, would you?
18
Ok just finish this one ok 👍
2
Elon did not mention one field which he should have. Commercial aerospace - aviation and aerospace. ABC of commercial aviation the third component COMAC is catching up very fast. China’s aviation market is collosal needing more than 9000 airplanes in next 20 years. They have demand, talent, resources. Like BYD today in EV by 2040 Comac will surpass Airbus/ Boeing with cheaper cutting edge technology jets in its own giant domestic market as well as in global south markets. In commercial aerospace field, the Chinese companies are giving Musk’s company a tough run for the money.
Show less
7
Well done china . I wish india could be as focused as you arr
3
There was a time when the U.S. led the world in Science and Technology - particularly during the years of the "Space Race" when students all wanted to get into STEM - Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics - because those were the exciting times. The news media, Hollywood, a far-sighted U.S. President and Congress all contributed towards making it a national goal. Those were the glory days of the U.S. in science and technology not only in space engineering but also in the development of digital computers which revolutionized the world. Then, after having successfully beaten the Soviets in landing a man on the moon, all of its engineering and scientific fervour began to fade away. Instead of going further in building a moon base, the U.S. merely did a few (six landed, 10 arrived at the moon if you include Apollo 8, 9, 10 and 13 that reached the moon but did not land) tourist return trips to the moon and then, abandoned the whole thing. In doing so, it copied what the Vikings did when they visited North America in 1000AD and did not establish a permanent and long lasting settlement there - or like the Chinese Ming Dynasty Cheng He who merely visited various countries in his voyages but never set up any permanent bases where they landed. Students doing STEM subjects after the 1960s were regarded as "nerds", "geeks", "dorks", "dweebs", "techies" and other derogatory name calling while more attention began to be focused upon brawn in college sports rather than in brains. "Participation trophies" became more or less the norm rather than striving for excellence in a competitive world. China's rise above the U.S. is not so much China climbing the ladder above the U.S. but rather, the U.S. slipping DOWN the rungs of the ladder of progress and advancement. Or basically, the U.S. dropped the ball and it still has not picked that up. It still believes that brawns are better than brains as can be seen in the electing of a fool for its leader and replacing diplomacy which requires brains, with the use of its military might instead to threaten others. Will the U.S. ever return to where it used to be in the 1950s to mid-1960s when it not only inspired a whole nation but the rest of the World when kids in far off lands outside the U.S. want to study engineering so that they could one day, be an astronaut in the U.S.?
Show less
4
Hi Elon, thanks for all your posts--just Elonesque. Amazing. Hey thanks for cleaning out dead weight in the federal government. Monthly, I pay five figures in federal tax, and I want value. Cheers...
21
Whatever China spent on the military, R & D, etc., is actually as high as the USA, if not higher. The USA built one ship at the same cost, which China is building 10 ships.
Your Tesla would be under water without that same Chinese manufacturing. Be appreciative and grateful.
Talking about HSR, I was amused when the West kept on saying that China would soon stop building more HSR because there was just no ROI. But when you just consider that they had transported 9 Billion passengers a year, let's assume that each passenger saved 1 hour of their time, or 9 billion-man-hours. How much working man-power that that figure converts to? Based on WB , it was noted that her national logistics cost was 29.2 % of her GDP; to-day in spite of her near continental size some 5 million square km, that percentage had dropped to 14.2%. Based on her GDP of US$18 Trillion, it means she had saved some US$2.7 Trillions in her national logistics costs since then!!
Show less
One from the City of Saints: you may wondering how China possibly so advanced in fighter jets, e.g., started out the fundamentals, to hammer down the sheet metal ( 板金)and mallet the wings, so did many things as per your statement.
3
China's dominance of manufacturing is growing, not shrinking. China's manufactured exports, for example, have been growing significantly faster than those of Germany, the U.S., Japan or South Korea. A lack of growth in Germany, US, Japan, and South Korea has nothing to do with China. China has maintained its dominance in global manufacturing, with its production exceeding that of the nine next largest manufacturers combined. According to a study by the European think tank the Centre for Economic Policy Research, China's share of global gross manufacturing production was 35 percent in 2020, which is three times the US share, six times Japan's, and nine times Germany's. China's rise to manufacturing dominance began in 2000 when it accounted for only 6% of global manufacturing value added (MVA). However, after joining the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001 and significantly opening up its economy to foreign direct investment, China's share of MVA grew rapidly. By 2022, China accounted for 31 percent of global manufacturing output, according to data published by the United Nations Statistics Division. Despite challenges such as the ongoing COVID-19 crisis and geopolitical tensions, China's manufacturing sector continues to grow. In 2021, the value of manufacturing output in China increased by 26% compared to the previous period. China's dominance in manufacturing is expected to continue, despite the rise of Southeast Asian manufacturers.
Show less
9
As an american, I'm ashamed how the US cannot even make a freakin pencil today. FACT. Seriously!
8
In China everything is overcapacity😂😂😂
5
My translation of the downstair quotes. 中華同胞們 我們一定要奉獻一己之力在千萬年的中華大復興征程上 服從習主席和中國共產黨的領導 至死方休
Translate to English
1
Does anyone notice that this is not from Elon Musk?
1
But, but, but…..what about Superpower India?
13
To the central core of the competition, it is the reluctance to go back after decades of cheap goods from developing countries easy life of business share profits, now you are faced with majority of factories already out of the west. To go back means you will have to accept the bitter pill & sacrifices required. How can you !? Falling from "millionaire to bankrupt" do you have the strength to take the pill !!? Mark my word, there's no short cuts to this. Look at china's history, when a great dynasty is declining, it too, will try short cuts without the hard work. It will slowly deteriorate over time, back there, it may take centuries until the people's living is reduced to so difficult that there's no such thing as bitter pill but WORST, survival !!! Then they will topple the dynasty. How long can today's west take this bitter pill will determine how long they will "up the curve". Any other means to reverse this are just trying desperately address the symptom.
Show less
Sir elon musk dont invest in d ph its not worth it.
1
Are you from DeepSeek?😂
战恐局🤣
Translate to English
2
Elon forgot to mention there is already another global superpower, competing 'head to neck', in the making called he "Bharat empire" next door. Pls dont overlook this immensely important superpower next door to china. It might get seriously offended & depressive. ❤indonesia.
2
But we are still far ahead in nuclear power plants and nuclear power generation. So why get exited and worry unnecessary? Just relax.
1
China is stuck in legion chips and unable to make EUV machines. China is behind in financial and information sectors.
It’s beating the world in NOTHING, nor ever will. Apart from how not to do something.
1

No comments:

Post a Comment