<
"For China, the economy is not just a
market. It is an instrument of national
strategy.
Markets are useful, but they are not
sovereign. They operate within
boundaries defined by political
priorities, social stability, and
long-term development goals. Thispriorities, social stability, and
long-term development goals. This
difference alone explains countless
misunderstandings.
When Americans see intervention, they
see distortion.
When Chinese policymakers see
intervention, they see coordination.
Neither side is irrational. "
<
https://youtu.be/bRTPQfGQiU4?si=e0_jZgMipMhC-lSf
"America and China don't just compete economically — they think differently about how economies should work.
In this episode, economist Keyu Jin compares the fundamentally different economic mindsets shaping the United States and China. While the U.S. emphasizes market discipline, short-term efficiency, and limited state intervention, China prioritizes coordination, long-term stability, and strategic state guidance.( Charles Brown :which is SOCIALISM ! ) <
These contrasting approaches influence everything from innovation and finance to crisis management and global strategy. What looks like inefficiency or overreach from a Western perspective often reflects a different logic of risk management and national planning in China.
This episode explains why economic misunderstandings between the U.S. and China persist - and why applying Western assumptions to China often leads to flawed conclusions.
But if the West keeps misreading China, what"
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