How U.S. Over-Finance Breeds Social Woes, China Avoids

“Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed” (ALICE) describes U.S. households that earn above the Federal Poverty Level yet lack the resources necessary for economic security. ALICE is neither a conspiracy nor a moral failure; it is a rational outcome of interacting systems optimized for self-protection in a society that has lost its stabilizers. U.S. over-financialization and … Read more

Lessons Fueling China’s Engineering Advantage Over U.S.

Engineering capability—the ability to transform theoretical and technological innovations into practical products—has long been a cornerstone of national competitiveness. The United States, once a global leader in this domain, has experienced a gradual decline due to a complex interplay of factors: overdevelopment of the service and financial sectors leading to industrial hollowing out, globalization and … Read more

Beyond Western Lenses: Understanding China on Its Own Terms

Western analyses of China often remain trapped in Western-centric political assumptions and fail to appreciate the enduring indigenous logic of Chinese political development. It is tempting to interpret China’s actions and ambitions through American or broader Western paradigms, yet such projections distort reality rather than illuminate it. A more accurate understanding requires approaching China on … Read more

WeChat and Alipay as Utilities—America’s Missing Layer

China’s internet ecosystem has evolved beyond a purely economic or commercial domain, increasingly expressing a distinct lifestyle and consumption philosophy grounded in deep user integration. Everyday scenarios—such as paying utility bills through Alipay or accessing ride-hailing services within WeChat—are not simply conveniences enabled by superior technology. Rather, they reflect a systemic logic in which digital … Read more

Household Registration in China and America Compared

Western critiques of China’s hukou (household registration) system often frame it as a uniquely authoritarian mechanism that restricts permanent migration to major cities by tying access to public services—such as education, healthcare, and social housing—to one’s registered locality. This comparison, however, is strategically incomplete. It evaluates hukou against an idealized vision of Western mobility rather … Read more

After Victory: How U.S. Post–Cold War Errors Lifted China

The collapse of the Soviet Union and the First Gulf War in 1991 marked the zenith of American global dominance and gave rise to the belief that liberal capitalism and American-style democracy constituted the “end of history.” Emboldened by this perceived victory, the United States pursued a post–Cold War globalization strategy centered on exporting its … Read more

From Moral Triumph to Strategic Drift in U.S. China Policy

The United States persistently confuses moral conviction and procedural authority with substantive material strategy, a pattern evident in its unplanned decoupling from global dependencies—a deliberate echo of habits ingrained since the Cold War’s end. To effectively vie with China in the technological arena and avert recurring pitfalls, the U.S. must confront its fundamental errors and … Read more

Capacity Beats Values: Lessons for the U.S.–China Tech Race

The United States misread the lessons of the Cold War, while China accurately understood the dynamics of the post–Cold War world. Today, as the U.S. and China compete in technology, it is imperative to draw concrete lessons from this divergence. In strategic competition, reality does not bend to values; outcomes are determined by capacity, cost, … Read more

From Cold War Myth to Tech Rivalry Reality Check

In U.S. discourse, the end of the Cold War was often framed as a moral triumph of “right values” over authoritarianism, fostering a tendency to interpret global affairs through ideological certainty rather than material constraints. This narrative dulled strategic judgment by treating outcomes as ideologically inevitable, even as the Soviet collapse itself was driven less … Read more

How Western Misconceptions Block U.S. Learning from China

Western misconceptions do more than distort how the United States interprets China’s economic system; they structurally constrain America’s ability to learn from China’s industrial policy experience. By framing China’s approach through ideological caricatures rather than analytical assessment, U.S. policymakers often dismiss outcomes that warrant serious study. This misperception is not merely rhetorical—it shapes the boundaries … Read more