China’s Real Economy Rise vs. U.S. Financial Sector Dominance

The gap between China’s strength in concrete, real-economy areas—such as infrastructure, manufacturing, renewable energy, and high-speed rail—and the U.S.’s command of the FIRE sectors (Finance, Insurance, Real Estate) stems from deep-seated structural, ideological, and institutional distinctions that have developed over the last three to four decades. State-Led Development vs. Market-Driven Capitalism China has adopted a … Read more

Misreading China: Western Bias vs. Its Adaptive Political Economy

Western academia and policymakers frequently highlight issues like “overcapacity,” debt risks, political repression, or corruption to argue that China’s model is inherently unsustainable. These arguments are often rooted in ideological frameworks emphasizing liberal democracy, privatization, and universal Western values. However, despite these persistent criticisms and predictions of impending collapse, they have largely failed to diminish … Read more

Hollowed U.S. Industry Fails to Scale Hardware Innovations

The hollowing out of the U.S. industrial base has severely impaired its ability to scale innovations from laboratory breakthroughs to mass production, especially in hardware-intensive sectors like advanced batteries, semiconductors, power electronics, and clean energy. The key failure lies not in invention, but in industrial translation—the critical mid-stage that connects research to scalable, market-ready manufacturing. … Read more

Rethinking Innovation: How China Redefined Global Tech Leadership

The complacent Western view that Chinese students—trained in rote learning and conformity—would be incapable of innovation led many in Western academia and policymaking circles to underestimate China’s technological rise. This misjudgment rested on cultural stereotypes, outdated theories of innovation, and a Western-centric understanding of creativity. This complacency was a critical intellectual blind spot. Misunderstanding of … Read more

Western Misperceptions and the Resilient Rise of China

The belief that China would inevitably follow the path of political and economic liberalization after the collapse of the Dissolution of the Soviet Union proved misguided. This expectation rested on the assumption that market reforms would naturally lead to democratization and that Chinese firms lacked the capacity to innovate or compete technologically. In reality, this … Read more

Free Markets, and the Historical Irony of State-Led Growth

The ideas of free trade, limited government, and laissez-faire markets, championed by theorists such as Milton Friedman, arose within a specific historical and ideological context, despite historical evidence of successful state-led development in cases such as Japan and South Korea. The Intellectual Origins of Free Market Thought The intellectual foundations of free market thought trace … Read more

The Illusion of U.S. Benevolence in China’s Rise

The story of U.S. assistance in integrating China into the global economy—culminating in America’s support for China’s entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001—has, over the past two decades, contributed to U.S. complacency and overconfidence. The Narrative of “U.S.-Enabled China” In 2001, China formally joined the World Trade Organization (WTO), an event widely … Read more

The Rise of Limited Government Ideals and Wall Street Dominance

U.S. deindustrialization and financialization redirected the nation’s economic center of gravity from the factory floor to Wall Street. This transformation reflected a broader ideological turn—away from the industrial-age belief that “what’s good for GM is good for America” and toward a new guiding principle: “what’s good for Wall Street is good for America.” The rise … Read more

The Rise of the Wall Street–Washington Corridor

The U.S. shift from the military-industrial complex to the Wall Street–Washington corridor reflects a structural and ideological change: industrial dominance waned, finance grew, and policymakers prioritized financial power as a strategic lever, replacing “what’s good for GM” with “what’s good for Wall Street.” Military-Industrial Complex (1940s–1970s) In the mid-20th century, the United States witnessed the … Read more

From “GM” to “Wall Street”: U.S. Financialization and China’s Rise

The ideological shift from “What’s good for GM is good for America” to “What’s good for Wall Street is good for America” did not happen earlier because the structural and institutional conditions of the U.S. economy, politics, and global system were different. Industrial Economy Dominance Before the 1970s, the United States was fundamentally an industrial … Read more