The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - China Decode: The U.S. vs China AI Battle Is Getting Ugly
Episode Date: April 28, 2026The race for global AI supremacy is accelerating—and getting messier. Alice Han and James Kynge break down the escalating tensions between the U.S. and China as accusations of AI model “distillati...on” and intellectual theft collide with China’s own rapid breakthroughs, including DeepSeek’s latest powerful new model. But the competition isn’t just happening in code. While Washington warns of industrial-scale AI copying, Wall Street is quietly increasing exposure to China through record renminbi borrowing and offshore “dim sum” bonds—suggesting a deeper financial realignment underway beneath the geopolitical friction. And inside China, a very different story is unfolding: a rising trend of “pretend-to-work” offices, where young people are paying just to simulate employment amid growing youth unemployment and economic pressure. Subscribe on Substack for ad-free episodes and much more! 👉 chinadecode.profgmedia.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I'm Preet Bharara.
And this week, NYPD's Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence,
and counterterrorism, Rebecca Weiner, joins me to discuss the evolving nature of terrorism
and targeted violence. The episode is out now. Search and follow. Stay tuned with Prete,
wherever you get your podcasts. Now we've got the White House accusing China of industrial-scale
theft of intellectual property from US AI labs. This is different. And on the China side,
we've got the Chinese government banning the acquisition by one of America's biggest companies,
meta, of a promising AI company that was founded in China, but is now based in Singapore.
So I would say all of this to me means that the rivalry has entered a new phase.
Welcome to China Decode. I'm Alasan.
And I'm James King.
In today's episode of China Decode, we're discussing the
tightening an increasingly combative race for global AI supremacy, why US banks are scooping up
Chinese currency in offshore markets, and the growing industry of pretend-to-work offices in China.
That's all coming up, but first, let's do a quick check-in with how the Chinese markets are starting
the week. On Monday, the markets open the week with slight gains, the Shanghai composite closing up
0.16%, while the Xinjiang component was up 0.37%.
Industrial profits jumped 15.8% in March year-on-year, with enterprise profits growing by over 15% in Q1.
That growth comes in spite of the shocks brought on by the war in Iran and is largely attributed to the booming AI and chip industries in mainland China.
The high-tech manufacturing sector alone saw a 47.4% gain and profits in Q1.
Stock market standouts included more threads up 8.5% and SMIC A shares up 5%.
Fivercom wireless and Liyad Opto electronic company were both down over 12%.
And tech giant stocks were broadly mixed with Tencent ending the day down 3%.
And Baidu up 3.5%.
All right, let's get into it.
As the US and China barreled towards a high-stakes summit next month,
the fight over artificial intelligence is getting a lot more aggressive and a lot more complicated.
Just today, China has announced it will prohibit foreign investment in
Manas, a Singapore-based AI company with Chinese founders, which means Mehta's December acquisition
of the company will have to be undone. Experts are saying the move could hold other Chinese entrepreneurs,
especially in the AI space, from seeking out foreign partners. Meanwhile, the White House has now accused
China-backed actors of running industrial-scale campaigns to essentially siphon off the capabilities
of American AI labs, querying systems millions of times to replicate how they work.
It's the kind of claim that is hard to definitively prove, but if true, it suggests the global
AI race isn't just about innovation, it's about extraction. And here's where the timing gets
really interesting. Just as those accusations ramp up, Chinese startup Deepseek has rolled out a
powerful new model built cheaper, released to open source, and quickly closing the gap with US AI
leaders. What some are calling China's deep seek moment is starting to look less like a one-off
and more like a real strategy. James, we talk a lot about AI on this podcast and with good reason,
I think. I think some of the news that has come out seems to suggest that there is an escalation
now in this AI conflict between the US and China, and it's not just driven by Washington and Beijing.
I detected in China, I was just there for three weeks, a consternation about AI competition,
but also about the politics of Silicon Valley.
I want to get your take really quickly on whether or not AI is going to be perceived broadly as a threat,
not just by American legislators, but also by Silicon Valley.
Well, welcome back, Alice.
Welcome back from China.
I'm dying to hear more about your trip there.
But as far as I see it, this really is pretty big.
We've got what I would say is kind of like a Cold War curtain coming down over the U.S.-China competition,
over AI. Until now, there's been a lot of rivalry, mostly commercial rivalry. We had the OpenAI's
ChatGBTGPT in late 2022, and then we had the first Deep Seek moment in early 2025. And both the U.S.
and China were going really strongly fueled by a lot of money and a lot of enterprise. But now we've got
the White House accusing China of industrial security.
scale theft of intellectual property from US AI labs. This is different. And on the China side,
we've got the Chinese government banning the acquisition by one of America's biggest companies,
meta, of a promising AI company that was founded in China, but is now based in Singapore. So I would
say all of this to me means that the rivalry has entered a new phase. The White House is talking about
exploring measures to hold foreign actors accountable. That's the phrase they use for industrial
scale distillation campaigns. To me, I think the important thing is that politically,
geopolitically, this is a step change. It is like the US law enforcement agencies are limbering up
to really get moving on the AI frontiers with China. So what is distilling? It's basically the
scenario in which a Chinese AI company would send hundreds of thousands or millions of prompts,
probably from proxy accounts through VPNs to camouflage their source to a USLLM.
That's a large language model.
And then it collects all the replies that it gets, and it collates all those replies.
And that allows it to develop a sense of the decision-making patterns of the U.S.
large language model, its reasoning, its confidence levels. It effectively allows it to kind of map
what the algorithm behind the target LLM is. To me, this is what this distillation is like.
Now, just to give China their say, they say that the US claims are entirely baseless.
They say they're a slanderous smear against the achievements of China's artificial intelligence industry.
But, you know, whatever the truth is, it feels like both sides are getting more acrimonious
that the temperature on the AI competition between China and the US is getting stronger.
But what's your sense, Alice?
How do you see it?
Well, I think, you know, putting aside Trump's trip to China and is increasing likely to happen
next month, I sense pressure from open AI and anthropic to get Washington to.
really crack down on China distilling U.S. models.
Those two companies have long been hopping on about the threat to not just national security,
but also to U.S. AI lead through China's willingness to distill models.
But I sense that at least from Washington's perspective,
even although many analysts and technical experts are pushing them to do more export restrictions
or regulations to obviate distilling of models.
Right now it seems like Trump is in the mode of summiting
and really trying to extract some kind of a deal or series of deals.
I was in China for the last three weeks.
It was obvious that the Chinese side are optimistic about the meeting,
even if nothing substantive comes out of it.
They believe that the mood music will be positive in a few weeks' time.
And they also believe that Chi will be.
be going to the U.S. in the second half of the year, and that the Trump meeting with Xi and China
will tee up Xi's own visit to the U.S. in H2, and that they similarly will probably meet at APEC and G20
later in the year. So in total, we could see four meetings throughout the course of the year.
Although this is definitely, I think, you know, a thorn in the side of the relationship,
My base case right now is that both sides, in particular Washington, want to be seen to be making a deal and to have a positive relationship right now.
So this, I think, will continue to be in the background, but I don't think it will be at front and center.
I similarly heard that there was consternation in Washington about China's biotech and farmer supremacy increasingly,
and that some members of Washington were trying to push for legislation or executive action on the biotech
farmer front. But right now, I think none of that matters because all that matters is what Trump
wants and Trump clearly wants to have a big win coming out of Beijing in a few weeks time.
That's really interesting. I must say, I get the sense there's a disconnect between the diplomacy
between the U.S. and China, particularly ahead of Trump's planned visit next month, and the reality
of the deep state in both countries becoming more and more wary and putting on more and more controls
and talking about, you know, more and more sanctions.
In addition to what we've just been talking about,
the DOJ in the US is actively prosecuting individuals
who are smuggling advanced NVIDIA servers into China.
The Commerce Department is investigating companies like Deepseek
for their use of restricted American AI chips.
And there's a couple of big pieces of legislation,
being proposed, such as the decoupling America's artificial intelligence capability from China
Act. That's not law yet, but it's proposed. And it threatens up to 20 years in prison and millions
in fines if you engage with specific Chinese AI technology. So there does seem to be a lot going on
in the background. The US seems to be really getting tough. Maybe in the shadows, maybe Trump will be
out there in front, making nice with the Chinese and the mood music around the summit will be
fairly friendly. But I think the true trajectory of the relationship continues to be bad.
One thing that I will end on that was raised in a conference I attended in Beijing just the
other day. What we have discussed is the use of AI and military applications. I think there's
a real concern from Beijing side about autonomous weapons that have been used, more research,
recently in Iran. So that could resurface as a discussion. Certainly, it was part of a strategic
dialogue that had just been rehashed towards the end of the Biden administration and potentially,
you know, in the bull case scenario about the relationship, if this summit goes well,
that could pave the way for more strategic dialogue about autonomous weapons controls. But I'm not
holding my breath. That was just raised as an issue by the Chinese side that could come to the
forefront again. Okay, we'll be back with more after a quick break. Stay with us.
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While Washington is warning about China stealing the future of AI, Wall Street is quietly buying into China's
financial present. U.S. banks led by Goldman Sachs are borrowing record amounts in Chinese currency
the Nomi B through a booming offshore market known as dim sum bonds. The reason is simple. It is cheaper
with lower interest rates and massive demand from Chinese investors. Borrowing in Nomi B has become
one of the most attractive funding plays in current global finance. Zimming out, and this is
bigger than just bond markets, it is part of a broader push by China to,
to internationalize its currency and chip away at the dominance of the US dollar.
And increasingly, global institutions from governments to banks are playing along.
So at the same moment, the US is accusing China of exploiting American innovation.
The financial system is drifting quietly but materially towards China's orbit.
This is an interesting topic for me because I deal a lot with markets, with clients.
You know, anytime you meet with the PBC, they're really trying to sell you on both the
panda bonds, the onshore, then maybe denominate bonds and the dim sum bonds, the offshore ones
that are sold through Hong Kong. And, you know, purely looking at it, as I mentioned, economically,
it makes sense in a time where Chinese interest rates remain considerably low and around, you know,
10-year government yields, around 1.75%. If the rest of the world, including the US, has inflation
risks and to the upside and rates are probably going north, that I think,
continues to make Chinese bonds look attractive in terms of lower borrowing costs for foreign investors.
My sense of this is that this is certainly a signal of something.
When you've got Goldman Sachs, the symbol of American capitalism,
issuing Chinese debt in Rimmi, in the middle of a US-led war against Iran,
it has to be a signal of something.
But what exactly I've been puzzling over?
My sense is that it is not yet a sign of the decline of the U.S. dollar or anything as drastic as that.
The U.S. dollar is in pretty good shape.
U.S. financial markets are just unbelievably strong.
But it probably is a sign of something more simple.
And as you've said, issuing debt in Chinese and these dimsum bonds is much cheaper than issuing them in the U.S.
I think Goldman Sachs had to pay about a 3% coupon on its 10-year Dimson bond.
If it had issued the same bond in America, it would have to pay about 5 to 5.7%.
So there is a bit of a differential there.
I also think that this is a move by Goldman Sachs to show cooperation, to show commitment to the Chinese government.
China does like foreign companies issue.
these dim sum bonds. It likes the way this offshore Rimini bond market is getting deeper and bigger.
It thinks that this shows China's rising status in the world. So I think there's a bit of a nod to
Beijing as well. I don't know whether the US would be worried about that. I'm really not that
sure about that. But do you think that's a possibility? Do you think the US will be looking at Goldman
thinking, hmm, why are you issuing bonds over there in China?
Well, there is a, I wouldn't say no to that being a risk given the Trump administration
and its scattergun attention to detail.
But I would say in general that it isn't a risk to the US dollar, despite the fact that
we're seeing the doubling of issuance of dimson bonds just year to date compared to the same
period in 2025. Yes, that suggests that more investors are getting interested for structural reasons,
but this doesn't displace dollar dominance, which largely is derived from, you know,
total share of global FX reserves, total share of trade invoicing, and total share of loans.
And across all metrics, the US dollar is by far, you know, a huge magnitude is much larger
than CNY. And that will take a while for CNWR to even get close.
to closing the gap. But it does suggest one, I think, key principle, which I really started over a year
ago when we started to see the unwinding of the yen trade, so the Japanese yen, on the back of
greater inflation expectations and rising rates. So traditionally, the yen, as you know, has been
a very popular carry trade in the sense that investors will borrow yen at low interest rates
and is a generally cheaper currency, and then use that to invest in high-yieldy.
assets and then pocket the change. So with the unwinding of that, I think the CNY has replaced
some of that structural dynamic. But I think this is all really just marginal compared to the real
table stakes, which are, you know, how will CNY increase in the use of global trade and in
FX reserves. Now, I do think that since Trump 2.0, that CNY has been creeping up in global
FX reserves.
Does this have been creeping up in some level of trade invoicing, notably with the Russians,
and now it seems increasingly in the Middle East.
But this is still a long, long game, and China is quite a bit behind.
I will mention, you know, since the Iran issue hasn't resolved itself, that at least
two ships recently have been paid in Nomi B, and this is payment to Iran, to secure
safe passage to the Strait of Hormuz.
So again, an indication of the direction of change potentially in bilateral payments between Iran and China.
Right, absolutely. So the Ramin B is becoming more of an international currency, but still very far from a threat to the dollar's dominance in the global economy. Is that fair?
Yeah, I completely agree. And I think investors who are worried about the trajectory of America fiscally, politically, militarily, and a risk off,
look to China and go, well, the risk premium are lower, seems to be a more stable regime.
They seem to be suffering less on the energy front because they put in these pretty generous price
caps to support the economy. And so they look at that and think China is a good place to park
your cash, not just in the equity markets, but also in the bond market where, again, I was hearing
that the PBOC is unlikely to do anything to rates, especially before the Trump Xi summit.
and that there will be reluctant to cut rates considerably this year.
So we'll probably stay at around the 1% level.
That is considerably lower than the rest of the world.
And James, just to say that people get a sense of the size of the Chinese dim sum bond market relative to say peers in the US and Japan, how big is it?
At the moment, the dim sum bond market is about 260 billion US dollars in size, about 1.8 trillion Ramin B, that is,
which is really tiny compared to the U.S. bond market.
That's, I mean, roughly, about 60 trillion U.S. dollars.
We're talking about a small market, but it's growing quickly,
and I think it's going to become more and more significant.
Okay, let's take one last quick break. Stay with us.
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Welcome back. And while China is racing ahead in AI and expanding its financial footprint,
there's a very different story playing out on the ground. Across cities from Shanghai to
Xinjiang, a strange new industry has popped up, pretend to work offices, where young people
are literally paying something like $7 a day to just sit.
at a desk, take meetings, and send photos home to prove they actually have a job.
On one level, it sounds absurd, but it's really a window into a deeper problem.
A tough job market, especially for young people, and a culture where unemployment still carries
real shame and stigma.
So instead of sitting at home, some are choosing structure, routine, and frankly dignity,
even if it is staged.
And when you zoom out, it creates a striking contrast.
At the top, China is projecting strength.
cutting-edge artificial intelligence, arising currency, global ambition,
but underneath it all, there is a generation struggling to find
its footing in an economy that's not delivering the same opportunities
as their parents experienced.
James, when I was looking at some of the videos of these pretend-to-work offices,
my first reaction, and I have to say this facetiously,
is kind of like we work back in the day.
Even though just come into these co-working spaces,
arguable, debatable
as to whether or not they were working.
And then when I dig deeper into it,
there was this company in particular
called Hangzhou,
I believe Hangzhou pretend to work limited,
run by a Mr. Chen.
And it seems that
a lot of the people who work in the space
are kind of like freelancers,
their content creators. So maybe it's not
fair to say that they're pretending to work
and that it's all fake.
But there's a degree to which
new jobs have been created
and located in these pretend-to-work office spaces,
mainly in the influencer content creation,
freelancer realm of things.
What's your take?
Yeah, people were talking about this when I was in China recently a little bit.
And my sense is rather similar to yours, actually.
It's not a full pretense.
I think quite a lot of people go to these places
because everybody else there knows that they haven't got a job
and they'd like to have a job.
And so they're almost like advertising their joblessness.
And, you know, obviously some people are there pretending to work.
But, yeah, I mean, what struck me about this trend is that it's quite widespread.
You find these pretend-to-work offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, places like Taiyuan,
Dongguan, all kinds of cities across China.
I'm not going to say it's a massive number of people, but I must say it does remind me very much of the time I spent in Japan in
the early 90s, when you would find quite a lot of salary men who'd lost their jobs,
getting up every morning, putting on their suit and tie, and going to a local library to
basically sit there all day because they'd been laid off, but because they felt so ashamed
that they couldn't admit it to the rest of their family.
So I think there's a little bit of that sense here.
I didn't get the same sense of shame.
in this particular dynamic.
But one thing struck me,
one journalist who went there was going around.
And there is some humor in these places, too.
For instance, in one of the offices in Beijing,
there was a door marked chairman's office.
But when you opened it,
you opened it and only found the fire escape going outside.
So I suppose it was a bit of a play on that the chairman doesn't exist.
Obviously, I think the reason why we,
chose this topic is because it shows an angle on one of China's biggest problem, social and
economic, and that is the way in which young people, 16 to 24-year-olds, are finding it really
hard to get jobs. The latest number is, among this cohort, 16.9% were unemployed, unable to find a
job in March. And if you ask me, based on the conversations I was having in China,
I wouldn't be at all surprised if that number really starts to rise now.
You must have had very similar conversations during your trip, Alice.
Yeah, what I actually did here is that there have been moves by Beijing to pressure universities
to increase the degrees by a year so that students stay on campus a little longer.
There's just a bit of pressure on SOEs to do these stages to these internships for a period.
of time in order to get some youth into the workplace as well. So this is coming at a time where
I think Gen Z in China are really struggling to get a job and that's having broader cultural
sociological implications. We talked in the past about Tang Ping, you know, this idea of lying
flat and not being aggressive or ambitious about work. And certainly I think this pretend to work
culture somewhat fits into that in the sense that, you know, these people want to cosplay working,
but they don't really want to go out or fail to go out and find real jobs. And so this is the
closest alternative that they get. But it really, I think, hits on the nail on the head in terms
of a lot of these themes that we've talked about in the past. What was interesting to me is that
the Global Times actually even acknowledge this trend. I was looking back into a piece that they wrote
in August last year, it's titled Chinese Urban Freelance's Turn to Pretend to Work Offices for Disciplined Spaces.
So the narrative is that these spaces are sort of disciplined work spaces for this new generation
of workers in the freelance content creation spaces.
And it was largely spinning it as a positive mode of employment, even though it was listing
towards the end some of the risks attached to this industry potentially if there is fraud involved.
But this all comes together, I think, to your point, James, in this feeling that traditional jobs
are no longer growing, and in fact a lot of jobs are being lost in the manufacturing, and increasing
the white-collar, stable sectors, including in SOEs, and that young people either need to
give up on the traditional job searches or find these alternative means.
And, you know, I think for people who are not so familiar with China's digital ecosystem, there's a lot of content creation that goes out there.
There's people who are full-time content creators, live streamers, selling products, creating video short form, long-form content that is being consumed.
You know, farmers, for instance, use Quaichael to sell goods direct to the market.
So the positive side of this is that people are finding alternative jobs in this new digital.
AI-driven era and the negative side of it is that it is again an indication that the structural
unemployment really exists and is worsening. All right, James, you know what time it is. It is
prediction time. As you peer into the future this week, what do you see? Well, I couldn't resist going
back to the dim sum bonds. I do think this is a very interesting trend. My prediction is that by the end of
2030, the market for Dimson bonds will be worth more than 10 trillion Ramin B. That's up from about
1.8 trillion now. So I think it's going to increase by more than five times by the end of 2030.
And the reason I think it's an interesting topic and an interesting trend is because this is
effectively China's offshore Ramin B market that we're talking about. A lot of foreign companies,
can go and issue bonds in Rimimbi in this market, and a lot of foreigners can buy these
bonds, if they like. But this is a different thing. Obviously, the size of the market is nothing
compared to the U.S. Treasury bond market or the Japanese government bond market, but it's significant
and it's going to grow quickly. Well, that's really, really fascinating. I agree with you.
Mine is about inheritance laws and wealth transfer. The economist had a really
good piece, I believe that it was a really, really great research on how we're going to see
very soon the biggest transfer of intergenerational wealth in China's history.
By some estimates, at least $2 trillion that will be transmitted to the next generation.
And if you think about the fact that really since the 70s, you've had a one-child policy
in place largely until 2016, what are the implications for the next generation in how?
inheriting all those assets. My prediction really is that we're going to see some form of legislation
around inheritance tax or capital gains tax because central and local governments are chomping in the
bit for more fiscal revenues. There needs to be more tax reform. Property tax is unlikely now given,
you know, the property sector is still severely deflated. And in the five-year plan, there was
mentioned about doing research on inheritance tax and capital gains tax. So I foresee, in the
next couple of years, legislation surrounding that. And that could be really, really interesting
because it's the first time we have seen anything like that in recent memory in China.
Yeah, that's such a fascinating topic. Yeah, really interesting.
All right, that's all for this episode. Thank you for listening to China Decode. This is a production
of Prof G Media. Make sure to follow us wherever you get your podcast so you don't miss an episode.
Talk to you again next week.
Thank you.
