The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - China Decode: What One Big Exam Reveals about Inequality in China
Episode Date: November 4, 2025In this episode of China Decode, hosts Alice Han and James Kynge unpack how the global auto industry is facing a new chip crisis. Dutch chipmaker Nexperia has halted shipments to China after a payment... and ownership dispute, forcing carmakers like Honda and Volkswagen to scramble for crucial semiconductor parts. They explain how a fight over factory control became the latest flashpoint in the U.S.–China tech rivalry — and why Europe is caught in the middle. Then, they turn to China’s most pressure-packed test: the Gaokao. With more than 10 million students vying for spots at top universities, the exam has long promised meritocracy but increasingly reflects inequality. Alice and James explore how this high-stakes system shapes opportunity, status, and ambition in modern China — and why reform remains so elusive. Finally, Trump and Xi agree to a one-year trade truce, pledging to ease tariffs, restart soybean purchases, and cool tensions over rare earths and fentanyl. But can either side really trust the other to follow through? The hosts break down what’s at stake — and whether this pause is a real breakthrough or just a political timeout. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Chinese parents spend five times more on education than the global average.
And I think that's around 17% of their household income is a portion to education.
I mean, these figures are really staggering.
And I love this story because it shows you at a cultural, economic, and social level,
how Chinese society is built and how people are rewarded, what the incentives are from an economic standpoint.
Welcome to China Decode. I'm Alice Han.
And I'm James King.
In today's episode of China Decode, we're discussing why Nixperia halted shipments to China amid payment and ownership disputes,
how the Chinese Girl Call exam shapes access to top universities' jobs and social mobility in China.
and why Trump and she's trade truce remains murky.
All right, let's get right into it.
James, how are you?
Very good.
We've had Halloween, so it's very dark outside.
It's wet.
We're heading into winter now, Alice.
Definitely.
I mean, in London, you're starting to see the Christmas lights.
But certainly, there's a lot happening towards the end of this year.
We're not quite yet in holiday mode.
One of the top issues, to my mind, I think in the last few weeks,
has been this Nick Sberia issue.
and I think it's somewhat confusing, so we'll try to break down the complexities of this story.
So a fresh crisis is rippling through the global auto industry, and this time it's not
COVID strikes, but actually chips, and chips mainly coming out of China.
The Dutch chipmaker, Experia, has suspended wafer shipments to its Chinese factory after a payment
dispute, escalating a geopolitical standoff that's already got automakers like Honda, Volkswagen, and
Salantis bracing for production slowdowns and capacity cuts.
This drama started after the Dutch government seized control of Nixperia from its Chinese
owner, Wing Tech, citing national security concerns, a move that prompted China to then
block exports from Nixperia's factories.
Now as factories on both sides of the world grind closer to a halt, the European and
Chinese governments are scrambling for a diplomatic off-ramp and de-escalation.
For carmakers already scarred by years of semiconductor shortages and, more recently, rare earth shortages, this could be a painful deja vu, especially since the affected chips aren't just the fancy AI ones, but the cheaper everyday components that make windows roll and airbags deploy.
James, there's so many different characters in this plot.
It seems quite convoluted, but to my mind, it seems that the Chinese are trying to extract some concessions from the Europeans.
are unhappy with the state of play and certainly with the way in which the Dutch government has
come in and sees control of a company where China has ownership. What's your take on this?
I'm curious to hear. Well, thanks, Alex. Yes. I'm going to try and break it down to its simple
constituent parts. But before I do that, I think it's as well to focus on the really big picture
here, because what this, I think, is all about is how the U.S.-China trade war and tech war,
which we're all so familiar with, is now blowing back onto Europe.
And that really is key because, obviously, Europe is a huge place.
This is also important because China is one of Europe's biggest trade partners
and it's Europe's biggest source of imports.
European countries import many of the industrial components
that their own companies cannot do without.
So that's why this spat between a Dutch semiconductor company
and China is really key, because it shows what might happen more in the future if relations between
Europe and China continue to deteriorate. It all started rather kind of left field. As you've mentioned,
Alice, this is a little-known Dutch semiconductor maker, and it doesn't make high-tech chips. It makes
mid-tech chips. The sort of thing that you would need in your car to make the airbag work, to make the
the windows go up and down. So we're not talking about the cutting edge of technology,
but it really has blown up since about October. And I think this shows how Europe is being
drawn more and more into the US-China tech wars. It's also really significant in itself,
in a very practical way, because it shows how the lack of these chips that are made by this Dutch
company can severely affect European carmakers. Many of those car makers will come to this more
in a minute, have been predicting potential halt in their ability to produce cars. So it's got a very
practical side to it as well. But just as a recap, Nexperia, which is, as you said, a Dutch
company, was bought by a Chinese company, which is called Wing Tech in 2019. And then last year,
the US government put Wing Tech on the so-called entity list, which is a blacklist that restricts
the Chinese company's access to US technology. Then in September this year, a new rule from the US
meant that the subsidiaries of Wing Tech would also be put on the blacklist. And that included
Nexperia. So the Dutch government acted immediately and seen,
control over Nexperia that's based in the Netherlands, and it did so by citing a law that came
right out of the old Cold War. So an extraordinary situation followed. Nexperia in the Netherlands
stopped supplying its former Chinese parent company with the wafers that it needs to make chips,
and of course then Beijing retaliated. It blocked Nixperia from getting the products that are made
in China. So, in other words,
Knicksperia back in the Netherlands didn't have anything to sell.
All of this was really important because suddenly,
the biggest car makers in Europe, Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes-Benz,
Stalantis, Fiat, Peugeot, and Volvo,
all started to signal that they were really worried
that they wouldn't be able to get the chips that they need
to maintain production of their cars.
So that's basically the story as it is. This is the last little twist. Just on Saturday, China said it could consider some exemptions from the controls for Nixperia chip exports. So in other words, it could be that Nixperia in the Netherlands might be able to get supplies again from its Chinese company and might be able to start supplying European car makers. But we're not sure about that.
for that, James. What I find so puzzling about this whole saga is the fact that you basically
have the Dutch government, as you rightly say, James, citing these small Cold War national security
concerns, basically ousting the Chinese CEO of Nixperia. And basically, according to the South China
Morning Post, as I was reading this, the Dutch government feared that Chinese owners of Nixperia
wanted to basically move manufacturing out of the Netherlands into China, where around 70% of the
packaging it happens anyway. And this, I think, led Nickspirit to be a bit of a collateral
damage object in between the EU, China brought a trade spat. But I think from the Chinese
perspective, this has obviously motivated the desire for more export controls, that you can
have a more controlled way to respond to these threats that Europe or America may pose. I think
it's not a coincidence that you have the rare earth export controls happen at the same time coming
out of China as the export controls for Nixperia.
So in a way, I think the two, the trade spat between the EU and China over Nixperia
and the trade spat between the U.S. and China over a host of issues are somewhat related
and probably incentivizing Beijing to take a more controlled stance on a lot of these technologies.
But I mean, the story itself is fascinating because in a way it's pretty unprecedented
that you have a European government intervening in a private company.
let alone a Chinese company, to oust a CEO, and effectively tell all the employees that they
should halt business. And again, this saga was so fascinating. It was reading about how, in Chinese
language, social media, the Nixperia headquarters management basically sent multiple messages
to the employees telling them not to listen to the Dutch government authorities. So I definitely
think that this is a great representation of the fact that a lot of companies are going to be
involved as collateral damage in ongoing trade and technology-related disputes. And it's not just a
US-China story. It's also an EU-China story. I sense that we're going to get more stories like
this because invariably we're seeing China get more and more access into the European market
by buying a lot of players in the high-tech space. So I think for a lot of companies that are
involved in trade or technology between those two regions, I think is going to be an ongoing
threat. But what's your take on the auto-implications?
as well, James, because it seems to my mind, just like earlier in the year, a lot of these car
companies, when you see their stocks plummet in response to this, are very much susceptible
and at risk to these supply shortages on chips, even if they're cheap, as you say, medium-tier
chips.
Yeah, I mean, this is just another classic example of the long arm of Chinese coercive policies.
As you mentioned, Alice, China's able to effectively exert a huge leverage over the United
States by restricting rare earth exports to all kinds of American companies that need those
rare earths. And in this case, China can keep these big car companies, wherever they may be,
Japan, Europe, the US, kind of dangling on a string because China controls the supply of the chips
that Nexperia in China makes. So really, China is showing yet again that it can cripple
a global and very important industry simply by restricting the supply of a crucial component.
In this case, these mid-tech chips that were made by this previously Dutch company.
So, yeah, I mean, it just shows how China has the whip hand over the global economy in so many
different ways.
And I feel we'll get to the prediction part of the program later, but I feel that this is not going to be the last thing we
hear about this. There are other industries that China can move to control in this kind of
coercive way as well. Yeah, and if I'm sitting in Brussels or I'm a European government, I'm
very worried about the trend because, you know, part of, I think, why the Dutch government
was concerned was that they were concerned that the manufacturing would get fully moved
from the Netherlands to China. Currently, they produce these chips. They're called foundation chips,
billions of these foundation chips in Europe,
they assemble and then test them in China
where there's a growing industry of assembly and testing,
and then they re-export them to other markets,
including customers in Europe.
Around 70% of the chips made in the Netherlands
are sent China to be assembled and tested
and then re-exported.
So if all these chips basically cut out the Netherlands
and are fully produced and assembled and tested in China,
that I think bodes ill for the Netherlands.
But I think broadening out,
this is an ongoing trend that I'm so.
for a lot of European countries, including key industrial countries like Germany, where, you know,
they once had a degree of dominance in the supply chain, especially at the high value end.
China is getting even more competitive, cost competitive and logistics competitive.
I think that this is going to paint a very bleak picture for Europe unless it gets its act together.
That's my sense and my hot take.
But just very quickly, James, as somebody who lives in the UK but goes frequently to Europe
and talks to people in the region. What's your sense of this ongoing trend?
Yeah, I mean, you're absolutely right, Alice. This is part of a much bigger story.
Part of the issue is that China has a huge trade surplus with the EU. That was about 304 billion US
dollars last year. So the EU is very much dependent on many of these industrial inputs.
But the other part of it is that China's has sent up the tech ladder to, I would say,
global pre-eminence right now. I said this before on this podcast. I personally think that China
has now overtaken the US in technology and it's left Europe far behind. This has meant that many
of the big companies, whether they be in the Netherlands or in Germany or France or Spain or
here in the UK, are feeling like China has moved ahead. And therefore, more and more companies
and more and more importers are dependent on Chinese products.
And that makes it very difficult for the EU to retaliate against China
because Chinese products are mopping up markets all over the world
and they're mopping up markets here in Europe as well.
So I think that what we're experiencing here with this chips bat
is basically the foothills of the tensions that we have coming down the track.
We're going to get into a much more fractious relationship.
relationship between the EU and China over technology, over China moving ahead, and over the
huge Chinese trade surplus with Europe. Yeah, and just to round out this discussion, the EU is
confirmed that China is suspending the October export controls for the EU when it comes to
these chips. So it seems that there may be exemptions for the next barrier chip imports. And some
of the big order makers in Europe, their stocks rose quite a bit on Monday in response.
Okay, we'll be back with more after a quick break, so stay with us.
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China comes to a standstill for two days.
Flights are rerouted, traffic is silenced, and millions of families hold their breath.
It's Galkhaw Week.
China's great entrance exam into universities, where more than 10 million students
take the National College entrance exam that defines their futures.
But Galko isn't just a test, it's a sorting system that decides who gets into China's top
universities, and by extension, who gets the best jobs, the best housing, and even social status.
A single point, quite literally, can change the course of a life.
A new book that it's just come out,
The Highest Exam, How the Golkhal Shapes China,
digs into how this marathon exam became both a ladder of opportunity
and a tool of state control in China.
It reveals a system that's supposed to reward merit,
but often mirrors and enhances inequality,
where wealthy Chinese families buy homes and elite school districts
or pay for private tutoring that poorer students just simply can't afford,
despite government crackdowns.
James, this is one of the topics that I find personally fascinating for a number of reasons.
I have a couple of cousins in China who recently went through the Golkho system.
So I feel as though I've vicariously gotten to know how stressful this exam really is.
And I don't think it can be understated how stressful this exam really is.
Because unlike in the U.S., for instance, where I went to college, your application has a sum of different criteria.
or different inputs, whether it's the SATs, your extracurricular activities, your school grades,
you're treated as a holistic package. In China, quite literally, it all comes down to the score
that you achieve at this big entrance exam. And China has a history of being an exam-oriented
culture. If we look back to the imperial examination system, which purportedly was supposed to be
meritocratic. It quite literally brought young scholars from around China from the furthest,
most remote places of China, to do an exam where they could get the chance to be a scholar gentry
in the imperial court, a Mandarin in Beijing. The go-co is still, I think, part of that historical
legacy. The figures are honestly quite staggering. More than 10 million Chinese students take
this exam every year. Last year, there was a record 13.4 million people registered to take it.
And they're competing mainly for the top 100 universities of which there are only 500,000 spots.
I was looking at some of the admissions ratios, Qinghua, as it reportedly under 2%,
and just for reference Harvard where I went to, I think last year was 3.5%.
So it creates an environment that is deeply high-pressured, but at the same time, as this book
alludes to, and rightly so, it enhances and amplifies the existing inequalities in Chinese
society. And I think it was part of the reason why, much to the dismay and surprise of a lot of
shareholders, the Chinese government cracked down in 2021 on private tutoring companies, the big
private tutoring companies that were involved in cram schools. Because part of the reason was they
believed it was leading to these economic inequalities, but it was also increasing the economic
burdens for parents. You know, one statistic is also surprising to me that Chinese parents spend five
times more on education than the global average. And I think that's around 17% of their household
income is a portion to education. I mean, these figures are really staggering. And I love this
story because it shows you at a cultural, economic, and social level how Chinese society is built
and how people are rewarded, what these incentives are from an economic standpoint. But James,
what was your experience of this when you were in China? You know, Alice,
I always sort of thought that in the UK, if you want to have a conversation, you ask somebody about the weather.
In China, if you want to have a long conversation, you ask people about their experiences with the Gao Kau.
I think it's true that every Chinese person I ever spoke to about Gao Kau could remember to the exact point what their score was in Gao Kau.
It's something that people carry around with them.
And I must say, I very much want to sympathize with exam takers all over the world.
world. Although my exam-taking experiences are decades in the past, I can tell you I still wake up
with cold sweats. My recurring nightmare is that I pick up the envelope in which the exam is, and I take
out one of the papers, and I do the exam on that, forgetting that there's a whole other sheet
of questions that I didn't notice left in the envelope. That's the one I always think about. But
in different countries, we all have our big exams. But in China, this is sort of next level.
And I think that it isn't too much of an exaggeration to say that destiny in China is to a large
extent set by your scores in an exam that you take when you're, you know, 16, 17 years old.
I've had so many anguish conversations with people, Chinese friends, who say, you know,
on Gao Kao, I was ill, I didn't get the score that I should have got, or on Gao Kao, my parents were
getting divorced and I didn't get the score I should have got. There was too much stress in the
house and therefore I went to a university that wasn't as great as the one I should have gone to
and then you kind of move on for the rest of their lives like that. I've been doing a little bit
of research. It seems that there are a maximum of 750 points on Gao Kao and if you want to get
into the top, top universities in China, which is Peking University or Tsinghua University,
you need to be getting above 670 points. That puts you in the fraction of the top percent
of all of the 13 million odd people who are taking it. But also, as you said, Alice, I think,
you know, people abroad don't quite recognize the extent to which Gao cow cow feeds inequality,
within the Chinese system.
You know, the main way in which this happens
is that in Beijing and Shanghai,
where the big top universities are,
they allocate more places to people
who have local residence permits.
That means if you live in a far-flung part of rural China
or in an inland province,
you're much less likely to be able to access
the allocations to the top universities.
So my kind of rule of thumb when I was living in China is if you meet somebody who went to
Peking University or Tsinghua University and they came from a far-flung poorer inland province,
then that person must be extremely smart.
But how did your relatives experience of it?
I mean, are they mentally scarred or psychologically scarred by the process or did they do okay?
Yeah, I think I've had some relatives who have been somewhat mentally and emotionally scarred by it.
And I think, you know, when you're 16, 17, 18 cramming for a university that will decide the fate of your life at a single point, that I think can be deeply harrowing.
And I worry at a local, but also a national level, what this means for Chinese youth.
So this is happening at a time where youth unemployment is still quite elevated.
In August, it was 18.9%.
That's the highest since they changed the metrics for it back in 2023.
This year, apparently there'll be 12.22 million graduates coming out of China.
That number over the next decade is, by the way, is going to increase
because only as of a couple years ago did we see birth rates start to decline.
So we'll invariably see continued growth in graduate levels over the next 10, 15 years.
That means you are having a glut of hyper-educated students in a slowing economy
in an economy where there's going to be a lot of AI disruption and automation.
When I put all those factors together, it makes me very worried about China's demographic and educational challenge.
And I think that the policymakers are aware of this.
I think this is going to come up in the five-year plan.
But to take a somewhat different tack, James, from what you alluded to earlier in terms of China's technological rise,
I worry very much about the productivity and demographic challenges when you have.
have these educated youths that don't really know where to go into the workforce. And that could
pose a societal political challenge for Beijing as well. I mean, you only need to study history
to realize what happens when you have a huge glut of highly educated youths with nowhere to go
in terms of the workforce. Yeah, it's a deeply worrying picture of where China is heading
over the next generation. And another point that I want to make, and this is based on my aunt,
who's a teacher actually at an international school,
one of the big ones in Shanghai,
is the way in which societally students are rewarded
mainly for their exam-taking capacity.
And when you take that at an economic level
or an innovative level,
that is also worrying for China's future innovative capabilities.
Because as we know, when it comes to some of the vibrancy
of the American economy,
it's not just based on getting great grades.
It's based on individuals that have
out there pushing the boundaries, having imaginative moonshot, disruptive ideas.
And many of the big CEOs in the Mag 7, let alone the big tech companies, didn't necessarily
study engineering or STEM.
I mean, you've got some big names like Reid Hoffman and Peter Thiel out there who mainly
studied the social sciences.
So I think that this is going to be another challenge for Chinese top talents, is how do you
end up being innovative in a system that rewards exam-taking capabilities?
that's a big question that I have for the Chinese economy. And just to end on this,
what I think is also interesting as a trend, and I hope that this is the trend moving forward,
is that individuals are starting to realize that getting into Qinghua or Peking, which are
the Harvard and Yale of China, isn't the be-all and end-all. You've got great names out there,
for instance, like a deep-seek CEO who went to Zhejiang University. Now, that's a top university,
but it's growing its reputation as a great place for people who want to start
startups and be in the AI space and the innovation and research space.
But I think that that's a good example of how maybe the narrative is starting to shift a little bit.
I think certainly people like Jack Ma helped that a lot
because he wasn't seen as your traditional Qinghua, Peking, educated graduate.
So, you know, my hope is that the Chinese system probably changes to be less fixated on
getting into those top universities and more about a holistic version of education outcomes.
All right, let's take a quick break, so stay with us.
Support for this show comes from the Audible Original, the downloaded two, ghosts in the machine.
The Earth only has a few days left.
Rosco Cudulian and the rest of the Phoenix colony have to re-upload their minds into the quantum computer.
But a new threat has arisen that could destroy their stored consciousness forever.
Listen to Oscar winner Brendan Fraser reprised his role as Rosco Cudulian
in this follow-up to the Audible Original Blockbuster, The Downloaded.
It's a thought-provoking sci-fi journey where identity, memory, and morality collide.
Robert J. Sawyer does it again with this much-anticipated sequel that leaves you asking,
What are you willing to lose to save the ones you love?
The downloaded two ghosts in the machine
Available now, only from Audible
Welcome back.
President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping
have agreed to a one-year trade truce
with China pledging to buy a lot more soybeans,
delay rare earth export controls and crack down on fentanyl
while the US itself rolls back tariffs and delays export restrictions.
But the deal's key details remain very, very unclear,
and both leaders track records raise great questions
about whether or not these promises will actually stick.
From agriculture to tech to drugs,
this trade truce or pause touches critical parts of the global economy
and businesses are watching very, very closely.
James, I want to go right into it.
There's a lot of enthusiasm about the fact,
that she and Trump met and seemed to have solved a lot of their issues.
But I need to remind everyone that no deal has been inked,
that they're still discussing the fine print of what they verbally agreed to.
And there's still a lot of groundwork that Besson and Greer and their Chinese counterparts
need to basically agree to in order to get to a trade deal.
And if history is any guide, the last trade deal,
the phase one trade agreement took over a year from start to finish to agree to. And even then,
much of it wasn't actually adhered to. I know COVID was part of the exacerbating factor,
but certainly just because she and Trump met doesn't mean anything really has materially changed.
So I want to get your take on this because, you know, obviously this was the big news of the last week
and a lot of people waiting with bated breath to see what both sides will actually deliver.
Yes, I'm in the same camp. I mean, I'm getting an almost eerie sense now because China has yet to
acknowledge that there was a deal. Trump came out of the meeting and saying we had a fantastic meeting.
It was a 12 out of 10 and then kept on using the word deal. Actually, when we look at the fine print of what
the Americans have announced, it looks much more like a temporary truce than an actual deal. And to this
moment, I mean, I've searched high and low. I have not been able to find a single official
statement from the Chinese side that says there was a deal. What I have been able to find is a
people's daily article that says, and I'm quoting now, the two sides need to work out
and finalize the follow-up steps as soon as possible. And that really sets the tone of
all the articles that I can find in the Chinese official media.
Another sort of typical quote is the two teams can continue their talks in the spirit of equality,
mutual respect and mutual benefit. I think what's happening is that the Chinese having been burnt before
by, you know, apparently making a deal with the US and then being harshly criticized by the US and then
the US putting extra controls on China. I think China is watching and waiting at this point.
And I think they, if they start to see the same template emerge from the US, i.e. the US being very
critical of China or, let's say, putting more Chinese companies on the entity blacklist that we were
mentioning earlier, then it may be possible that China will start to recede or resile from aspects of
what the Americans say the Chinese agreed to during the talk. So like you, Alice, I really think that this is a lot
more flimsy than the American side is currently claiming. Just to give you one concrete example,
I mean, there are more than a thousand Chinese companies that are on the US entity list,
meaning that those companies cannot import specific US technologies. But it looks like that list
may well be expanded in the US. And so if that was to happen, then what would the Chinese side say?
Would they say, you know, well, the Americans spoke to us in South Korea and now they're doing this.
So that means that the deal doesn't hold or aspects of the deal doesn't hold, etc.
The last point I would make is that even some of the statements coming out of the US, particularly I'm talking about Scott Besson's statement, that China is set to buy 12 million metric tons of American soyobines during the current season.
that runs until the end of January,
seem to be a little bit tentative to me
and a little bit critical of China.
All right, well, James,
let's just go very quickly line by line to see where we're at.
I think this is going to be a helpful exercise.
So on soybeans, as you've already mentioned,
I think there have been some concrete concessions
from the Chinese side.
They've committed to buy 12 million tons of soybeans
in the last two months of this year,
and then 25 million metric tons
in the following three years.
That's around the average of where we were at during the Biden administration.
And then we've got a delay, a one-year delay on the rare earth export controls that China announced several weeks ago.
An agreement, it seems to cooperate on fentanyl, on the precursors of fentanyl, which led Trump to decrease the tariffs, the fentanyl tariffs on China.
So now we only have a 10% additional fentanyl tariff on China.
And then similarly, the U.S. verbally is saying that it's delaying.
export restrictions on chips and other technologies and may have some flexibility over the 50%
subsidiary rule, which basically meant that subsidiaries that had at least 50% ownership
from a Chinese company could be part of the entity's list for export bans or export controls.
I think that that issue in itself was actually quite important for China, but I think that's
where we're at. Am I missing anything, James? No, I think that's about it. I would just
reiterate that this is all according to American officials. And I'm really not sure that the
Chinese have signed off on any of this. Or if they have signed off on the big picture, then as you
said, right at the top, the details are yet to be worked out. And as we always know, the devil is
in the detail, especially between two trade partners like the US and China that simply don't
trust each other. Yeah, I know you're completely right. And this is going to be a very
difficult, I think, series of negotiations between the two sides going into 2026. But it seems
that at least Trump has committed to going to China in April and Xi visiting Marilago or the
other parts of the U.S. right afterwards. So we may tee up to, I think, high-level meetings
between the two leaders in 26. But there's a lot that needs to be figured out between now and then.
And meanwhile, China's trade surplus is going to ever expand that I think the $295 billion trade imbalance between the two countries is somewhat, I think, largely unchanged, actually, because these tariffs and their exemptions haven't actually addressed the deeper underlying structural issues.
So I think that right now, we're right to breathe a sigh of relief, but there's, I think, going to be a bumpy road ahead or rocky road ahead in terms of trade discussions.
But it's been surprising to me that we didn't see much mention of the geopolitical issues.
I think that the U.S. vaguely mentioned Russia, Ukraine, that there could be areas of collaboration.
Taiwan didn't come up at all.
What's your view on the geopolitical angle and how it will rev up, I think, in 2026?
Because there's already some inklings of concerns about China's territorial ambitions in the South China Sea.
That happens quite periodically, I think, when people are concerned about Chinese, aggressive foreign policy.
but I've noticed in the last few weeks that there's been more media articles about this issue as well.
Yeah, I mean, my sense of the talks in South Korea was that the U.S. and China both wanted to make some
kind of progress on these very crucial trade and investment deals.
Therefore, they didn't want to overload it with geopolitical talks as well.
Once you start talking about issues such as South China Sea or Taiwan, you immediately start
pressing on very raw nerves.
And so I think that the fear was that if you tried to go there, you might scupper the trade and investment aspects of the deal as well.
But you're right to point this out, Alice, geopolitically, the US and China are no closer together than they ever were.
And as we also know, it's geopolitics that forms the bedrock of the disagreements between them that then filter into the trade and investment relationships.
So the fundamental problem between the U.S. and China is geopolitical.
It's not economic.
And therefore, just by leaving geopolitics aside, does not solve the geopolitical problem.
So it's highly likely that these tensions will rear their head again in the coming months.
You know, there's any number of scenarios of things that can go wrong, unfortunately.
I'd really like that point that you made.
But just for the sake of argument, I think as an economist, I would take the other side of it,
which is that I think it's the trade imbalance.
that China runs with Europe and America, running these massive surpluses, which, by the way, I think
will get bigger, that lead to these political spats will lead to both sides, basically
mistrusting China and finding ways to, you know, either through export controls, through means,
fair or foul, to stop or rather quarterize China's massive exports. So as an economist,
I'll take a different side to that, but I completely hear you. I think that in 2026, geopolitics,
I think will be important again.
It's probably reserved for a later discussion,
but certainly I think you're right on the money
when you say that right now they're focused on trade and investment.
All right, James, it's prediction time.
What's your prediction for this week or in the near future?
Okay, Alice, we've just been talking about frictions and geopolitics
and things that could go wrong in the future.
I hate to be so gloomy, but my prediction concerns that.
I think that pharmaceuticals may be one of the next focuses of U.S.-China tensions at some
point, let's say, over the next six months. My prediction is that China may threaten to restrict
supply or actually restrict supply of key pharmaceuticals at some point over the next six months.
This choke point is another piece of leverage that China holds because, according to
U.S. pharmacopia, which is an industry standards body, nearly 700 U.S. medicines are made using at least
one key ingredient that is only sourced from China. So China's, you know, situation in the
pharmaceutical supply chain allows it, this leverage. And to my mind, it may either threaten to
use that leverage or actually use that leverage going forward. So do you think that that will mean we
get supply shortages, prices go up? Well, if it's a threat, then it may not have an immediate
sort of price impact, but if China starts to really restrict the inputs into pharmaceuticals
or actual pharmaceutical products that it exports around the world, then I think we could well
see some increases in the prices of these pharmaceuticals, just as we did in rare earth prices
or more recently in prices of these chips that Nexperia makes in China.
So, yeah, we could see a very similar template of stresses coming forward.
But what's your prediction, Alice?
Well, thanks, James.
The first thing, that's really interesting.
And I think, whereas we talked about egg prices going up early on in the Trump term,
this could be the next hot button domestic political issue in America.
If you see pharmacy products, drug products go up in price, that could be, I think, quite
important politically as a salient issue. My prediction, you know, going back to this education
issue, I think in the next five-year plan, there may be some more loosening on private tutoring
and education. In 2021, we basically saw this massive crackdown that took out pretty much the
operations of the top private tutoring and education companies and platforms. I think that they're
starting to realize that they need to do more to support the job market. And this
is actually a key hirer. This industry employs millions of people. So I think that there may be
loosening on that and we could see more companies getting into the private tutoring space. That's
my hot take for early 26. All right, that's all for this episode. Thank you for listening to China
Decode. This is a production of Prof G Media. Our producer is David Toledo. Our associate is Eric
Janikis. Our research associate is Dan Shalan. Our technical
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