What Now? with Trevor Noah - Alice Han: Chinamaxxing
Episode Date: July 2, 2026This week, Trevor and Eugene are joined by China expert Alice Han to unpack why so much of what the West believes about China misses the mark. They break down China's "Four Ds”: debt, lagging deman...d, an aging demography, and the threat of destruction over Taiwan. They also explore how the legacy of the one-child policy helped create a generation of wildly successful women, an extreme male dating shortage, and a booming market for AI boyfriends who always know exactly what to say. Naturally, the conversation ends with Trevor and Eugene wondering whether their next career should be running a Chinese matchmaking business. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you watch videos on Chinese TikTok, there's a lot of...
Is that label?
It's doying, like doying and Xiaohongshu, which is red note.
That last part?
Shaoongshu.
Yeah.
Because sometimes I feel like you like, you have a Shaoongshu.
Shaoongshu?
I can roll like that.
Thank you, Eugene.
Thank you.
Oh, my God.
You have such a good accent.
Oh.
Thank you very much.
Yeah.
Seriously.
Seriously.
You could go on to Chinese TV.
Oh, damn, damn.
Oh, no, Eugene.
Excuse me.
A wise man once said, compliments are best when they are shared with others.
So please, Ellis, please carry on.
Carry on.
This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
Ellis was telling me an interesting story, but...
You forgot.
No, I didn't want to come and repeat it back here.
Because also, there's one thing about compliments.
They are better when they are shared.
just like conspiracy theories
or sometimes charges
when they're being pressed against you
him too, he was there
oh my God
I've never heard that one
compliments are like conspiracy theories
I made it up
no that's what I'm saying
I've never heard that I like that's a fresh one
Alice go ahead tell him
Oh I got so I got the email from you guys two weeks ago
and I legitimately thought it was a scam
I was thinking why the heck is Trevor Noah
Hey interested in China
And B, why is his team emailing me?
And so I sat on it for two days thinking this is just, this is probably another one of those
AI scam artists that are just creating random emails out there for people.
Okay, you've made me realize something.
I think you're not, you are not the first, second, nor third, no fourth person who said this.
I need to find a different way to reach out to people then.
Because I, because many people think that when we're reaching out, it's a scam.
Yeah, but DMs are the original authenticator.
Okay.
So if someone reaches you, you know it's true, right?
Unless if you had gotten a DM from him, would you have thought it was a scam?
He's got the blue tick verified.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I never, well, I'm glad you didn't think it was a scam or I'm glad that you were
naive enough to fall for the scam.
Well, I did, I did due diligence.
So I went and LinkedIn profiled the guy.
Yeah, but this is too much.
You know, your team.
Yeah, this is too much work.
This is way too much work.
And I apologize.
No, not at all.
I mean, this is so fun to get to come here.
I'm just really a huge fan of both of you.
I mean, I'm a huge fan of your work because, you know, as you said, you're an expert in probably one of the most complicated topics that the world has ever dealt with.
Relationships.
Not relationships, but that is one of them, Eugene.
But in many ways, actually, Alice is a relationship expert.
It's just a different type of relationship, geopolitical relationship.
Uh-huh.
No, but you are considered an expert on China, which is, am I correct in saying it is one of the most complicated countries to actually be an expert in because of how multi-layered it is?
I completely agree.
And we were just talking earlier how my pet peeve is the amount of white people that write about China without having ever gone or lived there.
That is hilarious.
And they have a framework by which they analyze China.
They think it's the next Soviet Union.
They think it's the next imperial Germany.
And my real shtick is you've got to, and you probably understand this better than most people,
you've got to understand the culture from the ground up to really understand what the country's about.
And it's a very complicated, diverse history and culture.
It's entirely relevant in this new technological geopolitical age.
But I think you're completely right.
It's one of the hardest countries to get right.
And increasingly so in the last decade because, A, people aren't traveling in the way that they used to,
Western journalists aren't living there. Some were kicked out and see just in general
people have this ideological frameworking and fearmongering about China without really trying to
understand it. Did you see that trip recently where a few US, I don't know if they were senators
or just Congress people went to China. It was their first time, which also shocked me, by the way.
It shocked you that Americans left America. Don't do that.
They have a passport. Don't do that, bruh. You. You.
Both of you don't do that.
Don't do that.
Hey.
I'm, I had a bento box for lunch.
I don't know what that means.
That's how close I am.
To another country.
You, you, you,
you had a Korean,
of the Farahis.
You had a Korean meal and now you're close to China.
You're part of the problem, buddy.
No, I was shocked that lawmakers
could go to China for the first time.
And I mean, like, deep into their tenure,
like deep, deep, these people have been serving in Congress forever.
This was their first trip to China.
And then while they were there, they were just mesmerized by everything.
And they came back saying, yeah, well, I mean, China wasn't, I didn't expect it.
And I couldn't believe what they're doing out there.
And, you know, I mean, there's a lot of things.
I've got a new perspective on China.
And then I was like, wait, wait, wait, wait.
I understand if an idiot like me is living at home and has an opinion on China.
That's fine.
It's not great, but it's fine.
If you are making laws and you're deciding policies between yourself and China,
and you know nothing about China.
Like, what are we doing?
Do you know?
Yeah, 100%.
I love that imagery of Mark Rubio,
the Secretary of State,
marvelling at the ceiling as he goes into Beijing
during the Trump Xi summit.
But that really sums it up.
I think since COVID,
people haven't really been traveling to China in the same way.
Now that's changed in the last year or two
because there's now visa-free travel policies
and now it's trending China-maxing to go to China.
Do that really happen to?
because of I show speed.
I think, yeah, I think he was, he's a huge star, by the way, in China, and I love that.
That's insane that that happened.
But he's not the only one.
There's a ton of American vloggers.
You can see this across YouTube, who in the last 18 months have been going to China, getting huge views, just showing, because China compared to Japan is a way cheaper, and it's one of those underdog tourism destinations.
It's been so developed since COVID, the internal domestic tourism industry, the logistics, the transport.
So when people go there, they're so shocked that China's not the China of the 2010s.
You know, remember the Beijing Olympics and people were talking about pollution and it was still.
There was so much smog that people were saying they were afraid that the athletes wouldn't be able to run.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's changed a huge amount even the last 10 years.
But to add to your point, Trevor, my problem is that they, A, don't go there.
And B, they don't really do the hard work of trying to understand.
both the intentions and capabilities of the Chinese government and the people will give you a really
good example. So the semiconductor policy that the Trump administration and the Biden administration
put in, they thought it would be very, very easy to just cut off the hardware side of the
AI development, meaning of the chips, and that China would be behind. China would have no hope
of ever catching up. Fast forward a decade, and China's only a couple months lagging behind
the frontier models in America.
Huawei just announced that in the next couple of years
it will do under two nanometer chip production,
which is as competitive as TSM.
That, I think, is so different from what people would have expected
because they're not going to China.
They're not understanding that what's actually happening
at the government level,
but also in the companies, the companies like Huawei,
like Smic, which is another chip company,
Alibaba, bite dance.
They're hugely,
innovative companies, not just the kind of imitative China that we so used to.
Well, I think it's because people keep an idea of a place or a people as they first
learned of them.
And I think we're all guilty of this in some way, shape, or form.
Like in South Africa, one of the main things people would think about when they think
about China is fake goods.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Fong Kong.
Hey, aye.
I'm a Fong Kong.
No, no, no.
I would have thought.
What would you have thought?
Bruce Lee.
I mean, fine.
Carry on.
No, but I'm serious.
You're not wrong.
It was Kung Fu movies.
It was Kung Fu movies.
Drunken Master.
Yeah, Drunken Master.
Jackie Chan.
Jackie Chan, of course.
Jackie Chan came later though.
But yeah, but I mean, for us it was.
Bruce Lee and then Jackie Chan and then, yeah, all of it.
I mean, this was like our world.
Yes.
Then later on.
Yeah.
Then it became fake goods.
Yeah.
And not even like a negative word.
It was just like they're just the best at making fake goods.
Yeah.
But I think a lot of the world sort of stopped there.
And they were like, oh, China, the place that makes.
things, cheap things, toys and fake goods.
And that's where China's identity stopped.
And to your point, it feels like either just in silence or when nobody was paying
attention, China just leapfrogged.
I was watching a video.
I was telling you about this.
I was watching a video about some guy who lives in Shenzhen.
And this is a white American guy who grew up in Colorado.
And he lived in like a small town.
and he's just, he's not even like showing off the place.
He's just like, hey, I just want to show you guys like how I live and my vibe out here.
And the technology that he's showing, the lifestyle, the cost of living.
Yeah, the cost of living, the style of living, like how people are.
And he doesn't, he doesn't like flower over things.
He's like, oh, certain things are really strict.
And then he's like other things.
People are riding scooters, like mopeds wherever they want.
So he's being, from what I could see, relatively honest about his experience.
but I won't lie.
Even watching that, I was like, oh man, I didn't know that about China,
and I didn't know that about China, and I didn't know that about China,
and I didn't know that about China.
And I was just like, have we been living in like a dark ages of China information?
I like the way you said that.
I think so.
But it's starting to change.
Having you noticed on your TikTok Instagram feed, there's a lot of discussion about,
I'm living in a very Chinese time in my life, China maxing.
People are drinking warm beverages.
Yeah.
China is living in 2030?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a big one.
You know, that it's safe and clean.
It's starting to pivot.
And what's interesting in some of the polling data that came out from Pew,
is that in particular, on both sides of aisle, Dems and Republicans,
Gen Z are way more favorable than the boomers.
That makes sense.
But that's starting to change in the sense that they are getting over time more favorable
towards China.
That's pretty interesting to me.
I don't know how much of that is social media content driven by the stuff you see on YouTube,
Instagram, TikTok.
But certainly I feel like in particular in the last year or two,
we've had a change in an opinion just at the popular level about China.
And that's across the board in Europe too.
China's unfavorable readings were really high during COVID
because obviously a lot of people blame China for it.
China seemed to be screwing up the process, the response to COVID.
But since then, it's rebounded remarkably in terms of favorability.
Yeah, you know, that is probably the strangest thing.
about China. Like when I try and read about it and try and understand it, on the one hand,
it seems like China runs, you know, the way the Chinese government runs the country is really
structured and rigid. That's how it feels for me when I see it. I'm like, okay, they have an idea
of where they're trying to go. It's multi-generational. It isn't constrained by the next election or
democracy or like a thing that's going to like throw it off course. There's no, no, no, this is our
long-term plan, it's going to last longer than we're even alive, and this is where we're trying
to get to.
But it seems very rigid.
It's like strict parents.
That's how I feel like.
I feel like China's government is like strict parents.
But then at the same time, I'll see things that China's doing where I'm like, that seems
fun and rock and roll and it doesn't match up with the idea that I have of a homogenous, like,
strict parent, if that makes sense.
And I don't know.
How should we be thinking of China?
Like which China is the real one?
Is it the place where everyone's building every.
everything and they're moving forward and, you know, there's just like a boom happening in terms
of manufacturing, et cetera, et cetera, or is it the China that has like the strict government
that defines how people live their lives every day?
Yeah, it's honestly a copan answer, but both.
This is going to sound very wonky.
There was a great paper by a Chinese economist over a decade ago in which he has a framework
that China is a regionally distributed authoritarian regime.
And what he means by that is that, yes, you have the central government, which historically
in China has been the emperor.
There's a phrase in Chinese, which is the mountains are high, but the emperor is far away.
And that suggests...
Wait, say that again, the mountains are high?
The mountains are high, but the emperor is far away.
I'd love that on my bio.
The mountains are high.
And the emperor's far away.
And what it means by that is, yes, you have central command.
And the emperor, or in this case, the central government says, you should do this.
These are the targets for semiconductor output.
Yeah.
This is what growth we want.
But local governments have a degree of latitude to interpret what that means.
and at the same time they are so experimenting.
So China from the 80s onwards had, as you probably know, these special economic zones,
in particular the eastern provinces like Shanghai, Shenzhen.
They are experimenting with innovating, being pro-business,
bringing more private market entrance into the economy.
And that was really the responsible driver for growth in China.
That cannot exist without a central government
that is willing to give a degree of latitude to the local government.
So yes, China is like a strict Asian parent,
and I know this from my own personal experience,
but there's a degree of...
You have Asian parents?
I do have Asian parents.
You see, my friend Eugene here...
We can trauma bond if you are.
Eugene doesn't see color.
That's what I love about Eugene.
Eugene doesn't say, yes, Ellis is Asian, Eugene.
And so, uh, because also I was raised by my TV and it was a Sony.
So we have a lot in culture.
Japanese parents.
Asian parents.
Yeah.
But yeah, so it's, it's, and this is my thing with a lot of Western analysis.
It has a very formulaic, and sometimes ideological approach to China, which is, oh, it's
communist.
It's Marxist-Leninist.
You see this in the language.
This is what they say.
Yeah.
But really, you know, this.
So much to your point, innovation and chaos and diversity.
Even, you know, the number of ethnic groups in China, the different cuisines, the different
dress codes.
People in Shanghai behave very differently from people in Yunnan, which tends to be a more hippie
kind of area where people wearing, you know, a lot of linen and drinking tea and eating mushrooms.
And not drug mushrooms, but actual mushrooms.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's the most biodiverse place in the world for mushrooms.
Wait, really?
How can you explain to that?
It literally means south of the clouds.
It's Yunnan.
And it's borders...
Y-U-N-N-A-N-A-N.
And it borders Vietnam, Cambodia.
It has a lot of...
And it's a totally different vibe.
It's a lot of densest amount of minority groups in China, including Muslims.
So I think people have this kind of idea that China is very homogenous.
And yes, most people look like me and they have the dark hair and this kind of skin color.
Right.
But people have, you know, come from different religious backgrounds.
they practice different traditions,
they eat different foods.
It's interesting because when you talk about China,
or when I read about China,
because I'm consuming Western media,
the criticisms of China will always be,
yeah, China seems to be doing well,
and yes, they've built a lot of cities,
and yes, they've built a lot of infrastructure,
and yes, they're doing really well in technology,
and yes, they basically run the world's manufacturing.
Yes, yes, yes,
But remember, there are still parts of China that are experiencing a lot of poverty and people are not moving out of the middle class and there's no boom, et cetera.
Then what I find myself struggling with is I go, it's just interesting to me that that framing is used to label China's entire system as a failure.
But the same thing is not levied in Western countries, especially in America.
So they'll go, the US, you'll be like, yeah, but people live here paycheck to paycheck.
most people are one paycheck away from poverty.
Like it's like the number,
like the percentage of people in the US,
one paycheck away from poverty,
people who cannot afford their standard of living,
even with a full-time job,
is like one of the highest.
But then people here will make it seem like when the media writes about it,
they'll make it seem like people have failed.
They don't make it seem like the system has failed.
So they go like, yeah, well, I guess, you know,
some people, I guess have chosen the wrong jobs
or I guess they've got the wrong degree or they've got the...
So I want to know how China views its problems and like where where does it diverge from the way the West portrays China's issues or problems?
Well, the West, insofar as I understand, portrays it a lot as, you know, this is the problem of authoritarianism.
It's a massive struggle between democracy and authoritarian regimes.
They still see that little red book.
Yeah, exactly. They have this kind of Maoist Marxist-Lendous framework.
Whereas in China, they're thinking about structural issues.
So what I have called the four Ds are the real problems in China that policymakers understand.
Okay.
And those four Ds are number one debt.
You've got debt north of 300% of GDP.
That's just a little bit lower than Japan, but that's a huge amount of debt more than the U.S.
Okay.
Why does that matter?
It matters because it crowds out investment in more efficient areas of the economy, and it crowds out domestic demand, which is the second D.
consumption has really underwhelmed and actually is
underwhelming relative to pre-COVID trend because household
savings rates have gone up. Households are less, you know,
spent, you know, less keen to spend like Americans, for instance.
Interesting.
There's no sort of tradition of using credit cards.
People are more conservative when it comes to, you know,
spending durable goods, for instance.
And that has obviously got knock on effects for the rest of the world
because it means that if China wants to keep growing at 5%
of GDP, then it needs to export even more to the rest of the world to maintain that growth.
So it's the other side of this demand and debt problem.
So if China's population is not bearing the brunt because it's not spending as much,
it's not creating as much for China's economy, then China has to get that spending outside
of China.
Exactly.
And the strength of the American economy is that it is consumption and services based.
You guys spend so much.
Not you guys.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
Whoa.
you.
So the policymakers, they want to get to some version of America where they want to be more consumer
services led.
But they're not willing to see, you know, a massive slowdown in growth, meaning, you know,
winding down exports in order to achieve that rebalancing in the economy to be more like
the American model.
So it's a very difficult balancing act for the policymakers.
And then the third one is one of the, I think, most challenging is.
issues is aging population
demography, the third D's demography,
the fact that now we
have the lowest birth
rate since 1949, since
record on record, since the communists
came to power. Wow. I think you
moving back home will be good.
The fertility.
A nice young man,
settle down. Leave the 40s
alone.
I didn't know
this is going to be this kind of podcast.
Oh, no.
Too many tech bros that are talking about pro-natalist policies.
Speaking of, there is this one guy in China who's fascinating, just a side-note.
This whole entire podcast is a side note.
It's a side note.
Yes, feel free.
Good.
So there's a demography professor who is also the chairman and founder of Sea Trip, which is China's big trip booking platform.
Okay.
And he is now paying his employees $50,000 per baby.
because you're so worried about the demographic issue in China.
You know, China's, you know, replacement rate is now about one,
meaning that the population is shrinking.
Right.
By 2040, 1 and 3 people will be above 60.
Just think about 40.
Because Germany, Germany is currently like 1.4.
It's slightly higher than China.
Yeah.
And then like Japan is low.
Japan and Korea below one.
Yeah.
Yeah, so Japan is not replacing people.
It's not replacing people.
So China is at one.
at about close to one, exactly.
And that's a huge implication for growth,
because if you have an increasing number of the economy above 60,
one and three by 2040,
then who's going to pay for the healthcare?
Yeah, exactly.
And who's going to drive productivity
when you have ever-shinking labor force
and ever-shinking youth population?
So that's the demographic challenge.
And they're trying to subsidize it by giving people more money,
need to have babies, but women, this is the thing that's understated, I think, in Western
media.
And this is why it's actually, if you watch, um, videos on Chinese TikTok, there's a lot of
is that waybo.
It's, it's doying, like doying and shaw hongshu, which is red note.
That last part?
Shia hong shu.
Yeah.
Shia hushu.
Yeah.
Because sometimes I feel like you like, you are shaw hushu.
Shau.
I can roll, I can roll like that.
Thank you, Eugene.
Thank you.
Oh my god, you have such a good accent.
Oh.
Yeah, no, seriously.
Seriously, you could go on to Chinese TV.
Okay.
Oh, damn.
Damn.
Oh, Eugene.
Excuse me.
A wise man once said, compliments are best when they are shared with others.
So please, Alice, please carry on.
Carry on.
What was I say?
It was demography.
Yeah, you're talking about demography.
And you're talking about Chinese TikTok.
Oh, okay.
Oh, so girl bossing is a, it's a huge trend on Chinese TikTok.
Okay.
So women telling other women don't go and get married and have kids.
Find a younger man and just enjoy your life and focus in your career.
Really?
You know, you know, this is the funny thing about like the world.
You know, you're going to make sight.
No, it is.
You know why.
Second system effects.
You know, I love them.
Yeah.
The concept that we never know what the effect of something will be,
the second effect of something will be.
Okay.
So we know that we're going to make a,
computer, we don't know that the computer will lead to the internet. We know that we'll have the
internet. We don't know that the internet will lead to e-commerce. We don't know, we don't know, we don't.
You can do anything in life, but you don't know what the second system effect will be. You can't
always predict it. One of the things I think we've taken for granted with choice in general
for men and women, contraception, all of these things that we've come up in society is people now
can choose whether or not they want to have kids. And we're basically living in like the
first sort of generation where that that's a possibility.
If you think about like the last maybe 100 years, maybe even less, it's the first time where
people can like choose how they want to live their lives before life just happened to you.
And now if people choose how they live their lives, it might not go well is what we are
learning.
But we don't know how it's going to end.
Do you know what I mean?
Thank you.
Thank you.
What?
How do you say, how do you say like I get it?
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
So, but
you are part of the problem.
Yeah.
Or you could say that the men may be a problem.
Take some ownership.
You're at your prime.
You're doing this incredible work.
Eugene was sent here by your parents,
by the way.
The thought of settling down you are now,
where are we at with it?
Because I'm sure if they see someone
who's in your position doing what you're doing,
doing it, you can influence some people into having kids for $50,000.
You mean be an Asian tried wife?
Well.
The Asian version of secret life for women's.
But why is it not fashionable anymore for young women who are successful and professional in China
to aspire to having a partner and having children?
There's a couple of reasons.
You see this as a global phenomenon.
Once you get to a certain degree of, you know, per capita GDP or economic outcomes in a
country, and that translates to education outcomes for women. They decide that the trade-off of having
babies versus incremental growth in the career becomes, you know, not an attractive prospect,
so they focus in their career as opposed to having more babies. But in the China context,
I have the hypothesis, which is that you, the one child policy, back to your point about
unintended consequences, meant that you had, for the first time in Chinese history, because China
it is a country, I'm sure you guys are familiar with this concept of having many children
is a fortuitous thing, especially boys.
Doz or four, which is a Chinese expression.
The more boys you have, the more lucky the family is.
Yes.
They change that with the one-child policy, which is government intervention.
And then I think, I don't think of any other country in history where you have mass
concentration of parental time, energy, and resources on one kid.
And if that's a girl, then you were expecting that girl to go out and conquer and, you know, get a PhD, run companies doing incredible things.
She's incentivized.
Yeah, she's incentivized to be successful financially.
Yes, she's the one child.
All resources are pooled towards her, as opposed to a brother, you know.
That's something we take for granted as well is when we live in a world where everything has become hyper-competitive, getting into a school, getting a job, etc., etc., etc., etc., it may.
it means that it's safer for you
to put all your resources into one child
than to disperse your resources amongst many
because if you have one child you can afford their tutor
you can afford their extracurricular activities
you can afford their piano lessons you can afford
but if you have many children
you now risk having a wonderful Brady bunch
who just like plays with toys and has fun
but they may not be elites
you can't afford to make them all elites
I mean I see it happening in South Africa
and if you look at
mostly female users of TikTok
and Instagram and not
Twitter that much,
in South Africa is it's usually
professional women
in their late 20s or early 30s
who do not have children.
Yeah.
Who are maybe on weekends are running,
doing some cooking content and decorating.
And you think to yourself,
this was a generation that was raised
by two parents working government job
or maybe sometimes even in retail
in the township.
And they mostly are the first generation
to leave the township,
be in the suburbs,
become an accountant, a doctor.
But it's so rare
that they use five times
of what their parents
used to earn combined
to just facilitate
the lifestyle of hobbies.
Oh, interesting.
So I usually do this experiment.
When my daughter was younger,
I would look at race.
I would go, Afrikaans people
versus black people.
So black people in a private school,
you'd see them driving one child
in a fancy car.
Afrikaans people, African's women,
would drive four kids in a crappier car.
So they would spend most of their money
educating the kids that they have.
And then the black people on the other end,
you would see spending most of their money
in a lifestyle for one child.
So we're seeing that happening over and over again.
There's more single affluent black women
than they are in the other way around.
And it's becoming more and more trendy
for people to climb the corporate ladder
instead of prioritizing families.
And I find it weird in our country
because I'm like,
us in our early 40s
we are products of those
women. Yeah, we are. Who were earning
very little but managed to have
more than one child that went to a
public school and managed to
find their way in the world. And I'm thinking to myself,
where did it all go wrong?
Actually, what is the breakdown
while we're still talking about demographics in China?
We're seeing this trend around the world.
Is it the same in China where
the men are now becoming less favored
in the workplace or are finding themselves
in a hyper-competitive world
where they're actually like losing a bit of the race.
Is that also seen in China?
Or is it different?
Not to the same degree
and it's not talked about as much as it is in the West.
Okay.
I know there is a right wing in-cell movement that is anti-women.
you know, consternation, especially amongst men, that they can't find women.
Because one of the other unintended consequences, although you could have easily predicted this
based on human nature, is we've got a massive skewed towards the male population as opposed
to female. So they're way more men in my generation in China than there are women.
Because of the one child policy.
Because the one child policy. And people favored, they would rather have one son rather than
the daughter. And as a result, dating is just really tough. The
The barrier to entry to date as a Chinese man historically and still is present today is you've got to have your own apartment, your own car, a really stable job.
And that's really, really tough.
And that's why we were talking about this earlier.
There's been a trend on social media in terms of vloggers, but it's been happening really since Russia, Ukraine, of Chinese men going out and finding Ukrainian women and bringing them back to China.
No ways.
And the Ukrainian women have really popular.
popular vlog saying how great China is compared to Russia or Ukraine and how great Chinese men are compared to Russian men because they're responsible financially. They take care of the kids. They take care of their women. It's so fascinating. One last data point. I was in Shanghai a couple weeks ago. And in Tomorrow Square, which is right in the central of Shanghai, there are now these matchmakers that just sit out there. And I literally saw hundreds of them in the square.
In the park, I've seen this.
Yes, with posters of their children.
I like this.
I've seen this.
Yeah.
But not even a picture of them.
It's just that.
Just the data.
The data.
Wait, so I saw this and I thought like.
It's like they're bartering.
The people are like.
Yeah.
Someone comes in and goes, I've got it.
Yeah, I've got this guy.
It's sort of like an auction as well, right?
Like people are like, I'll pay you this for this.
No, I'll give you this much.
I'll give you this much.
I'll give you this much.
And it's like a whole, I didn't know there was a real thing.
But now you made me realize maybe maybe the solution to the world's
problems is we just need to figure out yes that but also we just need to figure out where
everybody's polar opposite answer lies in arranged marriages maybe but what I mean is this
who would have thought the perfect companion for Ukrainian women was Chinese men yeah that's what
I'm saying all along so I'm saying wherever you are out there you are a Chinese man or
whatever you are, you are a Ukrainian woman or whatever you are, and you might be struggling in
your market, as you say, little do you know, there's a market out there that is pining for you
and is more perfect for you.
What a business opportunity.
Do you get what I'm saying?
Yeah, 100%.
We could start this, the three of us.
Where would South Africans go?
Would you pair with that way?
I leave those ones.
They're done enough.
What we need to focus on is that.
The aunt in the park auction.
No, but you know, you know, what's actually funny is I actually think South Africans are lucky in this regard because we have such a melting pot.
So if you look at South Africans now, I would argue our generation, more than our parents' generation, has intermingled.
So like our parents' generation was more likely to be your mother was Tossa, your father was Tossa, your mother.
And there were a few outliers here and there.
But I think over the years, it's become more common for people to cross-pollinate and say, oh, I like those men from that culture because they're actually more.
more like this. And I like those women from that culture because they're more like that.
And so people will find themselves, you know, Zulu, Tzara, Zonga, whatever. They just find
themselves mixing in a different way.
This weird phenomenon that happened when apartheid ended and the world opened up a little bit
is when South African white men started traveling to Eastern Europe, like Bosnia and
Cheshire, yeah, after the war. And then there would be in hotels and then this hot blonde would
just come in and they were like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, you work here?
And the person would be like, yeah, that's what I do.
Yeah, they didn't know that was a thing.
You were coming home with me.
Yeah, they didn't know there was a thing at all.
And then they would be now, most of them are the owners of these B&Bs and these fancy neighborhoods that obviously got gentrified and acquired so much value.
And when you ask most of them where they came from, they're like, I met my husband on a business trip when South Africa opened up and they were like, I appreciate all of what you're doing.
You work hard, but a woman from here would have never seen your value.
But I think that's what's happening now in China, right?
When Chinese men go out there, they're like, yo, you don't know how hot I am in Ukraine.
I'm Cheje all day long.
Good for them.
I love that, actually.
We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break.
How easy is it to move to China?
Because from what I've read, China's not necessarily like an immigration country.
No, no.
But I think Japan is less of it.
Well, Japan's starting to change now.
When I was in Japan, sorry to cut you of, when I was in Japan, there were newspaper articles.
It was interesting because our tour guide was translating it for us.
But there were whole...
You made your tour guide translate newspaper articles.
We didn't make.
Please.
I didn't make anyone do anything, Eugene.
He has the tour guide was, I was just saying, what's in the news today?
And then he was telling me some of the stories.
And then he said, not much.
No, and he said, no, really.
What's in the news today?
Yeah, I was just asking, because I'm curious, I wanted to know what's happening in Tokyo while we're there.
Right.
And one of the big stories in the newspaper was a continuing discussion where they would,
essentially the headline was
should Japanese people be less xenophobic
because they're fully
like we don't want anyone who's not Japanese here
don't bring them into our country
we're not mixing cultures we're not
but then the article's like
it was weird because the article was basically like
we agree we shouldn't let anyone in
but it's not working
but we agree we shouldn't let anyone in
but what are we going to do about this
should we maybe bring
maybe we should start bringing people in who want to learn Japanese and want to learn Japanese culture
and they want to become Japanese. Maybe we start with them. And then we were out having sushi
at a, you know, those tiny, tiny, tiny little place like beautiful sushi places can only see six.
And I was there with a Japanese man and his wife who would offer to take me with them.
Wait. And while we were there, wait. Wait. Wait, what?
You were there in a six-seater Japanese restaurant in Japan.
It's just a restaurant. It's not a Japanese restaurant.
Because you're in Japan.
You're right. Yes.
And this couple wanted to take you out for dinner.
Yes. And where did you meet this couple?
I'd met the husband in San Francisco.
And so he said, if you ever come to Japan, look me up.
You did.
I don't think he meant it, but I looked him up.
And then he was like, wow, you're here.
And I was like, yes, I would love to go and have sushi.
So he took me.
We went to this place.
The chef is making the food.
It's amazing.
Some of the best sushi I've ever had.
And then,
I think they were American.
Yeah, but an American couple walked in,
and then the chef was like, no, we're closed.
And then they were like, oh, and they looked at us,
and we're guilty with our chubsticks.
You know, you're like, mid?
And they're like, we're closed.
And they looked at us like, you can't be closed.
And I was like, yo, I'm not trying to not get the sushi.
I'm not trying to.
I was like, yeah, I mean, whatever's happening here.
They left.
And then the chef said to them, yeah, I don't allow non-
Japanese people into the restaurant.
But it was interesting why.
He said,
because I do not believe that I can provide
the best level of service to people
who do not understand me
and I don't understand them.
And so if I don't speak their language,
this is not going to be the experience it needs to be.
And so I don't allow them in here.
And there were many places like that in Japan.
But then I asked us like,
yeah, but how does that do for business?
And he said, well, we're actually struggling because of that
because there are many sushi spots that are allowing foreigners in
and I can only rely on the locals and we're struggling.
So it's interesting to see how this thing is like all over the world.
Like how much immigration do you allow?
Because without it, you can't replace your population.
Maybe robots.
But I think this is where cultures are really,
cultures are at table robots in a second.
We're definitely not going to forget robots.
Seriously not sex robots in Japan.
Hey, hey, hey.
Why don't you just lead with that?
Geopolitical economics.
Sex robot.
Advocate, Nazo.
Trevor, bring the loop.
We're going to China, my friend.
They produce the most robots in the world.
Okay, so, sorry, guys.
So this is where culture is really important.
So Japan, historically, you know, you had the major restoration,
this closing off of Western influence
because they feel very fearful of that
and very strong and convicted, and they should in their traditions and culture.
But I think if I compare it to China, which is by no means perfect,
China has culturally a more curiosity and open-mindedness towards the West.
This is why it was able to invite a lot of foreign investment in the 80s and 90s,
obviously copycat it, imitate it, and then iterate on it and make it better.
But you also see it at a in terms of an anecdotal level, like I go to a bookstore in China,
and I see Elon Musk and his mother's face everywhere, May Musk.
Like she's a freaking star in China.
Really?
They are obsessed with the family.
But that goes to show you, the reason I cite that,
and apparently he was offered a green card by the then-premia a couple years ago before COVID,
because they just loved him so much in China when he started building the Shanghai Gigafactory.
Right, right.
But that shows you that Chinese culturally have a very pragmatic utilitarian approach to foreigners,
which is like, oh, you're going to bring me money and business.
you could come, I'll serve you.
And oh, by the way, I'm going to try to make it better than you.
Right.
Yeah.
In a couple years' time, I won't need you.
But please come so we can, you know, learn from what you're doing and then build
EVIs, trying to now build 70% of the world's EVU production.
And this is only in the last five years, which is insane that they've really wrapped up
that level of production.
So that was a wait, so I'm just trying to make sure we don't, it was the, so that the,
I think we're on the third D, right?
This is a third D.
And then the fourth D.
I could say really quickly before the fourth D is the robot question.
Yes.
Is whether or not robots can fill up some of the gaps in productivity that will be caused by aging.
We can discuss that later, but that's a huge question.
China is the biggest producer of robots in the world.
80% of robotic installations are made in China.
80%?
80%.
That's bigger than the next four countries combined.
Damn.
So that's really dominating.
And I just heard recently in China that they have over 100,000.
robotics companies in China. That's, again, that misconception people have is that China's not
super competitive. It is a super competitive ecosystem where companies are very cutthroat. They scale
very quickly because there's a huge market. This is 1.4 trillion people compared to the 300 billion
or so in, say, the US. It's like a huge market that they can service. So maybe robots, I'm a little
bit doubtful, but that's another kind of. Okay, we'll table robots. And then fourth D's
destruction, which is the other challenge.
It's related to Taiwan.
Are we going to have in the next couple years a big showdown over Taiwan?
How real is that, though?
Because it feels like that's been on everyone's lips for the longest time.
It's in the same way.
And, you know, not to flatten these topics down, but like in the same way the world
has been warned about Iranian missiles, like for decades.
Iran, Iran's going to make a nuke. Iran's going to make a nuke.
And it's like, here we are decades later.
they still haven't made a nuke, how real is the threat of China invading Taiwan?
Because to me it seems imminent.
But I remember even when I was on the daily show and we were covering it, it felt like it was weeks away.
And then weeks later, it felt like weeks away.
And then it was like, oh, it's been years and it's still weeks away.
And then even now when I read the news, they're like, I think it's happening.
I think it's happening next week.
I think it's happening next week.
I think it's happening next week.
And then I remember watching videos of people who live in Taiwan.
And then they were just like chilled.
Yeah.
But the media that I was consuming in America was going, oh man, it's very stressful.
It's about to happen. It's about to happen.
So like how real is the threat?
I certainly don't think it's real in the next two years.
There's a lot of internal politics that I can get into in just a bit in China.
Two years, though.
In the next two years, I think it's highly unlikely.
Okay.
But fast forward 10 years or more, I think the probabilities go up, mainly because, you know, the
Chinese will start to have superiority.
in terms of the military balance of power.
Okay.
Especially if the US doesn't do more to really invest in military defense capabilities.
And certainly you've seen in the last couple of years that the spending on debt has outpaced
the spending on the military.
This is a law in history coined by my boss, Neil Ferguson called Ferguson Law.
So shout out to him, which is that he looked at empires through history.
Yeah.
And whenever an empire was spending more in repaying its debt, its debt interest payment growth was
outpacing how much it was spending on the military,
that was the number one signal,
red signal that they were in decline.
And this happened in the British Empire, the Dutch Empire,
the Spanish Empire.
So you can go back and trace an empire.
As soon as they're paying more on this,
repaying their debt.
Then they are for their military.
They're in decline.
What is the correlation?
Why are they in decline?
Because they are spending more on repaying
how much they owe to their creditors
instead of building up their military capability.
Forgive me, I don't understand why the military is the key signifier.
Like, why the military, why not like they're spending more on their debt versus more on, I don't know, infrastructure and manufacturing?
Why military specifically?
So in historical periods, and it's questionable whether or not it's relevant today, you know, empires were overtaken by other powers through military campaigns.
Okay.
So seeing things like the British win against the Spanish and the Spanish, sorry, the Spanish Amada in 1588.
You know, these military campaigns oftentimes spell a decline in the economic power of a country
because if Britain has more ships and is more powerful than Spain,
and Spain's not able to get more control of the seas and trade goes down.
Not enough, they can't get the same amount of silver from Latin America.
And meanwhile, Britain, because it has more ships out there, it can develop trade routes and control those.
trade routes via the British East India Company, for instance. So there you have the mix of both
the military and the commerce, right? So the question is, is that relevant today? I do think it is,
because ultimately, the Taiwan question is both a political and a military question. The military
question is, will the balance of power shift in the region in Asia Pacific in favor of the Chinese?
Right now, the Americans still have supremacy when it comes to naval equipment,
nuclear submarines, you know, air denial systems as well.
China's massively catching up, though, and the next couple of years may have more PLA ships than the Americans.
But also related to that, America has more operational experience doing combat.
America's been fighting.
It's been fighting. America stays in the gym, bro.
Don't play with America.
It does.
You know what I saw this with Russia, Ukraine.
Russia has just been talking, and then when it came down to it, you're like, ah, ah,
You haven't been, yo, America stays match ready all the time.
You want to go to war?
America's fighting one right now.
Where?
It doesn't matter.
Ready, baby.
Yeah.
But then...
But the two guys we meet in the elevator going down.
Always ready.
But it's like those guys on steroids.
Yeah, yeah.
Because then you question whether or not they have the will to keep fighting.
That's the big problem.
That's why you're single.
You question too much.
That's a problem with the U.S.
Yeah.
I love your brain.
Oh, man, that was so funny else to the world to keep fighting.
It's like wrestling where it's a lot of show.
Yes, yes, yes.
The question is, you know, why did they lose Vietnam?
Because they didn't have the political will to keep fighting.
Oh, that's interesting.
And that's the second domain, which is the politics.
Like, Taiwan is way more important to China than it is to the media and U.S. voter.
Yeah, yeah.
Most Americans don't know what it is or why it's important.
In fact, they can't even separate.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah, because to your point, you even see it like now with Iran,
the appetite that the American, the average American person has for the war in Iran,
first of all, even before it started, they didn't want it.
But people are like, I don't know why we're doing this.
And I don't want us to be doing this, right?
But to your point, they have more leverage in America's politics
than the Chinese media would in China's expansion if they went into China,
into Taiwan.
Taiwan.
Yeah.
That's, oh, that's an interesting way to think about it.
Yeah.
And then she has time, Xi Jinping, the president has time on his side.
He's 72 this year.
He's still a young man.
He's still relatively young.
Still a young man.
Compared to American presidents.
A fresh young lotus.
That's what he is.
Huh?
Living his dream, Xi Jinping.
Are we saying it right when we say Xi Jinping or is it like, is it's, is it backwards?
Is it?
Oh, no, it's right.
Shejing ping.
It is the last name first.
Okay, it is Xi Jinping.
Because I remember when we found out like Shinzo Abe, it was Abe Shinzo and we were saying,
we were basically saying his name backwards the whole time
and then all of a sudden someone was like, no, it's wrong.
No, he's got it right.
Yeah, exactly.
What has made him so successful?
Like, it seems like, again, when you read Western media.
And this is something, by the way, that I think is interesting to your point.
I only realized the other day,
China is one of the few major countries where its news is also
being written in its language.
So if you cannot read Chinese or Mandarin, Cantonese, whichever one is being written in,
you are missing out on a lot of the nuance and the actual reporting and storytelling that's
happening in the cut.
Does that make sense?
So you're just going like, oh, we're looking at numbers, we're looking at data, we're
looking at numbers, but we don't go there physically.
And we also don't read or listen to what the people are actually saying.
That's another thing that I was thinking about.
But again, from what I read, that is in English.
They'll say like Xi Jinping is, he's just leagues ahead of his predecessors and he's got like an iron grip on the country and a focus that no one has ever really had in the modern age at least.
How true is that and why is it that he's being so successful in implementing his vision of what the party is trying to do?
Well, the fastest way to answer that is that he has elements of Mao.
And I don't say there's a form of criticism.
If you look back in history, what Mao understood, and part of the reason why he was successful,
even though he had a wilderness period in the 50s where he was out of the party for a bit,
or he's still in the party, but he was not in the elite party leadership.
He came back because he understood that power lived not in the elite policymakers,
the elite CCP apparatchiks, but in the people.
So he had this concept of the mass line where it's like from the people to the people,
that if you,
If you, and this obviously led to some of the bad parts of history, like the Red Guard,
the Cultural Revolution, because you want to stir up political fervor and nationalism,
he understood that if the people love you and they see you as this charismatic leader,
that's the only thing that matters.
And part of what she has been successful in doing relative to his two previous successes
is to build up this sort of cult of personality.
Yep.
And to build up this nationalist fervor.
He calls it the great Chinese dream.
And he even said it in the summit, that state banquet when Trump was there, that he said,
Make America Great Again can coexist with his own slogan, which is the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.
So he has these very patriotic, jingoistic language, which, you know, to some extent, other authoritarian leaders like Putin and Modi have as well.
But he's been able to leverage that to have a mass of people.
And obviously what's helped him is that he has now this external aggressor, you know, this, you know, in traditional Chinese communist terms, this, this paper tiger or imperialist power, which is America.
Right. Right. Okay.
And only a strong man like she who has the will of the people who can see the future. He calls himself the great helmsman. He can he can help course, chart the course in these very choppy, difficult geopolitical waters.
And then the last bit, which I think has made him successful, is that like Deng Xiaoping, he understands politics, the game of politics.
And he has been leading these anti-corruption campaigns and promoting his own people in order to again consolidate his power through all arms, whether it's not just the party, it's also the PLA, it's the intelligence system.
it's really all levels of the party.
He has been raising a lot of loyalists,
and that again consolidates his power within the party.
So in some respects, he's a combination of both leaders,
but I think he's been very successful
in building himself up ultimately as a charismatic leader.
Do you do...
I mean, I wouldn't say do they see it, because I guess they do.
But like, it feels like America is withdrawing from the world,
and in that withdrawal, it feels like China is filling in the void.
So many Americans, I think, sometimes will take for granted that part of the reason America is as powerful as it is and has been as powerful as it has been is primarily because of its soft power.
America didn't go around the world blowing up the world to get the power it had.
It went to Africa with things like USAID.
It helped European governments build themselves up after World War II.
It gave low interest loans.
it really became the benefactor of the world.
It helped with trade.
It inspired people.
Yeah, it was really the sugar daddy of the world.
And that made the world like America and aspire to America.
Over the past few years, we've seen America to take a step back and go, hey, America is America.
We don't want anything to do with the rest of the world.
Don't involve us.
And that's that.
And then you see it in Africa.
Like China's gone in and, you know, has built ports and built roads and railways and airports.
and created these interesting agreements
where the Chinese will never lose in the deal.
So it's like either they get their money back
or they now own infrastructure in Africa.
We've seen the Chinese reach out to like Brazil
and create new deals that never existed
for like soy exports, etc.
Within China, what do you think they are seeing
with America pulling back
and what do you think they're trying to do?
Like is there a concerted effort to fill the gap
or is it just them?
creating another version of a silk road.
Yeah.
Lots of people talk about policymakers in China as being majority engineers
and the way that is different from the US
where they're majority lawyers.
But the other thing that I think is interesting about policymakers
is that they are very keen historians.
A lot of them read history.
And they have looked at American history and gone,
actually, it's not that great to be everyone's enabler and sugar daddy.
You know, there's just a lot of these commitments that you have to make
on obligations, expectations.
You know, it's far better if, you know, actually we have trade with all these different
countries and we help them build infrastructure that it actually accelerates trades.
They buy more of our products.
Interesting.
And we can have, get more commodities like cobalt and lithium from Africa so that we don't
have any supply chain problems like the Americans and Europeans have had.
So we can really dominate across technologies and supply chains.
That is the thinking, which is let's have more influence globally.
but maybe more preeminence regionally in Asia
where we're looked to within a tributary system
we're looked to as the centre.
But I don't think policymakers have this view
that it's worthwhile or worth their while
to become the next global policeman,
the next sugar daddy,
because they've seen what that means,
you know, costly battles,
increasing deficit spending in the American context.
And they increasingly look at the model in America
and see a lot of problems.
But one last thing I'll say,
I think is underappreciated. So in the 1990s, the G7 countries comprised about 70% of global GDP.
Okay.
Today, the global, today that's only 40% G7 countries. And the global South now represents
about 40% of global GDP and rising, the global South. So countries like South Africa, Brazil,
India, China. And by the popular.
population is 85%, which is crazy.
85% of the world lives in the global south.
And China's big bet is the global south.
Back to the demographic thing.
Yeah, yeah, that's where growth lies.
That is where there's a young labor force.
That's where economies are still growing.
And that's where you have markets that could still grow to buy your goods.
So I don't think that's understood enough in the West,
where we have a very naval gazing approach,
which is like the only game in town is a G7.
It's increasing not true
The balance of power is shifting
Don't press anything
We've got more
What now after this
How do people on the ground feel in China
Because again that's another one of those things
Where if you just like read the media
They'll always make it seem like
Western media makes it seem like
People in China are clamouring to get out
Like clamoring a good time
They're like you thank your lucky stars
That you don't live in China
Because oh
They would dream
to live in a country where there's 600 TV channels and 15 kinds of nut milk.
You don't understand how tough it is.
You don't understand.
By the way, that exists already in China.
That's hilarious.
But that's, yeah.
There's more variety actually in certain foods in China.
It is just so you know.
So what is the average Chinese?
I don't know, you're not speaking for everyone, but like, what is the average Chinese person
experiencing of China and what are they like?
Do you know what I mean?
How are they viewing China?
So there's a good side and the bad side.
The good side is, you know, everyone else is having a worse time.
Look at, they have this narrative, okay, there's just so much crime and guns in America.
Damn.
And racism increasingly.
They don't want people like us, you know.
And, you know, Trump has just put in this new green card policy that makes it hard
of for people to stay while they're getting their green cards.
Oh, yes.
Now you have to go, you have to leave the country.
Which seems like a trap.
Yeah, exactly.
And then, but the flip side of it is, you know,
people do feel like the economy is slowing down.
There's this concept you always hear in the media in the West,
this concept of lying flat, Tang Ping,
which is, you know,
why would you be in the rat race and work super hard
when you can only get so much money
and, you know, deflation is happening in the economy?
And there's not as many jobs, you know,
youth unemployment's still close to 20%.
So young people in China feel a little bit depressed
about the economy and it's heading relative to their parents' generation,
which is in the boom years.
But they still look at the rest in the world and go, well, I'd rather this than unsafe, unstable systems where you don't know if you could have a very right-wing government that comes in or a left-wing government that changes all the policies and trains don't work and run on time.
You know, that's the social contract, which is they'd much rather an efficient, stable, safe system than just to put it very simply, the kinds of democratic liberal freedoms that people in the West.
say, you know, of prime importance.
I mean, yeah, look, a simple example is you look at California has been saying they're going to build a high-speed rail system for more than a decade now.
They still haven't gotten it done.
Hyperloop.
Yeah, not even the Hyperloop was Elon.
Okay.
They were saying they're going to build one, I guess it was going like all the way up to like San Francisco.
So I was supposed to.
And this project was supposed to happen and it's just money and nothing's going on.
And then in the meantime, China has interconnected like all.
of its cities with insanely fast maglev rail that's, but again, is that an accurate, because
I haven't been there? Is this an accurate depiction of it? Yeah, then the gigantic structures in
Chongqing, they just had the world's biggest elevator. It's the longest elevator in the world.
It takes, sorry, escalator, not elevator. Oh, escalator. It takes about 20, 25 minutes to go from
25 minutes on an escalator. You, bra. Imagine you, imagine you drop your bag on that. Have you ever
drop the bag on escalator. Drop your bag. Drop yourself.
You jean.
After 15 minutes, you're like,
Ah, uh, uh,
Eugene, uh, you know,
because the elevator goes up and you go down and you'll go nowhere.
You know, he's falling for so long,
but people have time to process their grief.
Eugene, ah.
I mean, we lived a good life with Eugene, if we're honest.
I mean, it was a good one.
It was, uh, he was a great guy.
It was a, yeah, man.
It was a, 20 minutes on a,
Man
30, right?
No, 20 to 25 minutes
I can't remember the exact
But you should look it up
It goes to the second floor
To the top of the mountain
Oh my God
It really, yeah
It feels like China's just doing
like impossible things most of the time
Like in every
I was reading about BID the other day
Oh maybe this is
Yeah, this is you the perfect person to ask
Why?
Why was I reading about BID?
No, why is she the perfect person to ask?
Because she knows about China
she knows about economics.
And you know none of these things.
Even though I ask you about them every day.
You don't try and learn shit.
Out here telling me about beard oil.
That's a real B.D.
So, beard your dream.
BYD for a long time was considered the laughing stock of car manufacturers.
There's like one video of Elon.
Musk in particular, like laughing in an interview, they go, what about BYD?
And he's like, ha ha ha ha, ha, have you seen their cars?
And then you fast forward a few decades.
And BYD, you see not only do they have one of the most successful cars, one of the best
electric cars, they've got superior battery technology in terms of range, in terms of charging
speed, in terms of like how they use it in the car.
Then you see even the pipeline they've created where they've got their own ships shipping
the cause to Brazil, to Canada,
et cetera, et cetera.
And then I was reading this really interesting story
about how they were saying, oh, it's not going to last.
BID is not going to last like this
because right now they're being subsidized by the government.
And the Chinese government is doing a good job
of propping up many of its industries
to make it seem like they're doing better
than they actually are.
Now, I'm not an economist,
but the first thought that came to my mind was like,
yeah, but many countries subsidized their industries.
So I couldn't really understand what the issue was.
but I wondered if there's any truth to the House of Cardsness in China's economy or if this is being
overblown.
So to unpack that, you can't deny the fact that BYD is now the biggest producer and exporter
of EVs.
It's overtaken Tesla in the last couple months.
And if you've been in one, you understand why it's so appealing.
It's cheaper.
My first one was in Singapore.
It's insane.
It's a great user experience, both as a driver and a passenger.
Yes, there were huge subsidies that had been.
put in place to support the EV sector. That has been part of the ability for the EV sector,
and in particular, B.YD, just scale so quickly. Okay. But they are starting to walk that back.
So in the last couple of months in particular, they're trying to get rid of some of the subsidies,
the export tax rebates. Yeah. They're again, trying to make it a bit more competitive
domestically and globally, because they now understand, hey, the Europeans and Brazilians
don't like the fact that we're, you know, giving them cheap,
We would have thought they would like it because this is great for green technology.
But now they're starting to understand it's not just about green technology and market competition.
It's also about a lot of these countries fearing the flooding of Chinese goods.
And so now you're starting to see them get unwind some of these subsidies for the sector.
But in general, I think the problem is that the subsidies are so large.
This is the subsidies that China puts on, whether it's solar panels,
wind turbines, electric vehicles, batteries, much larger than, say, even the Europeans or other
countries put on to support their sector, that it is no longer seen as fair competition
by a lot of these other countries.
Because China is still acting in the framework of a developing economy, even though
in many respects, because of its technology boom, it's no longer a developing economy.
It uses that as an excuse to have the massive subsidies that it has for the green.
green technology sector.
Okay, got it.
And that's the big, that's the problem that the Europeans and Brussels have, I'll say
the Brazilians or the G7 countries like Canada or Australia have about sort of the flood
of cheap electric vehicles, is that the government has historically done huge amounts of
subsidies to support its local industry.
It's such a fascinating time because China always seems to be looming.
but you never know when the threat will ever be realized
or if it is even a threat
because what, you know,
sometimes people talk about China as if it is waiting to take over the world.
But then whenever I listen to what Chinese politicians will say publicly at least,
they're like, China has no interest in taking over the world.
China's interest is in making China the best in China.
And they'll always say like, we've been around for 5,000 years.
We have no interest in going anywhere.
Look at how big we are.
Our goal is just to make this, the shining beacon in the world.
And it's interesting to see how different those two viewpoints are.
You know, the one viewpoint for most of the West is when a country's that big and that powerful, it's inevitable that it goes out.
And then the Chinese leaders will be like, no, no, no, you go out.
We don't go out.
We are going in and we're trying to extend our tentacles to grow this thing as big as possible.
Where does the truth lie, as you see it?
Historically, it's control the home base.
Yeah.
And now more in the last couple decades, it's about having influence globally.
You know, we talked about commodity supply chains, even to some extent, geopolitics.
But I look to history.
So the last time China, you know, went out to Africa in imperial history was in the Ming Dynasty in the 1500s.
There was this Muslim eunuch captain who was, you know, an amazing figure in Chinese history,
who went out all the way to Africa and brought back a giraffe to the,
the emperor's
court and that was the last time after that
they decided hey why are we going to Africa
it's too expensive we should just focus
on our own you know
great culture and economy
and system and the
other thing that I would say is that
I don't think this is understood enough
historically China has been
controlled
if you go to imperial history
by non-hand people
so the Han Chinese are the majority of the Chinese
you know I think close to
percent of the population. But, you know, if you look at the Qing Empire, which is the last
empire in China, that was the Manchurians, you know, that area that is border as is the Korean
peninsula and northeast China. They are not ethnically the same as the Han people. They were
basically foreigners who invaded and, you know, took over the country and imposed things like
the Q. You know that in Chinese, you've got the shaved head and the long braid. That is not
a Han Chinese. That is a complete Qing Manchurian.
Your hand is still doing the import. And then you also know that the Mongols took over
centuries before that and founded their own dynasty. So China doesn't have that same
historical legacy of going out and wanting to invade other countries and have an empire.
In fact, it has more of a historical experience of other countries wanting to try to take it over.
The British tried obviously and to some extent fail.
in the 1800s, but they did manage to take Hong Kong, for instance.
So it's just a different, it's a different frameworking, a different historical legacy.
But I think in the last two decades, the Chinese understand, and I think this has really been
borne out by the Iran crisis, is that you need to have influence a little bit everywhere.
Like with the Gulfies, with the Africans, with the Russians, you know, have negotiations
and deals everywhere so that if like there's a straight of home use crisis and 50% of hydrocarpins
gets taken off the table for a period of time, then you can find resources to replenish your
stockpiles and import from other places around the world. So that's the way that I look at it is
it's less of an empire and it's more of a network of influence on trade, on geopolitics, on supply
chains. So do you think China's going to look to the robots? Is that a, is that a, is that
a conversation that they're having? Oh yeah, for sure, is that robots are going to help with a demographic
challenge and robots are going to be the next major export. I like EVs and solar panels and batteries
were a decade ago. But help me understand what solutions or what problems the robots are actually
going to be fixing. Because I understand, okay, there's the decline in terms of people's age and their
ability to do things. So I guess robots taking care of people, is that one aspect of it?
Taking care of elderly people. Okay, so robots taking care of elderly people. Yeah. And then you have
more task-specific, you know, robotic installations already happening in factories. So dark
factors that are completely devoid of humans, basically, and it's just machines, robotic machines.
Then you have certain hospitals and pharmaceutical companies that use, again, robotic arms to
pick, you know, pick out somebody's orders or prescriptions.
Oh, okay.
Without a human as well.
That's happening.
And then some really interesting stuff that is more in the brain chip interface that's
happening, both invasively and non-invasively.
So on the non-invasively front, they have this device that sits on the skin that basically
is able to control the brain so that you can control an arm, an robotic arm, an external arm.
So if you have an amputee, there's a company called Brain Coe that's doing it.
If you're an amputee, then your brain is able to, it's able to pick up an electric
signals from your brain, this chip device that sits on the skin.
And then and then move your fingers and infer intention.
And there's another one that's more invasive, which is a chip into bed and into the brain.
Right.
That is helping people who have spine injuries can't walk to walk again.
That's more in the kind of blended environment, not purely robotics.
But I suspect that we're going to see, you know, not just the humanoid robots that Elon wants to see,
but different, you know, task-specific robotic installations, you know, the stuff that I mentioned that, you know, the arms that are picking up orders.
Right, right, right, just doing one specific task and just moving forward with that.
Yeah, so for instance, I was just in Beijing.
I don't know if you guys have it here, Heidi Lau, which is the hot pot.
It's the Chinese hot pot chain.
No, I don't know how do you like.
Okay.
I highly recommend it if you guys go
really great hot pot chain
the most successful hot pot chain in the world
and run by a Chinese woman as well
so it's a great story
asking for a friend
she's not being too old for you
I can eat
Eugene this is not your Ukraine
Relax Ukraine
Relax Ukraine
Ukraine
is they have these robots that are picking up on people's
orders. So whatever, they know exactly what people's orders are, and then they will put it on a tray and deliver
it. And then I was just touring Alibaba last year, and they have this sort of logistics wing of their
company, because they started off as e-commerce, where the robot is already able to sense the optimal,
and I wish I had the skill, the optimal way to arrange packing so that you use the least amount of
paper, you use the least amount of product. So like the robot is already figured out, the
machine and then the robot have figured out, how do I, like, kind of like, um.
So you can optimize your wastage, minimize wastage essentially.
Exactly.
Because they can like 3D optimize space and figure out, okay, so this is how I put it all.
And this is the smallest box that I can use for, for this order.
So you see, everything you're saying there is what's terrifying most people around the world
because they go, I work in a factory.
I should be doing boxes.
And I work in a pharmacy where I get people's medication.
and I work in a, you know, logistics company and I and I and I and I.
And in America, what they're being told is, well, look, we'll figure it out in the future.
And the truth is, the robots are taking your jobs, and AI is taking your job, and there's nothing you can do about it.
But hey, man, we'll figure it out.
Let's do it and we'll figure it out.
The other day, I read an article where they said the Chinese government put forward a law saying that companies cannot fire people only to replace them with AI.
which again, now you want to talk about like the, the perspectives that people have or perceptions that they have of other.
I saw many Americans, British people who are going like, oh my God, yeah, why is the Chinese government doing this for its people?
But our governments, you can do this.
You can just make a law.
And the Chinese government is just like, yeah, you cannot replace people.
You cannot fire them just because of AI.
Yeah, because they know that they're going to be dead in 30 years anyway.
Yeah, but what I'm saying is, though, like, they're not trying to depress them while they're going up at 20.
five minutes escalator
to the grave
beyond.
It would be crazy
if the escalator just went to heaven
and then you get there and you're like
ah
robots everywhere.
The escalator is like
I am the robot
I took you there.
Yeah but but you see like
is that again to me
seems like
it seems like
the Chinese government again
pragmatically
looking at a situation saying
on the one hand we have to modernize
but on the other hand if the people
are completely left behind then this thing
falls apart. Is that like how they think
about everything? Is that even how they think about
this situation? Exactly and there were
two court rulings which you're
referencing in the last year or so
one in Beijing and one in Hongzhou in which
the court ruled on both the accounts it was
illegal to fire someone on the basis of
AI. You're right. And
China in the last couple years
has been at the forefront of AI regulation
in terms of data protection,
but also in terms of deep fake technologies
where I don't think we're getting enough attention.
Like, you can't just copy somebody else's voice
or use somebody else's image and impersonate them
and monetize off of that.
There's regulations against that.
And I don't know if that's the case in the US as of yet.
There's a few states that have imposed a few laws,
but obviously they apply to pornography and then other ones,
but it's not like a,
a federal thing yet. Yeah. So the Chinese government look at technology with a kind of, I would say,
more balanced approach, but also they have the power to do that in the way that, as I understand
that in America, they don't because there's a lot of vested interests. Yeah, there's lobbying.
Yeah. Is that a lot of thing in China? No, if you lobby the government, if you're lobbying
an official, that official will probably be ousted for anti-corruption.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's because in most of the world, what we call, they call lobbying in America,
we call it bribery. Yeah. Here it's legal. You can lobby people with gifts and trips and everything,
and that's just normal. And it's so funny, because when I was growing up, I always used to think
Africa was the most corrupt continent, because that's what we were told. Yeah.
There'd be like Africa, corruptor. So much corruption, so much corruption. And then when I moved to America,
I was like, oh, yes, you are right.
There is way more corruption in Africa
because we didn't think of calling it lobbying.
You are completely correct.
You got us on that one.
You've got us.
You know how you get rid of crime?
You just stop saying it's a crime.
That's the number one way to get rid of crime.
You just say it's not a crime.
And then now your crime has gone down.
I'm more interested in the future use of robots
to fill in the gaps.
We've spoken about industry.
We've spoken about how they can be useful in healthcare.
When one shoulder of Eugene goes up, it means sex is on his mind.
That's a tip I'll teach you about my friend.
As soon as one shoulder goes up like this, he's like, oh, yeah, Eugene is stepping into the romantic sphere.
Oh, yeah, here's Eugene.
Sorry, my friend.
Maybe I was wrong.
Please, ask your question.
Ask your question, Eugene.
Let me not, let me not.
Let me not tarnish you.
You know what Trevor's like?
He's like, that friend at the bar, you're talking to a girl and he's like, oh, your wife tried to call you.
He's the opposite of a wingman, the opposite.
He's a tumor man.
He's a little...
You're going to...
Oh, shit.
You're going to tell us about relationship robots.
Is that a big?
It's not big.
Japan is more big, right?
Yeah, Japan is a big.
It's also AI boyfriends.
Companions, yeah.
The AI companions is a big thing.
It's happening in China.
So this is another thing that's stopping women from both sides, but women in particular,
because now they have these amazing AI, thoughtful AI boyfriends.
Damn it.
We're being replaced.
Yeah, replaced by AI boyfriends that would check in with you and know exactly what to say
and make you feel good about yourself.
That's already happening in China.
You know what, I will say this.
We are quick to say that it's a bad thing.
But maybe this is the future that we should be living in,
a world where everyone has their AI perfect partner.
And then in order...
Men don't want an AI perfect partner.
You speak for yourself.
And then all we do is we'll just create like sperm banks and like embryo banks.
And then people can just have kids,
but your AI perfect partner is just there with you.
Men don't want an AI perfect partner.
Why don't men want an AI perfect partner?
You think we want to talk some more?
You think that's what we want.
want to be doing. Yeah, but your AI partner won't make you talk more. Because it's a perfect
partner. It'll do whatever you wanted to do. Then it's not a partner. No, it will be the partner
you wanted to be. Picture your perfect partner. That's how the AI will be. Yeah, but men want
companionship, not partnership. It will also be. Partnership means we have an equal say in what we're
doing, in what we're thinking, what we're not doing. It can be that as well. A companionship means
there's something or someone next to you. So, I'm glad you said there's something because Alice and I
will like to introduce you to a little robot
that we call companion bot
we'll be shipping it to your house
Eugene and it's got a great
host of features. It's got a soft outer shell.
One. Right? It's got all the knowledge
of you that you need. Two.
And most importantly, it knows how to read your shoulder
cues.
Let me ask you a question.
I'm gone.
Because, you know, I realize this when talking to an expert like yourself,
sometimes we don't know what questions we should be asking
because we don't have the expertise to know what the questions are.
What are the questions you think people should be asking about China that they're not asking?
I love that question.
I think that people should do that more in general.
I would say, especially in the AI realm, talent flows really matter.
and I don't think people, because they're in such a haste to focus, this is my other pet peeve on compute.
You know, everyone's saying, oh, US compute is the biggest in the world.
We have an advantage and the frontier models.
But at the end of the day, what really matters is having top tier AI talent.
And the fact that the plurality, and actually in some respects, the majority of top tier AI talent is Chinese nationals in the US is astounding.
So 39% of top.
tier AI talent in Silicon Valley is Chinese nationals. They're not even American-born Chinese.
There's Chinese nationals and 38% American-born engineers and then there's the rest of the world.
So if you think about that alone, and then you couple that with the fact that China has 40% of
graduates every year in STEM, as opposed to in the US, it's 20% of graduates every year is in STEM.
Five million of STEM graduates graduate almost every year in China and enter the workforce.
I don't think people understand enough how important that just scale, but also the talent of these top-tier researchers are for AI development, for technological development.
I think that's really understated and does not really capture it in economic models, but super important when we think about innovation in the next frontier.
And what do you think some of the questions are that we're not asking about like China's vision and its demographics and its sort of future plans as a whole beyond the same.
space of AI and technology? So beyond AI and technology, I think the big question is what is going
to happen to, and again, it's tied to youths, is like what is going to happen to the Gen Z in China?
Because the boomers and the millennials kind of really got to write the co-tells of China's economic
rise. And in the next couple of years, I believe there will be upwards to five trillion U.S.
dollars of intergenerational wealth transfer from the boomers to Genzi in China. So that's a lot of
change that is going to be transferred over. And the question is, how are they going to invest it?
What are they going to do with the money? Are they going to decide to work as hard as their
parents? Yeah, it would affect their work ethic? Yeah. You know, are they going to be motivated
to get married or not? You know, how are they going to think about their economic development,
you know, in a slowing China? I think that is the big question. We haven't figured it out yet,
because both narratives of like the youth are checked out and mailing it in,
but also the youth are really hardworking and excited about AI.
Both realities coexist.
And then the big question is which pathway do we take?
Like, will Chinese youths and the industry get super excited about AI
and will China be not just a near peer competitor with the US, but a leader?
Because maybe it's not just LLMs that matter.
And maybe there are other innovations that young Chinese people can design.
Because they've already shown, Chinese companies have already shown that they're not just good at iteration,
but also good at innovation and making very viral stuff.
Like, who would have thought a couple years ago that the most viral videos and content AI generated would come out of China?
Yeah.
From TikTok.
No one would have thought that.
And that gave birth to a whole rise of content creators and influences.
Damn.
It really is going to be exciting.
Very exciting.
It's like, yeah, I mean, to see.
The China that we grew up with, the China that we're living with now.
The China that we've been told about.
Yeah, the China we've been told about.
And the China that is, if we go to China, where should we go first?
I'm super biased because I'm from Shanghai.
So you have to go there.
It's like the Paris of China.
Oh, Shanghai is like the Paris of China.
People are irritated that you're there when you're not.
Well, they're kind of arrogant.
They think they're the best people in China.
Okay, I like that.
Yeah, they look down on everyone else.
Yeah, that's a pair of people are just like, what are you doing?
They dress better.
They look down on everyone else in China.
Okay.
And they just think that they're culturally superior.
Okay, cool.
But I think you get some of the best restaurants.
It's super cosmopolitan for a mainland city in China.
And there are some areas historically where there's like beautiful Art Deco, Spanish Revival buildings.
Because remember, in the Republican era, so the early 1900s in China, there were a lot of Westerners who were living there.
They had different concession areas or zones.
So there's a French concession zone.
Oh, so they could like build their own architecture and they did their own thing.
It's the opposite of China town, ironically.
Yeah, French town.
French town.
It's a European, French town, American town.
That's wild.
That I want to go there.
And where they had their own laws.
They had their own laws.
So the Chinese government couldn't interfere with them.
Damn.
Like in Hanoi, it's more French influence, right?
In Vietnam, yeah.
Yeah.
And then the other.
French and so it's all these like places in the world where.
Huh.
They're all.
Laws.
Your extra territorial laws in the 1900s, which is crazy.
Yeah.
And then the other place I would definitely go, do you like spicy food?
Ha ha ha ha.
Do I like spicy food?
Finish with your list.
I've got my list for Alice.
Do I like spicy food?
Cosmopolitan snubs.
He doesn't like spicy food.
No, he does?
He does he?
I can't tell you.
You think you got those pink ears by mistake.
It's chilly.
Let me tell you something.
If you can find me,
yes.
Eugen will always tell me not to call it this, but pig feet.
I just call them pig trotters.
And Eugene is going to say pork trotters.
Pig feet.
Pig feet.
Yeah.
Like, is it, is it, how, am I pronouncing it correct?
Is it Huananese cuisine?
Hunan, yeah, Hunan.
Yeah, it's very spicy.
Very spicy.
The pepper that, like, makes your mouth feel like it's flipped upside down.
Yeah, that's a good way to describe mala.
That's, that's like.
The Sichuanese pepper corn where it like flips everything.
And then you, hot is cold and cold is hot and sweet as sour.
Have you ever had it?
Your mouth, you're dating history.
It sounds like that.
As you can see, I love spice.
You know in Chinese
To describe a sexy woman
She's spicy
Oh
Look at that
Okay
Okay
And women in Switzerland are particularly spicy
Oh
Okay
But I used to go to the panda
If you're not into women
You've got pandas there
Ah Ah Eugene
I guess your list
Is now being dealt with
As you see
My list
My list with women
Was done
Alice moved on to
You see what you've done
Alice moved on to the panda bears
So sorry
You can go with your list
I'm more of a koala guy myself
Furry is furry
Oh man
Okay wait wait
No no
My cities
Okay
Shanghai
And then where else should I go
Chongqing which is in Sichuan
Okay
Okay
Okay
There I'm gonna get all my spicy food
And then if you go
Very close to that is
Chengdu which is also in the same province
That's where the pandas are
Okay
I do love pandas at confront
Amazing
And then I think that...
All pandas in the world are owned by China.
Did you know that?
All of them.
All of them.
There's no panda in the world that is not owned by China.
They don't allow anyone to own a panda bear.
You can have it and look after it, sort of lease it from them.
But the Chinese government goes, this thing represents us and it is our animal.
We're not going to let you...
You're not allowed to breed it anyway.
You're not that you sort of can because you know they're notorious for not wanting to smash.
But panda bears are all owned by the Chinese government.
It's a fun fact.
I love panda bears.
That's crazy xenophobia.
I love pandabism.
I really, really love panda.
I'll show you my WhatsApp.
Is it a panda bear?
That's my, see my WhatsApp profile picture.
That's cute.
I love pandabas.
But okay, so.
That's him early in the morning.
And then one other city?
Well, this might be underrated, because most people go to Shian, Beijing.
But I love Yunnan, which is the one I mentioned.
Yes.
Because.
Where they were linen pants?
Where they were linen pants and they're super hippie.
They have amazing cafes.
It's like the hippie cafe
Central part of China
Where people love just sitting out
And having coffee
How long does it take you to get around
When you're in China
Like if you're in Shanghai
How quick is it to go somewhere else
Are we taking the train?
Get at the high speed
So Shanghai to Beijing high speed
Is around four and a half hours
Man that's amazing
How that's with a high speed
It's a high speed train
Yeah but what is that distance though
That's huge
How far was it before the high speed?
Days my brother
No wonder Genghis Khan gave up
No it's days
moment. But what is the distance?
It's, um... Yeah. It's, it's huge. I think
I, I want to butcher it, but it's like...
It's definitely bigger than New York to Boston.
Yeah, it's way, way full. Way, way way for it.
I think it's more. I need to look it up. I'm not really sure.
Hmm. Okay. That's me. That's your list.
Any questions you have? Any... Alice, if you could
for an intrepid traveler such as myself and a humanitarian at
at most, where I could assist the Chinese population
the most
given my
you know
acquired skills over time
where would you
what are the acquired skills
Eugene wants to know
where he can earn
$50,000
that's what Eugene wants to know
Oh you could be
like there are a lot of African influences in China
that are doing really really well
No no no Eugene specific
Remember you said someone
pays $50,000 for a specific act
Go and work for C-Trip.
He'll pay you $50,000 per baby.
My resignation has now officially been intended.
See you.
Alice, this was amazing.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
This was, yeah, I think one of the biggest things you've left us with,
and I hope everyone will walk away with this,
is take everything you get,
not with a grain of salt,
but with the understanding that it is limited by the fact
that it's not made from the place or by the place.
It's not the language of the country.
It is not the news of the country.
It's not the people of the country.
And you've never been there.
I even say this as a South African,
the amount of times I've had to correct people's perceptions on South Africa
because they have an idea from the media,
which most people will have.
So, you know, I'm not saying it's a sinister thing that people form
is a good reminder.
But man, we've got to go to China and just see this for ourselves.
Escalators, spicy food.
And the fact that you'll be walking the talk by being there.
Yeah, no, for sure.
And living there now.
For sure.
Oh, man, all the best.
You guys really should go.
Do a comedy show.
It's getting popular again in China.
You spoke to the wrong guys.
We're there.
We're there like a panda bear now underway.
I thought you forgot that rhyme.
My friend, there's nothing panda bear related I've ever forgotten.
You've ever.
Ever.
Alice, this was so much fun.
Thank you.
It was so fun to be here.
Thanks, guys.
No, this was great, man.
Thank you very much.
What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Day Zero Productions in partnership with Sirius XM.
The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Sanaziamin, and Jess Hackle.
Rebecca Chain is our producer.
Our development researcher is Marcia Robiu.
Music, mixing, and mastering by Hannes Brown.
Random Other Stuff by Ryan Harduth.
Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next week for another episode of What Now.
