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China's Technology Triumph

9 hours ago
  • #Technocracy
  • #Economic Growth
  • #China
  • Dan Wang's book 'Breakneck' provides a detailed account of China's economic and technological success, highlighting better infrastructure in China's poorest provinces compared to the US's wealthiest regions.
  • Wang critiques China's top-down, technocratic model, arguing that central planning cannot manage a complex economy better than the market, a view influenced by thinkers like Friedrich Hayek.
  • The book suggests China is ruled by engineers, contrasting with the US's lawyer-dominated governance, but this narrative is questioned due to lack of evidence linking leaders' engineering backgrounds to economic success.
  • China's governance is complex due to its vast scale, with distinct regions like 'Hayekian China' (tech-savvy urban areas), 'Fundamental China' (less developed regions), and 'Communist Party China' (central governance in Beijing).
  • China's rise as a manufacturing giant is attributed more to geopolitical cooperation with the US during the Cold War and the properties of technology itself, rather than governance trends.
  • The book emphasizes the importance of core industries with complex supply chains in driving economic growth, as seen in past industrial revolutions.