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April 22, 2025 25 mins

Here’s a preview of a new audiobook, Global Tech Wars: China’s Race to Dominate. For decades, China’s economic rise has been symbolized by its unstoppable force of low-cost manufacturing. Now, it’s the leading country in cutting-edge industries like artificial intelligence, electric vehicles, surveillance technology, and more.

In Global Tech Wars, Financial Times’ veteran journalist James Kynge analyzes China’s rapid technological ascent and what it means for the future. If you like what you hear, find the full audiobook at Pushkin, Audible, Spotify, or wherever you get your audiobooks.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Pushkin.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
I'm journalist James King, and I'm in your feed today
to bring you an excerpt of my new audiobook, Global
Tech Wars, a gripping analysis of China's rapid technological ascent.
After decades of economic growth symbolized by low cost manufacturing,
China is now leading in cutting edge industries artificial intelligence,

(00:44):
electric vehicles, surveillance technology, robotics and more, and Western corporations
are struggling to keep pace. What does this mean for
the future. Will China's technological leadership translate into geopolitical dominance?

(01:04):
Listen to an excerpt of the audiobook, and if you'd
like to hear more, find Global Tech Wars from Pushkin
Industries and The Financial Times at Pushkin, dot fm, Slash
audio Books, Audible, Spotify, or wherever you get your audio books.

(01:25):
Chapter one, shun Jen Speed in the heart of shun Jun,
a city in southern China, is the district of Hua
chiang Bei, and it's home to the biggest electronics market
in the world. It's a vast warren of stalls selling

(01:50):
every kind of electronic component under the sun. So we're
standing in the middle of one of the Hua Changbei
electronics markets and the scenes is really quite impressive. It's
basically one stall after another. There's hundreds of stalls. Yeah,
I mean there's just piles of electronic components on top

(02:13):
of each other in a.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
Very higgeldy piggledy way.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
It looks like a rather eccentric hardware shop where you
know that you're selling everything when you're not quite sure
where anything is.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
So we have signal generators, we have multimeters, lots of
different kinds of multimeters. Obviously any microcontroller you could possibly want.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
And in the market, I met Noah's Zerkin.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
He's a tech inventor from the US and he's chosen
to innovate new products not back home in America but
here in shun Jernsters inductors. For him, the electronics market
is an Aladdin's cave of potential treasures.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
US speaking actors of every story, including some rather exotic
ones and these.

Speaker 2 (03:06):
Ones over here with lots of like brass looking nodules
coming out of them.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
It's something that I've actually been looking before it for
close to a year. A suitable one, yes.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
So what kind of products could you build with the
components that we can find in these markets?

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Here everything from consumer electronics devices to robots, drones, military systems,
to maybe even space systems. Right, you can build anything
using the components here, Yes, I mean it's such a

(03:50):
tough question because you can literally build anything.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
For decades, this part of China was known as the
electronics workshop of the world. But these days shun Jen
doesn't just make other people's technology. It's building its own
Chinese tech, and in the process, China is emerging as
a tech innovator on a course to overtake the US

(04:18):
as the most important technology power in the world.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
We're here in shun Jen.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
We're standing by a busy road intersection, surrounded by a
forest of enormous skyscrapers, glass and metal buildings reaching all
the way down this long avenue. Cars, taxis, even motorbikes
riding on the pavements around us. Pretty much in the
center of this vast metropolis, Shunjen is known as the

(05:01):
Silicon Valley of China, and it's changed dramatically in the
last few decades. About twenty years ago, shun Journ and
the cities around it in the Pearl River Delta made
a name for themselves by mostly manufacturing Other countries technologies
and maybe copying.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
It as well.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
But now we're on the brink of a really totally
different new era. These days, Chinese companies are making their
own brands, innovating their own technology, and selling that to Europe,
America and all over the rest of the world. Shunjan
is home to some of the biggest names in Chinese technology.

(05:44):
The internet giant Tencent is based here, as is Huawei,
the tech behemoth that's found itself at the center of
US China tensions over technology.

Speaker 3 (05:55):
In recent years.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
There are newer trailblazers too. Dji, which essentially invented the
consumer drone market, is a Shunjun company, as is byd
the Chinese car that is fast becoming a dominant force
in electric vehicles. It all points in one direction. Something

(06:17):
A think tank recently highlighted that China is overtaking the
US in its capacity to innovate, and it's now ahead
of the US in everything from advanced batteries to hypersonic aircraft,
quantum communications, and supercomputers. To understand how that has happened,

(06:38):
you need to look at China's long history of manufacturing
consumer technology.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
Okay, has been there. These are sort of ancient prototype parts.
But so once take us down and this needs to
go on the floor.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
In its workshop a short walk away from Shunjan's electronics markets,
the American inventor Noah Zerkin shows me what he's building,
an augmented reality headset.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Okay, so there are you see. There are these three
circuit boards up here, and that's just for making the
displays work. And there are these two sensors, each of
which have two little cameras on them, little fish eye
cameras to track your hands. Then there are these two
big curved mirrors that rest in front of your eyes.

(07:36):
And the electronics on this headset are basically all made
from stuff that you can find in the market downstairs.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Tech inventors like Noah have chosen to base themselves in
shun Jen rather than the United States because being in
Shunjen means having instant access to a vast supply chain
of components and factories. It means they can work quickly
develop prototype products, test them, and manufacture them all at

(08:12):
a rapid rate.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Being able to source those components, I was able to
order things mostly from places that have stalls representing them
in the Watching Bay markets right that are right here
and have them arrive at my doorstep, if not that day,
the next day. Same with the PCBs that the circuit boards.

(08:37):
Nowhere else can you get twenty four hour turnaround. If
I make a mistake on one of my prototypes, I
can identify it, change it anywhere else.

Speaker 3 (08:48):
This is a big deal.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
So I can do a prototype iteration in twenty four
to forty eight hours. That is not true anywhere else
in the world.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
The ability to prototype and manufacture tech products rapidly is
giving rise to some really exciting companies in Senjen.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
Very small factory. That's matter of factus is not a factory,
all right.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
It looks like an excavation center, but its not. This
is a R and D testing field. So where you
can see along the windows there are over twenty fifty
chairs and those for R and D and productions staff.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
Only a few miles north of Ua Chiang Bay are
the offices of the robotic startup ui Bot. They design
and build industrial robots in their bright and spacious new
research and development center. Dozens of robots move around the

(09:52):
vast open floor guided by lasers and algorithms. The company
is growing rapidly.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
Just a few years ago.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
It was a neighbor of Noah Zerkins in a small
workshop above the electronics market. Granjen from uibot says access
to supply chains and manufacturing expertise mean startups here can
operate at what he calls hun Jen speed.

Speaker 4 (10:27):
For the most typical example, during the pandemic, we build
a anti pandemic robot with UVC lights and a zero
meter camera on top within fourteen days. I'm not talking
about fourteen days to get the conception of a robot.
I mean fourteen days for the first prototype from an
idea to a prototype two weeks. That's supply chain. Were

(10:51):
you able to do that, we can get every single
component downstairs in Joaisel Nors.

Speaker 2 (10:56):
This means uibot is rapidly catching up with more established
US and European competitors.

Speaker 4 (11:04):
Before the pandemic, there were several strong competitors globally like
we look up to them and we try to study
from them. After the pandemic, when we join the conference
in Germany, we strangely realize that the European players they
still trying to sell the same thing with the one

(11:26):
before pandemic three years earlier. And when we look at ourselves.
Everything's totally different.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
So your R and D effort was moving at Shunjan speed.

Speaker 4 (11:36):
Well, I prefer to call it Shunjan speed.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
Yes, for newer startups like you I bought.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
There are plenty of examples around shun Jen of the
potential global success that Chinese companies can aspire to. We've
come to a different part of Shunjan. We're now in
one of the big tech centers of this city. We're
surrounded by huge buildings, mostly occupied by some of the

(12:05):
biggest tech companies in China and in the world. Sounder
construction in the background. Three more huge blocks are going
up soon to be occupied by other Chinese tech companies.
And we're standing in front of the brand new headquarters
of one of the companies that's really put chun Jan
on the map in the last few years, and that's Dji.

(12:31):
If you want an example of a Chinese company totally
dominating a sector, Shunjan's drone maker Dji is a good example.
Over the last decade, it effectively invented the consumer drone market.
It now sells eight out of ten drones around the world.
When it's coming towards us, it really looks like an insect,

(12:53):
I'd say a dragonfly or something like that. Now I
don't know.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
That must be twenty thirty meters into the sky.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
It's just tovering over the forecoll of this building that's
going even higher.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
Oh, it's now a sight.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
Success for DJI means a massive new headquarters, two towers
that appear to hover in the sky called sky City
everywhere we go in Shandwandi's enormous buildings.

Speaker 5 (13:26):
Yeah, so if you tell me here six years ago,
now it's seven years ago, there's no this building. But
right now because we got this piece of land in
twenty sixteen and in twenty twenty two we move into
this building. So after six years we have this beautiful
twin building and campus here and right now we live
here more than one a half year already.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
Christina Young showed us around the buildings and told us
about the secret drone testing area housed inside one of
the towers.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
Before when we have the office that we rent, it's
so difficult to find a place to fly because people
are going to walk around. We need to avoid the people,
and also some of the people they try to know
or try to find out what is DJ's next. For
that so they try to still in see the product
that we're testing flight. So we have the flying side

(14:14):
inside this building. You may see of those two box
there are four floor high area cell floor high area.
That's the flighting side.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
Wow, that's very interesting.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
So they can fly in there in peace, they know
nobody is watching. You can maintain your intellectual property. Nobody
can see.

Speaker 5 (14:34):
Yeah. And also even without the good condition, like if
it's ringing windy, you can still test inside.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
Have you got any really cool prototypes you're working.

Speaker 5 (14:44):
On at the moment, We have so many, but I
cannot share now.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
A company like Dji represents something that ten or twenty
years ago, to observe us in the West at least,
would have been difficult to imagine a Chinese company way
out in front of the competition setting the pace in
the creation of leading tech products. But China's tech ambitions

(15:17):
are not limited to robots or drones. China wants to
lead the world in all kinds of cutting edge technologies.
The drone maker Dji is one example of a Chinese

(15:40):
tech company that's leading its field in the development of technology.
Huawei is another, and China might be leading in a
multitude of other areas. Last year, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute,
a think tank, made waves when it concluded that China

(16:00):
now leads the world in thirty seven out of forty
four critical.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Areas of technology.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
Think tank, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, based in Washington,
warned that China is evolving from an imitator to an innovator.

Speaker 6 (16:22):
It's easy to forget now just how far behind China
was in technology and how dismissive most of us in
the West were about China's tech capabilities all the way
up till pretty recently.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
Matt Shean is a fellow in the Asia Program of
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in the US, where
would you say China is right now? Is China catching
up to the US level in many technologies? Is it
a peer competitor already? Is it on a trajectory to overtake?

Speaker 6 (16:54):
I think the term peer competitor captures it. I mean
there are some areas where the US is clearly ahead,
you know, right now, in the frontiers of AI, in
large language models and generative AI. That's an area where
the US can pretty comfortably say we are ahead. But
if you look across other areas. If you look at
renewable energy technologies, clean technologies, battery powered vehicles, electric vehicles,

(17:17):
China is far and away the global leader in these.
It has the supply chains, it has the deep manufacturing expertise,
and it's really on a trajectory currently to dominate those
industries globally. Look at an area like quantum, it's still
a wide open field. We don't know which sort of

(17:39):
path is going to be the most promising. But China
is showing results that are just as impressive or roughly
on par with the US across a few of those
different approaches. If you look at the success of platform
technology companies, obviously the US has some of the global
leaders in Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, But you know the

(18:01):
most popular app in the world right now is a
Chinese app.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
It's TikTok.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
In recent years, China has overtaken the US to become
the biggest file of patents in the world. Last year,
Huawei filed more patents than any other company anywhere. But
Sheian says innovation is not just about coming up with
new ideas, it's about turning them into solutions and products

(18:29):
at a scale that can reach a mass market.

Speaker 6 (18:33):
This is really an area where Chinese manufacturing prowess is
going to come into play. You know, the idea of
China being the factory of the world just because it
has cheap labor is way out of date. China's advantage
is not the cost of its labor. It's the fact
that it's built up the most sophisticated, intricate manufacturing ecosystem
in the world. That they have trained engineers who have

(18:56):
spent thirty forty years progressively building and refining more and
more precise manufacturing technologies, and especially learning how to take
a good idea and scale it up to the level
of hundreds of thousands or millions of products.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
The Chinese government has technological progress at the center of
its national ambitions. Matt Chan says it's not clear that
China will inevitably overtake the US, but he says China's
progress so far suggests that the US cannot assume that
it will always be in.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
The lead broadly.

Speaker 6 (19:34):
But I think, especially if you zoom in on the
United States and on Silicon Valley, we have this narrative
that technological innovation, freedom of speech, and democracy are all
intimately intertwined. That you cannot have innovation unless you have
free speech, free internet, political freedoms, and I think that
was a nice story. It fit broadly with our perception

(19:58):
of the way that creativity works and the way that
business and markets work. I think what China's done over
the last ten to fifteen years, it's essentially pulled apart
that narrative that innovation depends on certain types of freedoms.
You can have, you know, world leading apps come out
of a country that doesn't have a free internet. You

(20:20):
can have some of the biggest and most successful technology
companies in a country that has quite controlled markets and
a very heavy handed government. And I think it turned
a lot of ideas that we had in the West
on their head.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
It's a profound conclusion. It used to be an article
of faith that you need a democracy to spur tech innovation,
but China is turning that argument upside down. In an
authoritarian state, you can still innovate tech products and sell
them to the rest of the world via gloves off,

(20:59):
bare knuckle capitalism. So in your daily life, how many
times do you feel surprised by new products being made
and new innovations?

Speaker 3 (21:13):
Almost every day?

Speaker 2 (21:15):
Almost every day, Chijo is a venture capitalist based in
shin Jin. He spent years working at Huawei and in
Japanese tech companies before returning to China to capitalize on
what he saw as a boom in Chinese innovation.

Speaker 7 (21:32):
I forced myself to meet at least the one company
one day, at least the one company one day, and
reader five to ten business plans one day, five to
ten businesses every day, every day, almost almost, so I
can see a lot of innovative products.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
Joe agrees that China's expertise in manufacturing has helped tech
companies develop, but he says there's another factor spurring Chinese
firms on the intense competition between Chinese companies. For Chinese
tech consumers.

Speaker 7 (22:11):
Chinese guys like to use new things like application, one app,
and they will give up one.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
App very quickly too.

Speaker 7 (22:24):
So if you can't let them know the evaluations of
your app, they will give up very quickly. This is
a one point. And another point is competition. Competition. This
is a different culture. I think in the Western countries,

(22:45):
I do my business, you do yours. But in China,
I don't think so I do my business and I
do your business too.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
Joe says, Chinese companies think of it in terms of survival,
innovate or die.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Survive.

Speaker 7 (23:03):
Survive is very important keyword in China.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
China's transformation into a global tech superpower to rival the
US is an incredible story. But the question now is
whether China is going to maintain that momentum and power
past the US and other countries to become the tech
power in the world. The global success of shun Jan's

(23:29):
companies suggest it might, but it's not a given.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
I would say so.

Speaker 7 (23:35):
Most advanced technology is not in China even now. In
some key industrials we need some time. We need time
to develop, like semiconductors, like ais.

Speaker 2 (23:51):
So China is not the most advanced in terms of technology,
but it's catching up fast. Do you think that China
one day soon, in the next few years could become
the most advanced country for technology?

Speaker 7 (24:07):
We are developed very today. Before today, after that, I
cannot predict. We are still working hard on catching up.
But when we overtake the US, we don't know. And
I think from the point of government, we don't think
one day we have to we have to overtake America.

Speaker 3 (24:30):
I don't think so.

Speaker 7 (24:31):
But as the boss of the company, we have to
overtake see other guys. I am a businessman. When I
investor a company, I hope say we'll bus the first
one in the world one day.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
A changing of the guard when it comes to technology
happens very rarely. For the first time, we're seeing global
tech come out of an authoritarian state without free internet,
without freedom of expression, and we're surveillance cameras monitor your
every move. If China wins the tech race, the impact

(25:16):
on the rest of the world will be huge, and
we're already starting to see it.
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