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Showing Original Post only (View all)We Warned About the First China Shock. The Next One Will Be Worse. [View all]
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/14/opinion/china-shock-economy-manufacturing.htmlhttps://archive.ph/NIBMJ
We Warned About the First China Shock. The Next One Will Be Worse.
July 14, 2025, 5:01 a.m. ET
By David Autor and Gordon Hanson
David Autor is an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Gordon Hanson is an economics professor at Harvard Universitys Kennedy School. They are both known for their research into how globalization, and especially the rise of China, reshaped the American labor market.
The first time China upended the U.S. economy, between 1999 and 2007, it helped erase nearly a quarter of all U.S. manufacturing jobs. Known as the China Shock, it was driven by a singular process Chinas late-1970s transition from Maoist central planning to a market economy, which rapidly moved the countrys labor and capital from collective rural farms to capitalist urban factories. Waves of inexpensive goods from China imploded the economic foundations of places where manufacturing was the main game in town, such as Martinsville, Va., and High Point, N.C., formerly the self-titled sweatshirt and furniture capitals of the world. Twenty years later, those workers havent recovered from those job losses. Although places like these are growing again, most job gains are in low-wage industries. A similar story played out in dozens of labor-intensive industries simultaneously: textiles, toys, sporting goods, electronics, plastics and auto parts.
Yet once Chinas Mao-to-manufacturing transition was complete, sometime around 2015, the shock stopped building. Since then, U.S. manufacturing employment has rebounded, growing under President Barack Obama, the first Trump term and President Biden.
So why, you might ask, are we still talking about the China Shock? We wish we werent. We published the research in 2013, 2014 and 2016, along with our collaborator David Dorn of the University of Zurich, which detailed for the first time how Chinese import competition was devastating parts of America, through permanent declines in employment and earnings. We are here to argue now that policymakers are spending far too much time looking backward, fighting the last war. They should be spending much more time examining whats emerging as a new China Shock.
China Shock 1.0 was a one-time event. In essence, China figured out how to do what it should have been doing decades earlier. In the United States, that led to unnecessarily painfully job losses. But America was never going to be selling tennis sneakers on Temu or assembling AirPods. Chinas manufacturing work force is thought to be well in excess of 100 million, compared with Americas 13 million. Its bordering on delusional to think the United States can or should even want to simultaneously compete with China in semiconductors and tennis sneakers alike.
China Shock 2.0, the one thats fast approaching, is where China goes from underdog to favorite. Today, it is aggressively contesting the innovative sectors where the United States has long been the unquestioned leader: aviation, A.I., telecommunications, microprocessors, robotics, nuclear and fusion power, quantum computing, biotech and pharma, solar, batteries. Owning these sectors yields dividends: economic spoils from high profits and high-wage jobs; geopolitical heft from shaping the technological frontier; and military prowess from controlling the battlefield. General Motors, Boeing and Intel are American national champions, but theyve all seen better days and were going to miss them if theyre gone. Chinas technological vision is already reordering governments and markets in Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia and increasingly Eastern Europe. Expect this influence to grow as the United States retreats into an isolationist MAGAsphere.
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And Trump makes it easier for China every day....killing higher ed and other research, alienating everyone that counts.
dutch777
Jul 14
#2
Your comments bring to mind something that my French teacher from high school once said. . .
Collimator
Jul 14
#6
What MAGA seems to completely fail to understand is that--like a kid that got lucky and hit...
Ol Janx Spirit
Jul 14
#13