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Bloomberg Television

Bloomberg Television

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How China Became a Superpower and What Comes Next for Its Economy

Video Overview & Insights

China’s entry into the WTO in 2001 accelerated its rise as a global manufacturing and technology powerhouse, fueled export growth, and helped stabilize global demand during the financial crisis. As China expanded Belt and Road investments, advanced in EVs and AI, and entered a sharper economic rivalry with the United States, its property slowdown and domestic inequality exposed new vulnerabilities. Enda Curran, Elizabeth Economy, and Afsaneh Beschloss explain China’s past 25 years and what its next phase means for the global economy.

WTF why is she saying that not having traffic is not having entusiasm for the economy, China has one of the best transport networks in the world by super modern transportation, i wish my country had that instead of dealing with huge traffic (mexico)

— @gasparmxm

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Friend just back from china trip says was shocked that the tibetans ppl are very very happy with their government.. 😂 so much the haves and haves not.. their ideology is for everyone to prosper not for the top 1 percent..

— @mangosorbet768

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The model actually works for them. They have a space station of their own, they control the TV market, the EV market, and the cellphone market. Yet, we are still haggling over their place in the world😅

— @franciscoalvarezmontero9504

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有些人很奇怪,整天在那说中国崩溃论,一边又在那说中国威胁论,一个要崩溃的国家有什么威胁?😮

— @斌匡

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China has a clear plan and China does not let the Oligarchs control the Government. Unlike USA and European countries where laws are created to protect the businesses exploitation.

— @Jayz5484-d7u

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China is run by smart people because its leaders are selected on merit, not on the basis of empty electoral promises.

They have to start at the bottom of the ladder and climb it, one step at a time by showing results. You will never be promoted to a higher position if you haven't accomplished something significant that benefits the community. When you take your position, they establish a five-year plan for you. When the deadline arrives, you are judged on your results. If you haven't met them, you'll stay at the same level. They can even move you to a lesser position if you're not even up to your current position.

Let's say, you start as a village chief, then you become a county chief, then a city mayor, prefect, governor, and so on. You'll never make it to Beijing, where the fate of the country is decided, if you haven't proven your skills at every step. When you finally get there, your qualifications have been already proven by your extensive experience in accomplishing concrete projects.

If some of our leaders were in China, they would remain village chiefs their entire lives.

— @Asparas-d7t

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That’s complete bullshit.
The reality is that China is heading toward economic and social decline. Ordinary people barely have time to relax or enjoy life.
The CCP suppresses dissent constantly.
How can a society without freedom remain truly prosperous in the long run?
Go to hell, scammer.

— @RobertLee-l1j

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Don't put the title of superpower on China. Superpower means bully.

— @VictorZhang-u8g

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This lady is delusional.. Blatant propaganda. Chinese are suffering blah blah blah

— @Shynnne

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dont worry about china ,, leave china along

— @SHuang-w7x

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Same data. Different interpretations. It’s not China is not interested in domestic consumption. It’s in the bag. Foreign trade is more important especially when the USA’s only trade is big tech and war.

— @EdK-e9p

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if Bloomberg analysis is this bad how the hell do they make money on wall street,of course insider trading.😂😂😂

— @johngray7791

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Despite its people suffering and screaming, Bloomberg continued to 'worry' about the conditions in China. From China's economy collapsing, to the human right and freedom of speech, and now the economy of haves and have nots, Chinese people not benefiting from the growth, etc.

How kind you are to the Chinese people, and how vicious you are to your own US people (systematic rasism, homeless, drug abuse, massive shooting, crazy price level, corrupted political system like lobbying, lack free health care, student loans, increasing GINI coefficient, terrible infrastructure, stagnate growth of income for bottom 50% of population, unstopped war on foreign soil, support of Isreal's genocide, etc.) .

— @MichaelMok-yk9dc

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A better tittle for Bloomberg: "How China On The Brink of Collapse Every Year and Became a Superpower"

— @MichaelMok-yk9dc

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9:23 projection without evidence

— @justanotherdayonyoutube-n7o

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More User Perspectives

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The west had the opportunity to charge ahead in terms of EV tech and infrastructure + renewables, but instead we chose big oil and gas. Wouldn’t want to upset those precious relics

@Salta-kt3nh
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Western people are so backward in understanding "consumption". As a matter of fact, Chinese people consumes more meat/fresh vegetable/fruits per capita than most countries in the world, including many in the west. Chinese people also dine out more on average than people from almost all other countries. Chinese people tops in the world on per capita purchase of other merchadise, too. The only reason that the Chinese consumption seems low is because of the exchange rate. All in all, Chinese people are already one of the most consumeristic on material goods in the world.

@FreddieWu
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Chinese propaganda bots in the comments are insane

@Dom-bw8qo
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your the man Bravo God Bless

@BitcoinBanditBrandon
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If china collapse the world collapse

@Paralianpoet
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China is putting lots of effort to increase domestic consumption and doesn't want to rely only on export.

@bireswarhalder9765
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China go go to 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

@cinnamomumcamphora8943
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It's pretty rich hearing Americans complain about China's wealth gap.

@dayeli3821
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19 years later these ppl will be talking about chinese domestic consumption and how china has replaced us as the economic powerhouse

@rakeshkrishnan1099
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Make up your mind, is China collapsing or thriving?

@hujin3899
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China has risen to power economically, and has now become a super power. The US hit its peak and slowly started becoming self destructive. The US cant blame china for its own collapse, we literally did it to ourselves.

@JayvenAnderson-e6z
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Creating a giant system that will just require endless energy for ??? A Unsustainable country ! Foolishness ! Try the reverse !

@howardbaker3756
@

@edwardeliasramos



Abonohu

The magnificent Thousand-Hand

@AltinTile-v3b
@

🇹🇼 taiwan tw

🇲🇳 mongolia mn

🇨🇳 zhongguo cn

@onereal-y3w
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China is already super power in their own right. The US is a loud, racist, uneducated bully, cosplaying as the model figure. But is actually miserable on the inside lol.

@theerealvinny
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If you think there are not many people in the streets, that’s because many people take undergrounds/subways as the public transportation infrastructures are so magnificent.

@浩瀚的宇宙不觉孤单
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China’s $3 trillion in US currency, once a symbol of strength, is increasingly viewed as a strategic risk.

@MichelleCecunjanin-c9v
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China way ahead of the US in many areas.

@kside-o7g
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China’s debt problem isn’t simply about how large it is—it’s about how it’s structured and where it’s concentrated. Much of it rests with local governments and property developers, closely tied to infrastructure projects and the real estate sector. The key question isn’t just the total debt, but whether China can maintain steady growth and handle restructuring effectively to avoid prolonged financial strain.

@StephoneMtomas
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Your country busy killing people

@SHAMSUDEENSALISU-t1l
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Many people always say 8964 at YT, nowadays u know why china didnot agree free news and vote,🤣Rather than hand it over with vote, it would be better to let the Communist Party govern for more decades.🤣

@ndya2435
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Top 2 winners of globalization: China and USA.

@elys1977
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China’s debt issue isn’t just about the headline numbers — it’s about structure. Much of the debt sits with local governments and property developers, tied to infrastructure and real estate. The real question isn’t whether China has debt, but whether growth and restructuring can outpace the risks over time.

@LizzetteDejesus
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No, please be patient and trust Western media. China will collapse in 30 years. Collapse follows a downward oscillation curve; an upward curve indicates a threat. The overall trend is towards collapse. There are still 30 years left, so please wait.

@HerMan-Winged
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白癡學者...呵呵呵 繼續傲慢吧 我們就靜靜的看著你們繼續裝逼..等你們自動崩貴!

@jessie7472
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This Rockcreek lady talks bullshits. A completely biased and blinded small frog sitting under a small well and only looks at the tiny sky above her stupid tiny brains.

@浩瀚的宇宙不觉孤单
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where is fox and its friends?

@trymrthen
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The lady in black is wrong about China not being interested in promoting domestic consumption. Quite on the opposite, China has implemented several programs to incentivize upgrading of home appliances and “night economy”, for example. The Western politicians and media have fantasized that once the Chinese economy grows and the middle class people will demand a western style political system. This is purely a wishful thinking. People in China are happy with their political system. Why can’t you accept that?

@R.G.9795
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对中国充满了偏见 从不会正面去解读发展状况 只会一昧的抹黑

@weiye-h7o
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Do West have an ability to compete with China?

@gggg-yg5hk
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This video captures China as it was 20 years ago. One can visit China and witness the magnificent construction there.

@yukpun9971
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No one expected China to bounce back after COVID! Instead they used COVID to master the EV and start up Ai!

@kaInting45
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China’s debt issue isn’t just about the headline numbers — it’s about structure. Much of the debt sits with local governments and property developers, tied to infrastructure and real estate. The real question isn’t whether China has debt, but whether growth and restructuring can outpace the risks over time.

@ShahidRafiqdui
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I need to know is china’s economy falling or rising? I’m planning on moving there im in my early 20’s
And I want to move to the country that would still the best in 10-20 years from now

@FeysExplains
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I saw this kind of title almost every week. What a meaningless and useless video

@zixiaozong9789