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In this fascinating conversation, Patrick O'Shaughnessy interviews Dan Wang, author of "Breakneck," who offers the most nuanced framework for understanding US-China competition. Wang spent six years living in China studying its manufacturing ecosystem and tech development, providing unique insights into both superpowers. (00:48)
Dan Wang is a technology analyst and author who spent six years living in China studying its manufacturing ecosystem and tech development. He worked as a technology analyst at Gavekal Dragonomics, an economic investment research firm, from 2017-2023, during which time he wrote extensively about the US-China tech war and sanctioned entities like Huawei. Wang is currently a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and previously served as a fellow at Yale Law School's Paul Tsai China Center.
Patrick O'Shaughnessy is the CEO of Positive Sum, an investment firm focused on technology and innovation. He hosts the popular "Invest Like the Best" podcast, which explores markets, ideas, and strategies through conversations with leading investors, entrepreneurs, and thinkers. O'Shaughnessy is also the founder of Colossus, a platform that produces investment-focused content including the quarterly Colossus Review publication.
Wang argues that it's far harder for the US to rebuild manufacturing capacity than for China to improve scientific research. (17:04) China has already made significant strides in scientific output, with Chinese researchers producing an increasing share of the top 1% cited scientific papers and better funding environments attracting American researchers. However, the US manufacturing base continues to decline, with companies like Boeing, Intel, and Detroit automakers struggling while China's 70 million manufacturing workers gain expertise daily. This asymmetry suggests China can more easily patch its deficiencies than America can rebuild its industrial capacity.
The real source of Chinese technological power lies not in breakthrough innovation but in manufacturing process knowledge - the accumulated expertise from building complex products at scale. (13:43) Wang explains that workers who assembled early iPhones in Shenzhen later started drone companies and EV battery businesses, creating an ecosystem where "workers are learning to solve three new problems a day before breakfast." This tacit knowledge can't easily be written down or replicated, giving China sustainable advantages in manufacturing-intensive industries.
Chinese companies may generate exceptional cash flows but trade at massive discounts due to Communist Party unpredictability, exemplified by ByteDance's humiliation in 2018 and Alibaba's Jack Ma situation. (41:21) Wang describes the Party as resembling "the God of the Old Testament" - sometimes generous, sometimes randomly punitive based on values-driven beliefs. Combined with geopolitical risks around Taiwan and capital controls, this creates an "anaconda in the chandelier" effect where investors self-censor and avoid exposure despite attractive fundamentals.
China demonstrates higher societal agency - the ability to make decisions quickly and execute them - compared to America's deliberative approach. (48:47) When COVID hit, Chinese manufacturers like Foxconn and JD.com immediately retooled to produce masks and cotton swabs, asking "how do we make money?" rather than "is this our core competence?" Meanwhile, American companies struggled with basic production. This pattern extends beyond crisis response to infrastructure, where China builds gleaming systems while California's high-speed rail remains unfinished after 17 years.
The future AI race depends less on current compute advantages and more on electrical power generation and manufacturing capabilities. (71:58) China is adding 500 gigawatts of solar capacity this year versus 50 in the US, has 33 nuclear plants under construction compared to zero in America, and possesses the manufacturing workforce to implement AI at industrial scale. Wang suggests America might get "a much better McKinsey" while China gets "a much better Foxconn" - with potentially decisive implications for economic and military power.