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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This episode of China Decode covers three major developments shaping China's political and economic landscape. Hosts Alice Han and James Kynge examine the unprecedented purge of China's military leadership, including Xi Jinping's longtime confidant Zhang Yuxia from the Central Military Commission, which leaves Xi effectively alone at the apex of the world's largest military. (26:28) They also analyze TikTok's survival strategy through a US joint venture deal that keeps the platform alive while maintaining ByteDance's control over the crucial algorithm. Finally, they discuss China's economic reality with economist Houze Song, exploring the country's manufacturing-led growth strategy amid weak domestic consumption and the ongoing property sector slump.
Alice Han is co-host of China Decode and brings expertise in Chinese politics and economics. She provides in-depth analysis on military purges, drawing historical parallels to Chairman Mao's purges during the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution.
James Kynge is co-host of China Decode with over 35 years of China journalism experience, including 18 years based in China itself. His extensive background provides crucial context for understanding the opacity of Chinese elite politics and military decision-making systems.
Houze Song is a China economist and director of China research at 22V Research. He provides expert analysis on China's economic policy, trade surpluses, and the structural challenges facing Chinese household consumption and the property sector.
The unprecedented removal of Zhang Yuxia and other top military officials from the Central Military Commission represents the largest purge of generals since Chairman Mao. (02:45) Alice Han notes this leaves Xi "effectively alone at the apex" of command over 2 million soldiers and 600 nuclear missiles. The specific language about "trampling on the chairman responsibility system" indicates personal political betrayal rather than simple corruption. This consolidation of power actually reveals weakness and insecurity about military loyalty, suggesting Xi feels threatened by potential rivals within his own circle.
The military leadership purge paradoxically makes Taiwan safer in the near term by eliminating experienced commanders capable of complex military operations. (03:14) Han argues that without "operational experience or combat readiness," Xi cannot effectively execute a Taiwan invasion, quarantine, or blockade for the next few years. However, this creates a dangerous longer-term scenario where new "wolf warrior" generals might be more bellicose and willing to pursue military action after 2027 when Xi reshuffles the Central Military Commission.
The TikTok joint venture solution allows ByteDance to maintain control over the algorithm while transferring nominal ownership to US partners. (24:37) James Kynge explains that ByteDance retains 19.9% ownership and leases the algorithm for 20% of revenue, meaning "the engine of that car remains in the hands of a Chinese company." This deal benefits Trump's billionaire supporters financially while failing to address the original national security concerns that prompted congressional action, essentially rewarding economic interests over data security.
China's record $1.2 trillion trade surplus reflects a deliberate manufacturing-first economic policy driven by weak domestic demand and tech independence goals. (39:55) Economist Houze Song explains that Beijing prioritizes technological advancement over economic growth, aiming for only 4% average growth through 2035. This export-heavy strategy, combined with US-China tensions, forces China to "double down on manufacturing and technology first strategy to pursue tech independence," creating inevitable conflicts with trading partners who view China's surpluses as unfair.
The five-year property sector slump has evolved from being a cause of economic problems to a symptom of deeper structural issues. (43:51) Song identifies weak job market conditions, with nearly one-third of urban workers in precarious gig economy positions, as the primary driver of reduced household spending. The root cause has shifted from real estate weakness to labor market insecurity, where workers "are really not very sure that they will still have a job in two months or three months from now."