China’s contemporary economic trajectory is paradoxical, marked by both extraordinary technological advancement and mounting macroeconomic vulnerabilities. China has achieved global leadership in advanced manufacturing sectors such as electric vehicles and batteries, and continues to innovate in fields like artificial intelligence. But these successes are offset by deepening financial and fiscal constraints, most visible in a real estate crisis, declining consumer confidence, and soaring local government debt. State-driven resource mobilization, closed financial institutions, and fiscal weakness have produced both global champions and massive inefficiencies. Fiscal reforms and financial modernization are required to translate industrial might into broad-based prosperity, but an authoritarian political structure will make this more challenging than earlier rounds of reforms.
Meg Rithmire (Fri,) studied this question.