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Dive into China’s economy, factory floors, and strategic posture—all in one high-energy, sixty-second podcast. Whether you’re researching “China trade war impact,” “Chinese unemployment surge,” or “EV price war in China,” this episode is your one-stop source for up-to-the-minute insights. 

First up, the shockwaves from Washington’s decision to eliminate the “de minimis” duty-free threshold on small-parcel shipments. Temu’s parent, PDD Holdings, just reported a jaw-dropping forty-seven percent drop in first-quarter profits—down to fourteen point seven billion yuan—and saw its U.S.-listed shares crater more than thirteen percent. We break down how those new U.S. small-parcel tariffs of up to one hundred twenty percent forced Temu to reroute its supply chains and triggered a limited ninety-day tariff rollback, and why Europe and the U.K. are now circling with their own parcel fees and customs reviews. Keywords: “U.S.-China tariffs,” “Temu profits plunge,” “global parcel fees.” 

Then, we move inside China’s manufacturing hubs, where toy factories and electronics assemblers are grappling with mountains of unsold inventory. According to Natixis economists, sustained U.S. duties could slash Chinese exports in half, costing as many as six million manufacturing jobs—climbing to nine million if tariffs fully snap back. We’ll explain why that bleak projection matters for social stability and global supply chains. Keywords: “manufacturing job losses,” “China export forecast,” “Natixis trade war analysis.” 

Next, we survey China’s job market, where official urban unemployment may read around five percent but youth unemployment has exploded into the mid-teens. With twelve million new college graduates poised to enter the workforce, full-time positions are vanishing and workers are flocking to gig economy roles—food delivery, ride-hail driving, contract manufacturing—that offer flexibility but no benefits. We’ll highlight the latest Beijing policy tweaks—wage subsidies, entrepreneurship grants, and “quiet” layoffs—and why household savings have surged past one hundred sixty trillion yuan despite repeated deposit-rate cuts. Keywords: “China youth unemployment,” “gig economy growth,” “Beijing wage subsidies.” 

On the European front, a record-low thirty-eight percent of EU companies plan to expand in China this year, down from over fifty percent last year. Yet many remain hooked on bargain-basement components, prompting creative workarounds like assembling Chinese parts in bonded warehouses in Taiwan to dodge U.S. tariffs. We unpack how this paradox fuels Europe’s dependency on Chinese supply chains even as corporate sentiment sours.

Buckle up for the electric-vehicle showdown, where BYD slashed its Seagull hatchback price by nearly three thousand U.S. dollars and ignited a brutal price war. Startups like Neta and Polestar are teetering on the brink as margins evaporate, and regulators are probing “zero-mile used cars” schemes aimed at hitting sales targets. It’s an EV bloodbath in China’s world-leading car market. Keywords: “China EV price war,” “BYD Seagull discount,” “automotive consolidation forecast.” 

We shift gears to regional security: North Korea lambasted Trump’s “Golden Dome” space-based missile defense as “arrogant” and a guise for outer-space warfare—while Kim Jong Un’s multi-warhead missile tests aim to overwhelm any shield. Simultaneously, Beijing’s near-daily military incursions and hotlines against “separatists” in Taiwan ramp up cross-Strait tensions, raising the stakes of miscalculation.

We explore how this breakthrough could revolutionize long-range surveillance and force fresh investments in counter-interferometry. Keywords: “China laser imaging,” “intensity interferometry,” “remote sensing technology.” 

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