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A closing China meets a scrambling West—and the balance of power looks different up close. We sit down with our Shanghai-based correspondent, Steve Croll to unpack how the city that once courted foreign CEOs now moves confidently without them, and why the assumptions that guided two decades of outsourcing no longer hold. From Hong Kong’s electric past to today’s tighter controls, the story tracks a deliberate strategy: master the tech, shift management in-house, then narrow the aperture for outside influence.

We follow Trump’s whirlwind through Asia to his meeting with Xi and ask the uncomfortable question: what do you negotiate with when your leverage is thin and your intel thinner? Rare earths sit at the heart of the contest. Beijing maintains the upper hand with export controls on gallium and germanium while the U.S. faces a five-to-seven-year march to rebuild processing. On fentanyl, our guest argues the uncomfortable reality that China could choke precursor flows if it chose, given its enforcement machinery. And on agriculture, American farmers still feel the sting as purchases swing toward Brazil after tariffs and retaliation reworked trade patterns.

This conversation isn’t nostalgia. It’s a field report on how power actually shifts: through supply chains, midstream chokepoints, and the quiet disappearance of foreign voices that once shaped policy choices. We map the practical path forward—reinvest in processing, deepen alliances, compress permitting timelines, and pair external pressure with domestic capacity. If you care about geopolitics beyond photo ops and headlines, this is the ground truth you won’t get from a motorcade. Subscribe, share with a friend who follows global trade, and leave a review with the one policy lever you think matters most.

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