China Decode: China’s Next 5-Year Plan & Xi’s Possible Successor

40m
In this episode of China Decode, Alice Han and James Kynge break down Xi Jinping’s next five-year plan and the politics behind it, explore the US-China soybean trade war and its impact on American farmers, and dive into the rise of a viral “Chinese Trump” comedian.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Listen and follow along

Transcript

Support for the show comes from Saks Fifth Avenue.

Sacks Fifth Avenue makes it easy to shop for your personal style.

Follow us here, and you can invest in some new arrivals that you'll want to wear again and again, like a relaxed product blazer and Gucci loafers, which can take you from work to the weekend.

Shopping from Saks feels totally customized, from the in-store stylist to a visit to Saks.com, where they can show you things that fit your style and taste.

They'll even let you know when arrivals from your favorite designers are in, or when that Brunello Caccinelli sweater you've been eyeing is back in stock.

So, if you're like me and you need shopping to be personalized and easy, head to Saks Fifth Avenue for the Best Fall Arrivals and Style inspiration.

I need a job with a steady paycheck.

I need a job that offers health care on day one for me and my kids.

I want a job where I can get certified in technical roles, like robotics or software engineering.

In communities across the country, hourly Amazon employees earn an average of over $23 an hour with opportunities to grow their skills and their paycheck by enrolling in free skills training programs and apprenticeships.

Learn more at aboutamazon.com.

Adobe Acrobat Studio, so brand new.

Show me all the things PDFs can do.

Do your work with ease and speed.

PDF Spaces is all you need.

Do hours of research in an instant.

With key insights from an AI assistant.

Pick a template with a click.

Now your prezzo looks super slick.

Close that deal, yeah, you won.

Do that, doing that, did that, done.

Now you can do that, do that with Acrobat.

Now you can do that, do that with the all-new Acrobat.

It's time to do your best work with the all-new Adobe Acrobat Studio.

I think these five-year plans, I mean, they sound like they could be a bit workmanlike, a little bit sort of socialist, communist type of terminology, but they're really important way markers for China's development.

We've had a five-year plan every five years since 1953, and they really show where China's aiming.

And as you say, this one I think will be AI, AI, AI.

It's really hard to overstate the importance of that.

Welcome to China Decode.

I'm Alice Han.

And I'm James King.

Today's episode of China Decode, we're discussing China's five-year plan and Xi's possible successor, how the U.S.-China trade war is hurting soybean farmers, and what a Chinese Trump impersonator says about political satire and the state of comedy in China.

All right, let's get right into it.

I think it's an exciting time in general in China in October, not just because the first week is the national holiday, but also because you've got some important plenary meetings coming up.

Notably, among them, you've got the fourth plenum, in which China is going to discuss the next five-year plan, which will cover 2026 through to 2030.

The fourth plenary session will be held October 20 to 23, and there should be approval of updates to this new five-year plan, which we will soon hear about at the the end of October.

On paper, it's about rebalancing a slowing economy, boosting consumption, investing in high-tech industries, and trying to shake off a prolonged property slump and deflation.

But behind the scenes, this is also about politics, where Chinese President Xi Jinping is personally driving the blueprint, even as questions about his eventual successor and how that transition could reshape China are starting to surface.

I'm really excited about what's going to come out of Beijing at the end of October, James.

I think that if you look back to the last five-year plan, at least my reading of the 14th five-year plan, which covered 2020 to 2025, China placed a lot of emphasis on high-quality growth, mainly in the form of technology.

It also placed a lot of emphasis on dual circulation, so boosting the internal demand in the economy, not just the external demand.

And we can debate whether or not they've been successful in this last five-year plan, but I'm excited to see what they announce for the next five-year plan.

My own sense is that it's going to be about AI, AI, and AI.

When I was in China, it was very clear to me that they were using this kind of AI plus approach to the economy that they did.

If you remember, Li Ke Chang announced the Internet Plus program several years ago.

I think a similar methodology is being applied to AI.

And I could see, I think, a big push towards trying to boost consumption, trying to boost China's social security safety net, which remains significantly weak by global standards.

But what's your take, James, on the next five-year plan?

I'm curious to hear.

Well, like you, Alice, I think these five-year plans, I mean, they sound like they could be a bit workmanlike, a little bit sort of socialist, communist

type of terminology, but they're really important way markers for China's development.

We've had a five-year plan every five years since 1953, and they really show where China's aiming.

And as you say, this one I think, will be AI, AI, AI.

It's really hard to overstate the importance of that.

And, you know, if we look at some of the statements that China's made about AI, Just in August, there was a big government report that said that AI would be the core engine of a new round of technological revolution and industrial transformation.

It's quite rare that you get in Chinese documents them using the R word, revolution.

I mean, that's normally a word that's reserved for the 1949 communist revolution.

So to be using that, I think, is quite significant.

China is betting really big on this.

Yes.

And the way that I think about these five-year plans is it shows what Beijing politically and economically is trying to prioritize.

Now, whether or not they reach those targets or those goals remains to be seen.

Certainly, you can debate that parts of the last five-year plan were not met, but it shows what policymakers will care about moving forward.

And I think critical to the last five-year plan, I think, was made in China.

I think China has been quite successful in meeting many of those goals, especially when it comes to EVs as well as robotics and aviation.

But what I think about this next five-year plan is that AI is going to be the cornerstone and key to the way that they think about their economic, political, and social problems.

I was just looking at some of the AI plus plan earlier this week that they've unveiled.

It's a three-step three-step roadmap for the future of Chinese AI.

So they want a penetration rate of 70% of AI integration in six key sectors by 2027.

And they want this to cover 90% of the economy by 2030 and have quote-unquote universal adoption by 2035.

I think this fits very well into the framework that Xi Jinping announced in 2023, the new quality productive forces.

That I think will come up again in the next five-year plan.

And I think a lot of emphasis will be placed beyond AI on some of these choke point technologies, whether it's advanced semiconductors, especially for AI, advanced chemicals, advanced pharmaceuticals in the biotech realm, as well as scientific equipment and aviation.

These are sort of what they call the choke point technologies where China still is relatively weak and relies on a lot of imports from the West.

I think that that is going to be a key focus and part of Xi Jinping's ideology when it comes to China's technological supremacy and self-reliance.

What do you think, James?

Yeah, I mean, I think you're right to stress the applications of AI.

What I sometimes find a bit annoying about commentators on China and AI is that they never get down to specifics.

They're constantly using the word AI as if it's a kind of magic wand.

So I think, you know, it's as well to think about actual specific examples.

I came across three just the other day.

So the latest unitary humanoid robot is powered by AI.

And just in the last month, this robot has had a new breakthrough.

It can now jump and then do a 360-degree spin in the air and then land on its feet.

And if it falls over, it can get back up onto its feet again using what's called an anti-gravity mode.

Apparently, all of that stuff, the ability to turn 360 degrees in the middle of the air, apparently that's all powered by AI.

Last year, there was this extraordinary mission to the dark side of the moon that the Chinese lunar probe, Chang'e, Chang'e 6, I think it was, did.

And then after it landed on the dark side of the moon, there was a tiny little lunar rover that went walk about or trundle about on the surface of the moon.

And then it turned round and it took a selfie, a historic selfie, of the Chang'e lunar module sitting on the moon on the dark side of the moon.

That was all powered by AI entirely, the whole mission.

And so that's another example.

And then a more kind of down-to-earth example is in Beijing.

At the moment, there's an AI hospital at Tsinghua University.

This is actually like a test hospital.

It's not treating real patients yet.

But they've got 42 AI doctors.

These doctors can see simultaneously thousands of patients because they're just AI, and they have diagnosed already about 10,000 test cases of people in inverted commas with ailments.

And apparently their success rate is about 93%, which compares to

human doctor success rate.

So we can see just in those three examples that AI is really across the board.

Alice, if I have a chance, could I tell you about my experience with a humanoid robot in a hotel in Shenzhen last year?

Please do.

I'm excited to to hear about it.

How dystopic on the scale of one to 10 is this story going to be?

Dystopic.

It's not that dystopic, I don't think.

But a disclaimer, first of all, I met this robot in the hotel lobby.

I can't quite call it humanoid because it was on wheels, not on legs.

But anyway, I decided to give it a test.

It was sort of hanging around, and I thought, look, you know, I'll give it my mobile phone and I'll ask it to deliver my mobile phone to my hotel room.

So

I gave it the mobile phone and it truly over to the lift and it somehow opened the doors of the elevator.

And then it went to the fifth floor and it went all the way down the passageway to my room.

And then it opened my hotel door.

And I politely, being British, of course, politely asked it to give it my mobile phone back.

And

it did so.

And then I discovered that these humanoid robots or whatever you call this are developing a little bit of chutzpah because it then said to me, if you approve of my service, please give me a five-star rating.

Okay.

Did you give it a five-star rating?

I certainly did.

It was worth it.

Okay.

And it seemed like a happy robot.

But well, it trundled away.

It didn't have any complaints.

Well, that's interesting.

And I think begs a question more broadly about to what extent some of these applications will be an automation as opposed to real integration and application of AI.

Certainly, I think that what's really interesting about China's AI ecosystem that doesn't get enough press, I think, is the fact that it's mainly open source.

And I think that this creates a more competitive landscape for AI models.

We see a lot more AI models cross-proliferating in the Chinese ecosystem.

What is interesting to me to see potentially in the five-year plan is the way in which AI is integrated in public governance.

So, in the public sector, when it comes to medical records or local government records, I think already certain companies like DeepSeek have partnerships and relationships with local local governments and the central government.

So for me, it'll be interesting to see to what extent these AI models are integrated in sort of the public governance capacity, which brings back to, I think, the beginning of the discussion.

Well, this all matters because ultimately the fourth plenum historically is when the CCP comes together and talks about party governance, personnel discipline.

organizational logistics and whatnot.

And as I was preparing for this talk, I was looking at some of the data about purges in China.

So we've seen the biggest, I think, purge of the CMC, the Central Military Commission in the PRC since Mao.

There's been a big, I think, a rooting out of especially the senior level, the general level of the military.

So to my mind, it will be interesting to see if we get any glimmers about what is going to happen to the PLA and the CMC structure.

How are these people going to be replaced?

And secondly, the most important question is, is Xi prepared to groom a successor or is he going to continue as president for life?

I don't yet yet see the signs to indicate that Xi Jinping is ready to pass on the baton, so to speak, but I know that people will be watching that closely as well, not just for the five-year plan, but also for any glimmers or suggestions as to whether or not Xi Jinping will remain in power.

Have you heard anything about this, James?

This is a total black box.

The China analysts that I speak to, everybody says that nobody honestly has a clue about Xi Jinping's plans to stay on or not stay on.

I do think that what you mentioned, Alice, about the Central Military Commission and replacing those members of the Central Military Commission that were supposed to be loyal to Xi is interesting and it's a puzzle.

And in a sense, you know, where there's smoke, there's fire in the Chinese political system, but we just can't read it accurately.

You know, at the same time as looking at signs like that, we also have to acknowledge that all seven members of the Politburo Standing Committee, so that's the pinnacle of Communist Party power in China, they are all either long-term allies of Xi or have served him loyally over more than a decade.

And more than half of the broader 24 members in the broader Politburo are also his protégés.

So I really think that if C wants to stay on, he probably can.

That's my gut feel.

But to be honest, I don't think there's an analyst in the world outside a tiny number of charmed individuals in Beijing who honestly have a clue whether Xi Jinping will stay on or not.

I mean, I would agree with this, although my money is that he's staying on.

He's not too old by American politics standards.

He's 71.

So if he takes care of his health, he should see, I think, a good solid decade ahead.

But everyone will be watching that closely for the political ramifications if anything does come up.

All right, we'll be back for more after a quick break, so stay with us.

Support for PropG comes from PipeDrive.

One of the major things entrepreneurs struggle with when starting a business is the sales process.

It's easy to get disorganized, jumping between back and forth emails, scattered notes, and forgotten follow-ups, spending more time chasing paperwork than actually closing.

That's where PipeDrive comes in, a top-rated CRM tool for small to medium businesses.

Their visual sales pipeline lets you see where every deal is, what stage it's in, and what needs to happen next, and it's all in one dashboard.

You can automate follow-ups and set reminders for meetings so no contact gets forgotten and leads don't slip through the cracks.

Plus, PipeDrive AI analyzes your sales process, helps you summarize long email chains, and finds qualified leads for your business.

It's a powerful, simple CRM built by salespeople for salespeople.

Join the over 100,000 companies already using PipeDrive.

Right now, when you visit pipedrive.com slash profg, you'll get a 30-day free trial.

No credit card or payment needed.

Just head to pipedrive.com slash profg to get started.

That's pipedrive.com slash profg, and you can be up and running in minutes.

Support for ProfG comes from BetterHelp.

October 10th is World Mental Health Day and we want to thank the therapists out there, but also acknowledge that your mental health journey isn't just confined to a single day.

And BetterHelp therapists have helped over 5 million people worldwide on their mental health journeys day in and day out.

That's millions of stories, millions of journeys, and behind everyone is a therapist who showed up, listened, and helped someone take a step forward.

Moments in therapy, like asking the right question, providing a safe space to cry, or creating a small win, can change lives.

It's why BetterHelp is honoring those connections and the therapists who make them possible, while showing how easy it is to get guidance from a licensed therapist online with BetterHelp.

So, this World Mental Health Day, we're celebrating the therapists who've helped millions of people move forward.

If you're ready to find the right therapist for you, BetterHelp can help you start that journey.

Our listeners get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com/slash prof g.

That's better h-e-l-p.com/slash profg.

Welcome back.

Soybeans are the latest flashpoint in the U.S.-China trade conflict.

For the first time in years, and this is very startling, China hasn't bought a single soybean from American farmers this season, choosing instead to rely on imports from Brazil and Argentina.

Now, that's a huge blow for U.S.

farmers who have long depended on China to buy a huge share of their crop.

And it comes as US President Donald Trump vows to raise this issue directly and personally with Chinese President Xi Jinping at this month's APEC summit in South Korea.

There have been reports that Trump may actually be going to Beijing earlier than expected, as early as November.

And a lot of this probably hinges on whether or not some kind of a deal can be ironed out beforehand that involves soybeans and Boeing parts.

James, obviously the soybean story, which is so critical to American agriculture, is also critical to the U.S.-China trade conflict that is still ongoing.

How much leverage does Beijing really gain by cutting off U.S.

soybeans entirely?

I think they gain quite a lot of leverage.

This is the first time in more than 20 years that Chinese importers have not bought soybeans from the U.S.

autumn harvests.

So that's the first point.

The next point is that China bought roughly 13 billion US dollars worth of US soybeans last year.

So if it continues this policy of not buying a single bean, then that obviously removes 13 billion from the pockets of American farmers.

The other point is that China has bought 52%

of all American soybean purchases, i.e.

those are purchases that are sold abroad in the past.

So this is a really big hit to American farmers.

And I don't know a huge amount about American politics, but I think these farming areas in middle America are really important when it comes to politics.

And so far, the price, because China's exited the market effectively, the price of soybeans has also been falling.

They're now trading at about 10 US dollars a bushel.

That's down from around $13 at the start of 2024.

And when you consider that farmers are often on a kind of a knife edge in terms of their their profit margins, that's a big hit as well.

So this comes at a very inconvenient time for the Trump administration's trade negotiators.

As you mentioned, Alice, we've got one important meeting after another, and we've got the end of the so-called tariff truce coming up on the 10th of November.

And so something's got to give.

We don't really know what, but something, I think, has got to give on this.

Otherwise, those American farmers are really going to be hit.

Oh, yeah, I agree.

And to some extent, I think this is pretty low-hanging fruit for the Chinese to agree to commit to.

Although the numbers are startling, just as you cited, James.

U.S.

total soybean exports are down 23% year on year so far this year.

But it's all part of a bigger narrative.

Since Trade War I, China has pivoted significantly from U.S.

soybeans, and it's largely moved towards Latin America, namely Brazil.

So U.S.

soybeans now meet about 20% of Chinese demand, whereas Brazil is 70%.

And this pivoting away, I think, is a big strategic shift that has obviously hurt the U.S.

agriculture sector.

But I think what isn't covered enough is that China is also internally seeing a slowdown in demand of soybeans.

I was looking at some of the data on the demand side.

What is interesting to me is a couple of things.

The soybean ratio of hog feed.

So, basically, you know, how pigs and pork are the big meat industry in China.

Hog feed that is largely comprised of something like soy meal, which is a soybean component, that ratio has gone down due to government demands and targets.

So, actually, soybean meal demand will actually fall in the near term.

And China is targeting a cut to soy meal, which is the soybeans used in animal feed, from 13% in 2023 to 10% by 2030.

And this is really important because around 70% of total Chinese soybean consumption is used in hog soymeal feed.

So, I think there's a bit of a rude awakening for U.S.

agricultural producers because not only has China strategically shifted towards Latin America since Trade War I, but it's also seeing an internal slowdown in its demand for soybean imports.

So even although I think the low-hanging fruit when it comes to this trade deal is for China to say, okay, U.S., we're going to buy more of your soybeans, it's going to be very hard for me to see them fully pivoting back to the U.S.

or even meeting the same kind of growth as we previously saw in demand in the past because of these internal dynamics.

Again, another thing that I thought was interesting as I looked back at Trade War I is that China only purchased 58% of the total additional 200 billion in purchases that they agreed to as part of the 2020-2021 first trade war framework deal.

Again, it's hard for me to see them fully meeting any kind of increased agricultural purchase commitment that they may decide to promise.

But again, when it comes to Trump, a a lot of it is about the performance or rather the discussions rather than the real details.

So that'll be really interesting to see.

I sense that on the Chinese side, they can easily verbally say, look, we'll buy more agricultural products and Boeing products.

We've basically greenlit this TikTok deal.

I think that paves the way for a Trump-Xi meeting, both in Korea and potentially in China.

What do you think, James?

Yeah, I mean, and you mentioned those U.S.

agricultural producers there, Alice.

And, you know, there's a strange sidelight to this whole story, because back in 1985, a young man called Xi Jinping actually visited Iowa.

He went as part of a lowly agricultural delegation from China's Hebei province to a town called Muscatine, which has just 24,000 people.

And then just as he was preparing to become president again in 2012, he opted again to go to Iowa.

And this time he was received by a farmer there called Rick Kimberley.

Of course, he was a soya bean grower.

And of course, there were pictures taken of a smiling Xi Jinping sitting behind the wheel of a John Deere tractor.

And I just imagine that if Mr.

Kimberley and his family are still producing soybeans, they're not going to be at all happy about what's going on right now.

My sense of this is very much for some of the reasons you've given, Alice,

actually China does need American soya beans and China would like to have a full trade deal with the US, obviously that brings down US tariffs across a number of different sectors.

And my sense of it too is that the Trump administration has been wrong-footed on several occasions so far by these tough tactics, this kind of shadow play that the Chinese have been implementing.

So, you know, whether it be on rare earths that we've talked about in previous episodes or on the soybeans, I think China's basically building up its negotiating chips.

Well, it's funny you say chips because to my mind, I think this Chinese strategy is we'll buy more soybeans if you sell us black boiled chips from Nvidia.

And it may actually work out for them if Trump really believes politically he needs to support US agriculture.

Brilliant segue there, Alice.

Yes, yeah.

Which I think, you know, chimes with his recent tweets, which have been very much about China needs to buy more soybeans, needs to buy more aircraft from Boeing.

But certainly, I think, you know, again, to put it in perspective, I think Latin America and the global south is a big part of this story because, you know, we're seeing record Argentine exports of soybeans to China and other agricultural products.

Even though China may promise to buy more goods from the US, I think the bigger picture is that China is diversifying from the US and is increasingly buying commodities and agricultural products from Latin America, where they seem to have an ease of doing business with countries like Brazil and even Argentina, even though Malay is a known ally to Trump.

So again, I think in the larger context, it's important not to forget that China has pivoted quite a bit since Trade War I towards the global south.

Absolutely.

Yeah.

I mean, you're so right to bring this back to the big picture.

Those are the big tectonic shifts of China's trading relationships with the world and very deliberately done by China.

I think something like 44%

of China's total trade these days is done with countries of the global south.

So China's sort of Uber strategy looking forward, you know, five, ten years is really to engage with the parts of the world that are not in the West and thereby increase its influence with those countries.

And of course, those countries make up the vast majority of countries in political organizations like the UN.

So if China can get stronger relations with them, then it can enlist the voting power of the global south, all of those countries, to basically get its way in international affairs.

So that's an important part of this whole topic.

I very much agree.

Perfect.

All right, let's take a quick break.

So stay with us.

To remind you that 60% of sales on Amazon come from independent sellers, here's Scott from String Joy.

Hey, y'all, we make guitar strings right here in Nashville, Tennessee.

Scott grows his business through Amazon.

They pick up, store, and deliver his products all across the country.

I love how musicians everywhere can rock out with our guitar strings.

A one, two, three, four.

Rock on, Scott.

Shop small business like mine on Amazon.

Welcome back.

So, James, this is probably one of my favorite segments of today's discussion.

Meet Rai Chen, better known online as the Chinese Trump.

His spot-on impersonations of Donald Trump, complete with the hand gestures, rambling tangents, and over-the-top accent, have made him a viral star across China and now the US.

Chen says he's not doing politics, just comedy, but his skits are landing at a moment when US-China relations are tense and Trump himself is back at the center of global headlines and global comedy.

So let's watch a clip.

Folks, I'm in China.

The Lomen Kratos, one of the world's heritage sites.

It's very beautiful.

It's tremendous.

Folks, this is what you get when you travel in China on a national holiday.

When the Westerners say soup, they often mean something thick, mushy, that's boring, like porridge.

But if you really want to drink decent soup, you have to come to China.

Of course, some veggie.

I like to eat it healthy, right?

What I like the most is that the locals, they also have their spry.

They call it happy.

That was great.

I have to say that he really nailed a lot of the mannerisms and cadence of how Trump speaks.

I think this is a very important and interesting window into China's comedy scene, but the way that China thinks about humor and politics.

And I want to sort of go back to the history of this, which I've since read up on.

You know, growing up, for instance, my family's from Shanghai.

So, as you know, James, Shanghai is known for its comedy.

And in fact, there was a comedian who back in the day basically created this new form of stand-up comedy called Qingkou, in which they were borrowing elements of Western stand-up comedy, making sort of reference to everyday society, descriptions about funny characters, using dialects often in Shanghainese.

But even if we go back further in time, and I'm sure you have a view on this, James, is you had this kind of crosstalk known as as Shangsheng, which is this kind of duo act, comedy act, kind of like, you know, Fry and Laurie, Albert and Costello, Lewis and Martin, these sort of two comedians that are dueling with each other, making puns and comic references and descriptions.

That has been, I think, a big part of Chinese comedy history.

In fact, I've read somewhere that they often have masters and apprentices.

They basically train some people from a very young age, as young as five or six, to become one of these Shangsheng crosstalk comedians.

So there's definitely a history of comedy.

It's slightly different in China, but I think this is one of the first comedic acts that has both Chinese and global appeal.

And obviously it's been helped by TikTok and Doying and the rise of social media.

But I think this is an interesting, again, entry point into how comedy is used and understood in China and how, to some extent, the West is more interested in it than it ever has been.

But James, I'm so curious to hear what you have to say about this.

Yeah, that's fascinating, Alice.

I really, there's the Chingco stuff I particularly didn't actually know.

That's really interesting.

This guy, Ryan Chen, though, really fascinates me.

Apparently, he has over 1.5 million followers on his American Instagram and TikTok accounts.

And he's got over 1 million followers in China.

So he's quite big, actually.

And obviously, I just think that the subject matter is the secret of his success.

You know, traveling traveling around China, you often hear people referencing Trump.

Trump is very much a big figure in Chinese sort of day-to-day discourse.

And also, he's been a target of satire for quite some time.

His nickname in Chinese is Tuan Jianguo, which means Truan obviously is a Chinese word that's supposed to sound like Trump.

And then Zheng Guo means to build the country.

So I suppose the nickname Tranjio could mean Trump the nation builder.

And this is highly satirical because what it means is that all of these trade actions and criticisms of China that Trump has been pushing through have actually backfired on America and in the process have helped to build China as a nation.

But at the same time, it has to be said that actually I found quite a lot of Chinese who rather like Trump.

They like his style.

They like the fact that he, he, you know, he calls a spade a spade.

He shoots from the hip and he's not a boring politician.

I don't know what you think, Alice.

I mean, what's your experience?

I wouldn't say that Trump is a universally disliked American president in China.

What's your sense of that?

I actually have relatives in Beijing and Shanghai and one half of the family, it's kind of like US politics, James.

One half of the family thinks that Trump is the Antichrist and they don't understand how a lunatic like him could be president.

And the other half think that he's kind of cute and he appeals to the everyday man.

He's got this kind of earthiness about him that makes him very memorable and almost adorable if you can actually describe him as such.

So I agree with you, James.

There's he's definitely grabbed the imagination of everyday Chinese people.

He's a very memorable figure and a character.

And what strikes me as interesting about Ryan Chen is that he is using the Trump impression to basically sell parts of China.

So if you watch his videos, he's going to an EV car show.

He's showcasing Chinese tourism, Chinese food.

One of my favorite videos is when he's talking to the president of UFC, Daniel White, and they're making sholung bal dumplings together.

Today, we have something to cheer you up.

We got some traditional Chinese local delicacy, mainly Shenhai snacks.

You're gonna love them.

Let's sprinkle some flour here to prevent the dough from sticking.

Pick one dough, okay?

Depress it with your palm, push forward, like spin it.

Finally, you see it.

Mine looks like shit.

Mine is worse.

I agree.

So it's a version of kind of cultural soft power that has been used through the hijacking of a Trump impression that I think is quite interesting.

But again, I think it speaks to the fact that there is a comedy scene in China, even although there's a degree of censorship.

and self-censorship, especially when it comes to politically sensitive topics.

But there is a burgeoning comedy scene and it's moving towards the direction of stand-up, towards the direction of these viral influences on TikTok.

And again, I think that this is a sign that comedy is still alive in China, but it's with Chinese characteristics.

I suppose Ryan Chun and some of the other comedians in China, the one topic they can't touch is politics or certainly, you know, China's leaders, right?

So I suppose that's perhaps the reason he has to sort of make a virtue out of talking about food and and other things like that.

Am I right there?

I think so.

And I was watching some stand-up comedy shows.

So there's one that's famous in China called Rock and Roast.

And it's a reality TV meet stand-up comedy show in which you have everyday normal people who are comedic amateurs come on stage and deliver a stand-up routine.

And oftentimes they will talk about the fact that it's hard to make money.

Everyone's nagging them about having kids and getting married and how modernity is really tough.

There was this one guy who made a political commentary, especially about the Chinese military and Chinese nationalism.

And that faced a lot of nationalist backlash from everyday viewers.

So he got a lot of hate, and I think there was a degree of censorship of that.

So again, it reminds us that it's not all fun and games.

There's a degree of censorship and self-censorship.

But I think it's an interesting entry point into seeing what everyday Chinese people feel.

There's quite a degree of candor when you listen to some of these routines about how tough it is to live in a slower growing China, which we talked about in previous podcasts.

And I suppose also it acts as a bit of a pressure valve, would you say?

You've got, what did we say last time, I think about nearly 20%

of urban Chinese youth who can't find a job.

And many of those who can find a job, even if they've graduated from university, are ending up in, I don't know, Starbucks or the equivalent in China.

So is there a sense that the comedy helps to sort of lance the boil or it helps to at least release the pressure of a very stressful life, really, in modern-day urban China?

And again, not to make this too academic, but I've read some pieces in the past about how the central government allows a degree of locally voiced dissent through protests because it, again, to your point, James, it releases some of the pressure valve without it being concentrated on the central government.

So they allow a degree of low-level protest and complaint on social media and everyday life because they want to allow this pressure valve to be released, but they don't want it to go too big and at the expense of what they consider national stability.

But I don't know if you've watched this.

One of my favorite films last year is a film called Yolo in English, which I think it's

something in Chinese.

And it's about a Chinese female boxer who starts off as a very fat woman and then trains to be an amateur boxer, loses a lot of weight.

The director, who was also the main character, lost a lot of weight training, but it's a hugely funny film if you haven't seen it.

That sounds great.

I haven't seen it actually.

I know it did really well.

I think it generated something like 3.5 billion renminbi.

So it obviously did well.

This is a very interesting emerging cultural scene, actually, isn't it?

Yeah, there's a great deal more in terms of humor coming out in films and these kits and Ryan Chen himself.

Yeah, and in a strange way, he's become a diplomat or ambassador for China by impersonating Trump.

So go figure.

All right, James, prediction time.

I'm interested.

What's your prediction for the future?

Okay, well, we were talking about humanoid robots a bit earlier as part of the idea that AI and AI devices would be a big part of the new five-year plan.

So my prediction is that Unitree, which is the Chinese humanoid robot company or some other robot maker, will by the end of next year be selling a humanoid robot for about 3,000 US dollars or less.

For reference, the current price of the R1, which is a humanoid robot made by Unitree, is 5,900 US dollars at its lowest price.

And by the way, that is a mere fraction of the cheapest price of a humanoid robot sold anywhere else in the world.

But I'm afraid, Alice, you'll have to wait until the end of next year to see whether I'm right about that prediction.

Sorry for that.

And you're saying that they will be exporting them globally at that price.

I reckon they will be, yeah.

I mean, we can already find Chinese humanoid robots on sale in London and in other cities in Europe.

Oh, really?

Yeah.

So this has already started.

This is starting right now.

China's mass producing humanoid robots as of a few months ago.

And we've all seen this movie before.

When China gets to mass production, then the prices tend to come down precipitously.

So that's the basis of my prediction.

Of course, I got no idea whether I'll be right or not, but I think it kind of, what I'm trying to get at really is this is the direction of travel.

Okay.

What's your prediction, Alice?

What are you seeing in your crystal ball?

Well, I sense that there will be more optimism about Chinese tech stocks.

We're already seeing, I think, a record degree of enthusiasm this year.

You've got the Hang Seng Index up almost 40% year to date.

But I think this bull run, especially when it comes to Chinese tech companies, has longer to run.

And I think when we get the announcement of the five-year plan, we'll see equities being priced upwards because of enthusiasm about this AI rollout.

That's an easy, I think, cop-ed answer or prediction for this week, but I think nonetheless could be quite lucrative for some people listening.

So keep your eyes peeled for the five-year plan and what that means for Chinese stocks.

All right, that's all for this episode.

Thank you for listening to China Decode.

This is a production of Prof G Media.

Our producer is David Toledo.

Our associate producer is Eric Genikis.

Our research associate is Dan Shallan.

Our technical director is Drew Burrows.

Our engineer is William Flynn.

And our executive producer is Catherine Dillon.

Make sure to follow us wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss an episode.

Talk to you again next week.

To remind you that 60% of sales on Amazon come from independent sellers, here's Scott from String Joy.

Hey, y'all, we make guitar strings right here in Nashville, Tennessee.

Scott grows his business through Amazon.

They pick up, store, and deliver his products all across the country.

I love how musicians everywhere can rock out with our guitar strings.

Ho one, two, three, four.

Rock on, Scott.

Shop small business like mine on Amazon.

Adobe Acrobat Studio, so brand new.

Show me all the things PDFs can do.

Do your work with ease and speed.

PDF spaces is all you need.

Do hours of research in an instant.

With key insights from an AI assistant.

Pick a template with a click.

Now your prezo looks super slick.

Close that deal, yeah, you won.

Do

Oh, the car from Carvana's here.

Well, will you look at that?

It's exactly what I ordered.

Like, precisely.

It would be crazy if there were any catches.

But there aren't, right?

Right.

Because that's how car buying should be.

With Carvana, you get the car you want.

Choose delivery or pickup and a week to love it or return it.

Buy your car today with Carvana.

Delivery or pickup fees may apply.

Limitations and exclusions may apply.

See our seven-day return policy at carvana.com.