- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmy.ml
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmy.ml
- world@lemmy.world
Robotics has catapulted Beijing into a dominant position in many industries
“It’s the most humbling thing I’ve ever seen,” said Ford’s chief executive about his recent trip to China.
“Their cost and the quality of their vehicles is far superior to what I see in the West,” Farley warned in July.
Andrew Forrest, the Australian billionaire behind mining giant Fortescue – which is investing massively in green energy – says his trips to China convinced him to abandon his company’s attempts to manufacture electric vehicle powertrains in-house.
Other executives describe vast, “dark factories” where robots do so much of the work alone that there is no need to even leave the lights on for humans.
“We visited a dark factory producing some astronomical number of mobile phones,” recalls Greg Jackson, the boss of British energy supplier Octopus.
In Britain, Shenzhen-based BYD multiplied its September sales by a factor of 10 this year – overtaking far more established brands such as Mini, Renault and Land Rover.
It’s post reconstruction Japan all over again. Once mocked for making only cheap low quality products, and then feared by America to overtake them as the largest economy in the world before the economic bubble burst.
It’s one of the reasons cyberpunk as a genre has so much Japanese culture in it. In the 80s the US thought that the dollar would be replaced by the yen as the world’s currency and English would be replaced with Japanese as the language of trade. They thought that Americans would be eating their meals with chopsticks in a decade’s time as they were rendered culturally obsolete.
I was a kid in the 80s and remember the fear of Japan. Funny in retrospect, but it was real and it was pervasive at the time.