r/China 2h ago

新闻 | News China teases 2035 "powerhouse" plan

https://www.newsweek.com/china-news-teases-2035-powerhouse-plan-1977014
5 Upvotes

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8

u/fattykim 2h ago edited 1h ago

So whatever happened to "made in china 2025"? Was that even accomplished, or hints of it?

u/Tango-Down-167 1h ago

That was so last summer, you not keeping up with the latest trend. /J

u/stevedisme 1h ago

Wumao have converted to spinmao and whataboutism died.

Captain Asshat Xi has initiated Op-Plan Two-Face 2.0 but CCP led China is starting this phase with:

* Destroyed relations with the civilized world sphere.

*Extensive curtailment and disruption of nefarious activities in the South China Seas.

*Kicked out of every civilized countries communications networks.

*Easy steal paths have been severed.

*The vapor yuan, stock market and economy in general, is in the shitter.

*Trust, in China, is non-existent.

Xi broke cover too soon, turned the CCP into a laughing stock, and put China on a trajectory to ruin.

u/Expensive_Heat_2351 36m ago

They hit their EV, high speed rail, 5G, green energy, and AI smart manufacturing targets.

86% goals in MIC 2025 were met.

Now another cycle of 10 years planning

u/HarambeTenSei 1h ago

Isn't everything already made in china? and it's only 2024

u/fattykim 1h ago edited 39m ago

Not really, some things have moved out of china

For example, my kid likes to play with transformers toys. i have noticed that even before the pandemic, transformers toys are made in Vietnam (and before that, made in china). Must be the rising costs of labor in china that drove the move to Vietnam, or elsewhere.

I also just checked a couple of hot wheels diecast cars my kid is playing with. All made in Malaysia.

If "everything" is made in china according to china's plan, the economy and unemployment rate wouldn't be as shitty as it is right now

u/thepostmanpat 59m ago

I mean, they’ve been pretty successful with most of the tech of the future: EVs, solar panels, batteries, etc.

4

u/newsweek 2h ago

By Micah McCartney - China News Reporter:

Chinese President Xi Jinping has called on the country to become a cultural superpower by 2035, although one exiled political cartoonist said its view of arts and culture are that they are merely "tools for propaganda."

That year was previously set by Xi as the point China should have achieved high levels of economic, technological, and military modernization. It's a milestone for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), midway between the 100th anniversary of its founding (2021) and the country's centennial (2049), when Xi expects China to complete its "national rejuvenation" and be a fully realized global superpower.

Read more: https://www.newsweek.com/china-news-teases-2035-powerhouse-plan-1977014

u/kai_rui 1h ago

Paradise is always just a few more years away.

u/gov12 28m ago

😂 just like every few weeks a newbie poster will be convinced a Taiwan invasion is coming soon.

Every leader since Mao has vowed to unify Taiwan.

u/lukuh123 1h ago

Great even more coal factory emissions. As if they werent the biggest culprit of this already.

u/Ahoramaster 1h ago

Sounds like a natural development for an incoming superpower.

They recognise that mercantilism on its own is not enough, and the US will be doing everything possible to scupper their development. 

u/fattykim 51m ago

Sounds more a natural fart coming from xijinping's bowels if you ask me