The Wire China · China
TIER 4 Sun, 24 Aug 2025 23:14:59 +0000
Plus, China’s Myanmar problem | | --- | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | #### Weekly newsletter | August 24th, 2025 --- | --- | **Good evening.** How do you solve a problem like Myanmar? The country represents China’s best hope of an overland alternative to the easily blockaded Strait of Malacca, by building oil pipelines and other infrastructure linking Yunnan province to the Bay of Bengal. It is also a critical source of the rare earths China needs in its century-defining technological contest with the U.S. These interests, Sean Williams writes in this week’s cover story, in turn depend upon stable relations between Myanmar’s brutal ruling junta, which controls the country’s Buddhist heartland, and the various ethnic groups that run its resource-rich hinterlands bordering Yunnan and Tibet. Such stability has been achieved off-and-on over the decades through “ceasefire capitalism”, in which the two sides suspend hostilities that threaten China’s economic interests. But it is a balancing act that has been tested as never before since the junta returned to power in Myanmar’s latest coup d’etat, launched in 2021, and may soon fail altogether. Also in this week’s issue: Why baseballs are more expensive; America's electricity grid gap with China; Larry Kudlow on Trump and China; and China's fertility paradox. To read these stories, gain access to our extensive archive, and opt-in to our popular daily news round up, subscribe to _The Wire_ today. _Was this email forwarded to you?_ Sign up to receive our free newsletter. Click here to view this email in your browser. --- | | | | | | --- | | --- | | --- | | --- | --- | --- A column of officers and soldiers of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) walks to a position located on a hilltop. _Credit: Thierry Falise/LightRocket via Getty Images_ | **China's Myanmar Problem** When a little-known warlord lost control over his fief in northeastern Myanmar late last year, Chinese diplomats began to worry. Zahkung Ting Ying had long held the rare-earth rich territory around Chipwi in Kachin state and was allied with Myanmar’s ruling military junta, ensuring the stable operations of mines supplying China. But his defeat by the Kachin Independence Army and the KIA’s much rockier relationship with the junta suddenly threatened China’s interests in Myanmar. It is a pattern that is being repeated with increasing frequency across the country, posing an unprecedented strategic challenge for President Xi Jinping’s administration. --- | --- | --- Workers produce baseballs in a factory in Longyan, Fujian, China, August 4, 2025. _Credit: Zhang Bin/China News Service/VCG via AP Images_ | **America’s Pastime Gets Caught Out** Every time a batter hits a home run or fouls off a ball into the stands, it costs U.S. baseball teams more money than ever before thanks to U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on China-made goods. And baseballs are just the start of it, writes Noah Berman. China is also a major supplier of bats, gloves and all the other equipment used in the game. So play ball! If you can afford it… --- | --- | --- Electricians check the temperature of an electrical device at a transformer station in Jiujiang, Jiangxi, China. _Credit: ChinaImages via Depositphotos_ | **The Grid Gap** The Trump administration isn’t even trying to compete with China when it comes to the generation of renewable hydro, solar and wind power. But there is an equally important, if less known, energy system gap separating the two countries, which Dean Minello examines in this week’s Big Picture. Unlike America’s fragmented and patchwork grid system, China has prioritised the development of ultra-high voltage transmission lines to make sure it can transfer clean energy from its resource-rich interior to high-demand areas in the country’s east and south. --- | --- | --- | --- | | --- ### **A Q &A with Larry Kudlow** Larry Kudlow has spent his career shuttling between Wall Street and Republican presidential administrations in Washington. During Trump’s first term, he headed the National Economic Council and worked on China trade and technology policies. In this week’s Q&A, the Fox Business host speaks with Bob Davis about his war on Huawei, his arguments with trade advisor Peter Navarro and Trump’s first-term China successes and failures. “When the president wanted to scare the hell out of the Chinese, he’d put Peter front and center,” Kudlow remembers. “But when he wanted to pull back you might see me.” Larry Kudlow _Illustration by Kate Copeland_ --- | --- | --- School children play in a park in Suzhou, China. _Credit: Depositphotos_ | **Don’t Let Your Daughters Grow Up to be Mothers** Everyday should be Mother’s Day in China. Seventy per cent of all Chinese mothers give birth without epidurals, child-rearing costs are extortionate, and middle-school students must be hounded year-round to prepare for a ninth-grade test that will determine whether they can go to university. And even after all that, there may not be a good job waiting for a well-mothered child. The Chinese government, writes Nancy Qian, must relieve these pressures if it wants birth rates to recover and ensure a prosperous economy for China’s people. --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | Subscribe today for unlimited access. Starting at only $19 a month. --- | Subscribe --- | --- | | | | | | | | --- | | --- | | --- | | --- | --- | --- | Want to change how you receive these emails? You can unsubscribe from this list. The Wire New York, NY --- | © 2025 The Wire --- | This email was sent to stephen.shu.zhang@gmail.com _why did I get this?_ unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences The Wire China * The Wire * New York, New York 10122 * USA ---