cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/8578464
How did Chinese electric vehicles leave Detroit, Germany, and Japan in the dust? It isn’t just about cheap labor or massive factories. In this episode of Modern MBA, we break down the brutal economics and decade-long geopolitical playbook behind China’s unstoppable EV expansion that's left Western automakers are begging for protectionism.
The global automotive market is experiencing an unprecedented structural shift. While Western legacy automakers take 2 to 4 years to design a single vehicle, Chinese EV startups and tech giants are cycling new, hyper-advanced software-defined vehicles into production in half the time. From BYD's un-puncturable Blade Battery and internal lithium supply chains to Xiaomi doing in 3 years what Apple’s Project Titan failed to achieve in 10, the global auto industry is facing an existential crisis.
But as the U.S. and Europe raise walls of tariffs and invoke national security to shut out foreign competition, they are simply repeating a century-old economic playbook. Every automotive superpower—from post-war Germany nurturing Volkswagen and Mercedes, to 1980s Japan scaling Toyota, Honda, and Nissan against American import quotas, to Detroit's own government-protected pickup truck oligopoly—has relied on state favoritism and protectionism to survive.
We analyze how the transition from Internal Combustion Engines (ICE) to modern, vertically integrated electric powertrains shattered the traditional automotive supply chain model. We investigate the structural trade-offs between the U.S. venture-capital approach and China's 20-year centralized master plan that built a $230 billion ecosystem spanning raw mineral refining to state-funded public charging infrastructure.