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Why Is “Everything” Made in China?
The Hidden Systems Behind the World’s Factory
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Narrado por:
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Eyvonne Kinsey
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De:
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Elira Fontayne
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You can tell a great deal about the modern world by turning an everyday object over in your hands and reading the small print.
A phone case, a kettle, a child’s toy, a set of headphones, a pack of socks, a kitchen timer, a car part, a rechargeable torch, a cable, a cheap drill, a Christmas decoration, a novelty mug, a watch strap, a hairdryer. The range is so ordinary that it becomes invisible. We barely register it anymore. Yet the phrase that appears again and again, stamped into plastic, etched into metal, printed on labels, or tucked into the corner of packaging, is not merely a place-name. It is a verdict on how the planet’s daily life is arranged.
Made in China.
For many people, it has become a background radiation of consumer culture. It is everywhere, so it stops feeling like anything at all. If we notice it, we treat it as a shortcut: cheap, fast, plentiful. If we dislike it, we treat it as a warning label: poor quality, imitation, disposable. If we feel uneasy, we treat it as a moral riddle: the price on the shelf versus the cost paid somewhere else.
But that little phrase is not the real story. It is the final stamp on a chain of decisions, policies, incentives, logistics, labour flows, corporate strategies, and geopolitical bargains that have been building for decades. It is not simply about one country being good at making things. It is about how modern capitalism and modern state power fused with modern supply chains to create something that, from the outside, looks almost impossible: a single manufacturing ecosystem so vast, so interconnected, and so fast that it can supply the daily material needs of billions of people.
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