
Columbia Energy Exchange What Drives 'Breakneck' Development in China?
Oct 14, 2025
Dan Wang, a research fellow at Stanford’s Hoover History Lab and author of "Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future," delves into China's rise as an engineering powerhouse contrasting against the U.S. 's lawyerly approach. He highlights China's rapid infrastructure expansion and compares it with American building failures. Wang suggests the U.S. can learn from China's efficiency without compromising democratic values. He also explores the implications of China's dominance in manufacturing and the potential risks in supply-chain dependence, emphasizing the ongoing competitive rivalry between the two nations.
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Build Faster Without Copying China
- Defend pluralism and rights while pursuing faster, outcome-oriented infrastructure.
- Learn from countries like Spain, France, Denmark and Japan that build well at lower cost without authoritarian suppression.
Immigration Raid Undermined Tech Building
- Dan recounts ICE deporting South Korean engineers from a Georgia battery plant, humiliating them in chains.
- He contrasts that with Chinese firms welcoming foreign engineers to transfer know-how into domestic manufacturing.
Scale Beats Lone-Inventor Glory
- Chinese innovation is often incremental, focused on manufacturing and improving products rather than lone inventor myth.
- Owning an industry through scale can matter more than inventing its earliest components.









