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The Great Squeeze of Overcapacity, State Resilience, and Managed Stagnation in 2026

How Beijing's Supply-Side Model Defies Western Collapse Predictions While Confronting Internal Contradictions and Global Pushback   As of early 2026, China's economy embodies a profound paradox: a structural overcapacity crisis spanning housing, steel, cement, and now the "New Trio" of EVs, batteries, and solar—coupled with a real estate implosion and demographic headwinds—yet without the expected Lehman-style crash or runaway inflation. Through state-orchestrated "zombie" strategies like debt evergreening, supply-side deflation, and aggressive pivots toward high-tech self-reliance, Beijing maintains stability and strategic power. Household consumption remains suppressed, fueling "involution" and low labor share of GDP, while exports face tariffs, prompting a Global South redirection. This "managed decline" or "slow-motion transition" prioritizes national resilience over individual flourishing, contrasting sharply with Wes...

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