Highlights
- China's core economic challenge in 2025 is demand-side weakness.
- Overproduction is leading to price wars, especially in electric vehicles (EVs).
- Margin collapse and a cycle of weak consumption persist despite massive industrial output.
- Beijing needs to shift from volume-driven growth to profitable production by:
- Moving income toward households.
- Forcing industrial consolidation.
- Resolving property sector stress.
- Reducing disruptive rare earth export control signaling.
- US-China economic contrast:
- America struggles with supply-side capacity gaps and needs to rebuild industrial infrastructure.
- China faces involution and must convert production strength into household-driven profitable growth.
Yes, China can still produce. However, the Rare Earth Exchangesโข question: can the nation still grow profitably? Chinaโs economy in late 2025 reads like a powerful engine running hotโwith a misfiring transmission. Output is not the core problem. The problem is where demand comes from (overproduction), how profits are generated, and whether growth is becoming durable or merely manufactured.
Beijingโs latest National Development and Reform Commission (opens in a new tab) (NDRC) call to โfirmly implement the strategy of expanding domestic demandโ is an implicit acknowledgment that the old model is reaching its limits. An economy driven primarily by investment, exports, and industrial scale can still produce impressive volumesโbut it struggles when households remain cautious, services lag, and property continues to weigh on confidence.

Stability on the Surface, Strain Beneath
Independent assessments of Chinaโs economy in 2025 converge on a familiar set of pressures. Consumer confidence is uneven. The property sector remains a long-tail drag, particularly in lower-tier cities. External demand is no longer just cyclical but politically constrained. Consumption has improved with policy support, yet remains below its pre-pandemic contribution to growth, while property weakness continues to suppress household expectations.
Beijingโs domestic-demand push is rational. But domestic demand is not a slogan. It is wages, safety nets, and credible expectations about the future.
Overproduction Is the Signal, Not the Disease
Chinaโs EV sector has become the most visible arena of overcapacity: price wars, compressed margins, and official concern about โexcessive competition.โ Regulators have openly warned that destructive pricing threatens financial health across the industry.
This is not just an EV story. It is a system signal. Local governments and firms continue to chase volume, market share, and industrial targetsโeven when incremental output erodes profitability. The result is growth that weakens balance sheets, suppresses income growth, and feeds back into weak consumption. The loop is self-reinforcing.
Rare Earths: Leverage With Consequences
Rare earths sit at the intersection of Chinaโs strengths and its tensions. Beijing dominates processing and magnet manufacturing, making it indispensable. At the same time, rare earths have become a geopolitical valve. Export controls and licensing regimes have tightened, loosened, and tightened againโsending clear signals to global markets.
The immediate effect has been supply-chain stress and price volatility outside China. The longer-term effect is more consequential: accelerated friend-shoring, capital formation elsewhere, and a determined push by other economies to reduce exposure. Leverage is realโbut it is not costless.
What China Must Do to Break the Cycle
If Beijing wants to move beyond the recurring pattern of stimulus, overbuild, and deflationary pressure, the next steps must be harder than infrastructure spending:
- Shift income toward households, not just firms and provinces, through stronger social safety nets and labor mobility reforms. Consumption must be enabled, not instructed.
- Force industrial consolidation where price wars are eroding the future. EVs are the warning label.
- Resolve property and local government finance stress cleanly, rather than allowing confidence to bleed away slowly.
- In rare earths, move up the value chain while reducing disruptive signaling. Chinaโs advantage lies in separation, metals, and magnets. Predictability preserves dominance better than shock.
Chinaโs leadership is right about one thing: domestic demand is national security. But the path forward is not more production. It is more profitable production, stronger household confidence, and less involutionโespecially where EVs and rare earth magnets meet the global marketplace.
United States vs. China: Core Economic Challenges (2025)
| Dimension | United States | China |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Growth Constraint | Supply-side capacity gaps in strategic sectors (manufacturing, minerals, labor) | Demand-side weakness despite massive production capacity |
| Core Economic Tension | Can the U.S. rebuild industrial capacity fast enough without triggering inflation or fiscal stress? | Can China convert production strength into profitable, household-driven growth? |
| Consumption Dynamics | Strong consumer base, but uneven and debt-sensitive; services-heavy | Structurally weak household consumption; high savings due to uncertainty |
| Investment Pattern | Underinvestment for decades; now overcorrecting via subsidies and incentives | Overinvestment and duplication; capital often chases volume over returns |
| Industrial Policy Risk | Fragmentation, political cycles, permitting delays, debt. | Involution: price wars, excess capacity, margin collapse |
| Labor Market Stress | Tight labor, skills mismatch, immigration constraints | Youth unemployment, productivity stagnation in some sectors |
| Property Sector Impact | Cyclical, but not systemic | Structural drag; confidence and balance-sheet damage, especially in lower-tier cities |
| Fiscal Position | High deficits, rising debt, but strong reserve currency advantage | Hidden local government debt; constrained fiscal flexibility |
| Financial System Risk | Market volatility, but transparent stress transmission | Opacity, delayed loss recognition, reliance on administrative controls |
| Rare Earths Challenge | Strategic vulnerability; dependent on imports and processing abroad | Structural dominance in processing, metals, and magnets |
| Overproduction Risk | Low overall; selective bottlenecks | High in EVs, batteries, solar, some critical minerals |
| Geopolitical Exposure | Weaponized dependence (imports, chokepoints) | Weaponized dominance (export controls, licensing) |
| Policy Execution Risk | Inconsistency across administrations | Optics, trade retaliation, accelerating friend-shoring |
| Key Strategic Test | Can the U.S. industrialize without losing fiscal and political discipline? | Can China reduce involution and boost demand without sacrificing control? |
| Failure Mode | Inflation + political backlash stall reindustrialization | Deflationary pressure + overcapacity hollow out profitability |
| Success Path | Integrated, intelligent industrial policy + labor and permitting reform; Transcending political chasms | Household income growth + consolidation + higher-value production |
Some Strategic Takeaways
The U.S. problem is capacity and..
It lacks enough factories, skilled labor, and processing infrastructure in the right places. Rapidly accumulating debt and political chasms may lead to more pervasive, enduring challenges.
Chinaโs problem is the quality of growth.
It produces too much of the right things, too cheaply, with returns that no longer justify the scale. Rigidities of the CCP, demographic shifts, and controls on capital can lead to mounting frustration among elites and a desire for change.
Rare earths sit at the fault line.
The U.S. must build; China must consolidate.
One risks a shortage. The other risks involve.
The next decade will not be decided by who produces the mostโbut by who can produce profitably, sustainably, and with adaptive political resilience.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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