Ep. 225: Are We Headed For A World Where China Makes All The Cars? with Michael Dunne
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Imagine a world where China doesn't just compete in the auto industry—they conquer it. Their master plan? "Scale up, flood in, starve out": Ramp up production to flood global markets with affordable EVs, then squeeze out rivals through sheer volume and cost advantages. And guess what? The stakes couldn't be higher for U.S. innovation, jobs, and national security. Joining me once again to decode this high-stakes game is Michael Dunne, CEO of Dunne Insights and a leading expert on Asian automotive trends, he's back to reveal what's really at risk.
China's playbook is ruthless and effective. They've turbocharged factories across the country, churning out twice as many vehicles as their domestic market demands. The surplus? It's pouring into export markets worldwide, fueling explosive growth for brands like BYD, which skyrocketed 880% year-over-year in the UK alone. Don't take our word for it: Peter Fleet, former Group Vice President at Ford Motor Company, warns that Chinese automakers could seize a staggering 30% of the UK market within just two years. That's not gradual disruption, it's a tidal wave.
And here's the kicker: China doesn't stop at scale. They control a near-monopoly on rare earth minerals and magnets, essential ingredients for EV batteries and motors, giving them an unbreakable edge in the electric revolution. Without these, Western manufacturers are left scrambling.
The fallout for America? We're exposed. Detroit's legacy giants are bogged down by outdated strategies, fumbling the shift to EVs amid surging consumer demand for sustainable rides. As Michael puts it, we need a "Sputnik moment," that urgent, all-hands-on-deck wake-up call from the Space Race era, to supercharge our own battery and EV supply chains. Why? Because a secure domestic ecosystem isn't just smart business; it's vital for energy independence, technological leadership, and safeguarding our future against foreign dominance. Tune in now to grasp the full force of China's automotive juggernaut and arm yourself with the insights to fight back.
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PUBLISHING NOTE: This episode was recorded on October 24th 2025.
As of October 30th 2025, following Trump's meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, China committed to pausing new export restrictions on five key rare earth metals announced on October 9, 2025, and agreed not to tighten controls on rare earth exports or related processing equipment. (Restrictions on seven other rare earths, imposed in April 2025, remain in place.) This directly addressed U.S. threats of 100% tariffs on Chinese EVs and other goods if Beijing weaponized its dominance in rare earths. The truce provides immediate breathing room. By halting new restrictions, it averts an acute supply crunch that could have halted EV assembly lines or inflated prices amid booming U.S. demand (EV sales hit 1.2 million units in 2025 so far). This stabilizes costs for U.S. automakers, supporting Biden-era incentives like the Inflation Reduction Act's $7,500 EV tax credit, which ties eligibility to North American sourcing—but still leans on Chinese-processed materials.
In essence, the meeting bought time but no transformation— a tactical win for Trump, but a reminder that U.S. EV ambitions hinge on outmaneuvering China's mineral monopoly.
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