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  • Ep. 32 Made With Taiwan: How AI, Security, and ‘One World, Two Systems’ Rewire Global Manufacturing
    Feb 18 2026

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with Wesley Chu, a research fellow of the Ash Center at Harvard Kennedy School and former General Counsel of Foxconn—one of the world’s largest manufacturers—about how Trump 2.0’s trade deal is reshaping the future of Taiwanese manufacturing. As the administration accelerates its push to “make it in America,” Taiwan’s firms find themselves at the center of a historic supply‑chain reset. Drawing on his experience, Wesley explains why the new U.S.–Taiwan investment deal is “not perfect, but workable,” how rising cross‑strait risk and U.S. national security demands are forcing Taiwanese companies to move beyond low‑margin OEM work, and what it really takes to survive in high‑cost states like Arizona and Texas. From AI servers and drones to “one world, two systems” production lines and a desperately needed Taiwan tech firewall, he offers a blunt insider view of how Taiwan can shift from “made in Taiwan” to “made with Taiwan”—and why it must become a true silicon hub, not simply relying on a silicon shield.

    00:00 Taiwan's Strategic Investment in the U.S.
    02:43 Challenges and Opportunities for Taiwanese Companies
    05:46 Shifting from OEM to Value-Driven Partnerships
    08:32 Taiwan's Role in the Global Supply Chain
    11:24 Diversification and Regional Manufacturing
    14:29 The Concept of 'Made with Taiwan'
    17:31 Defense Tech and New Opportunities
    20:06 Managing Operations in China
    23:07 Building a Technology Firewall
    25:58 Taiwan's Future in AI and Beyond

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    35 Min.
  • Ep. 31 RMB, Trade, and Power: Stewart Paterson on How China's Currency Fueled Its Economic and Manufacturing Power
    Feb 4 2026

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with UK-based economist and author Stewart Paterson about how Beijing has used the renminbi (RMB), trade surpluses, and industrial policy to fuel its rise—and why he believes Western engagement with China was flawed from the start. Drawing on decades of experience analyzing China from Hong Kong, Singapore, and London, Paterson explains how deliberate RMB undervaluation, subsidies, and capital controls built China’s export machine while suppressing domestic consumption and reshaping global supply chains.​

    They dig into the politics behind RMB “internationalization,” the limits of China’s ambitions to challenge the dollar, and how tools such as sanctions, Belt and Road lending, and central bank digital currencies are changing the geopolitical map. Wenchi also presses Paterson on whether the United States is now copying elements of China’s playbook—from industrial policy to re-industrialization—and what it means for countries caught between a dollar system run by a democracy and an RMB regime designed to maximize party-state power.

    China, Trade, and Power: Why the West's Economic Engagement Has Failed, by Stewart Paterson

    This episode is a collaboration with China Strategic Risks Institute.

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    37 Min.
  • Ep. 30 Taiwan's Energy Crossroads: Between Politics and Net-Zero Goal
    Jan 29 2026

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with Bart Linssen, an onshore wind expert who has spent over two decades in Taiwan, about how the island's energy system is struggling to move from cheap coal and nuclear to renewables while keeping prices and supply stable. As Taiwan and the US sign a landmark trade and investment deal centered on semiconductors, some of Taiwan’s most sensitive yet least understood strategic questions remain: how the island can keep the lights on, stay competitive in the global supply chain, and still reach net zero emissions.

    Bart explains Taiwan’s current mix—dominated by coal and LNG with nuclear recently shut down and renewables stuck at about 10 percent—its complex market design around Tai Power (Taiwan Power Company, 台電), feed‑in tariffs, and corporate Power Purchase Agreements driven by supply‑chain demands like RE100 and Europe’s carbon border tax, and the intensely political battles that routinely derail onshore wind and solar projects at the local level. He also discusses the growing reliance on imported LNG, debates over reviving nuclear (including small modular reactors), and why clearer zoning, more consistent policy, and stronger political will are essential if Taiwan is to reach its 2050 net‑zero goal and remain competitive.


    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    36 Min.
  • Ep. 29 China’s Biotech Rise and the Future of Global Health
    Jan 12 2026

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with Dr. Ruby Wang, a London-based surgeon turned health-policy and strategy expert, about how China has rapidly evolved from a “copycat” drug producer into a critical source of cutting-edge biotech innovation. Drawing on her experience leading the UK government’s health team at the British Embassy in Beijing during the pandemic and now advising global life sciences clients, Ruby explains how decades of long-term state planning, investment in R&D parks and regulatory reform, a huge patient pool, and a culture of fast experimentation have created a maturing ecosystem that now delivers world‑class oncology, cell therapy, GLP‑1, and AI-enabled drug discovery assets. She describes how roughly 40% of recent global out‑licensing deals now involve China-origin drugs, with Western pharma relying on Chinese assets for growth even as US and European policymakers debate tariffs, data security, and “China risk.”​

    The discussion explores the tension inside China between keeping medicines affordable for its population and sustaining a profitable, innovative biotech sector, as well as how emerging mixed public–private health models and experiments such as Hainan’s medical tourism zone might ease that pressure. Ruby and Wenchi also unpack Western misconceptions that Chinese biotech is still low quality, arguing that this outdated narrative shapes investor sentiment and policy in ways that could ultimately deprive patients worldwide—especially in developing countries—of effective, lower-cost treatments. They conclude that while security and data-privacy concerns are real, science and healthcare are inherently global, and the key challenge for the West is to manage risk without cutting itself off from Chinese innovation that could help meet urgent global disease burdens.

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    47 Min.
  • Ep. 28 From 2025 Upheaval to 2026 Predictions
    Dec 31 2025

    As we close out 2025—the first year of Perspectives with Wenchi Yu, now at 28 episodes—here are a few quick reflections on US–China–Taiwan dynamics in 2025 and some predictions for 2026.

    For more discussions and work from Wenchi Yu

    DC Insiders by TaiwanPlus

    Global Women Asia

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    5 Min.
  • Ep. 27 Front‑Row Seat to U.S.–China Face Off: Insights from Jane Perlez
    Dec 23 2025

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with Jane Perlez, host of the podcast Face‑Off: The U.S. vs China and a former New York Times foreign correspondent and Beijing bureau chief. The conversation traces Jane’s journey from an aspiring reporter in Australia to a Pulitzer Prize–winning correspondent who covered conflicts and political transitions from East Africa and the Balkans to Pakistan, Indonesia, and ultimately China. She reflects on how 9/11 and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan pulled Washington’s attention away from Asia just as China was expanding its influence in Southeast Asia, and how U.S.–China relations slid from the hopeful mood of a 2012 State Department banquet for then–Vice President Xi Jinping into today’s open strategic rivalry. Speaking from her current base in the United States, she discusses the challenges of understanding China without regular on‑the‑ground reporting or a steady flow of Chinese visitors, her decision to turn to podcasting—first with “On the Trail of Xi Jinping” and now with Face‑Off: The U.S. vs China—and why she believes closing the “barrier of ignorance” between the two societies is essential for managing competition and avoiding conflict, including over Taiwan.


    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    49 Min.
  • Ep. 26 Reaching Above the Sky: Private Innovation, Geopolitical Rivalry, and US-China Space Competition
    Nov 28 2025

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks to the Hong Kong-born aerospace entrepreneur, Michael Blum, about the evolution of the global space industry through the lens of US and Chinese competition. As the co-founder of Firefly Space Systems, Blum recounts his inspiration for space and aerospace, his early days in Silicon Valley, and direct involvement with Elon Musk and SpaceX, highlighting the transformative impact of private enterprise in reducing costs and expanding access to space. He contrasts the innovation-driven, commercially vibrant US sector with China’s more opaque, state-led program, discussing how geopolitical rivalry—for prestige, technological superiority, and security—drives distinctly different strategies and norms. Key discussions include the rise and challenges of commercial space ventures (like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Firefly Aerospace), the Artemis Accords and international alignment in space governance, and China’s ambitious goals for a permanent Moon presence and technological self-sufficiency. The conversation addresses issues such as space debris, differing legal frameworks, and how recent political changes in Hong Kong have impacted Blum’s trust in cooperating with China—particularly significant given his own upbringing in Hong Kong. The dialogue also emphasizes the ongoing ideological contest between centralized planning and open competition, the crucial role of public-private partnership, and the inspiration emerging from new commercial opportunities and international collaboration—even as competition in space intensifies between the US and China.

    *This episode is in collaboration with the China Strategic Risks Institute, www.csri.global

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    43 Min.
  • Ep. 25 Beyond the Headlines: Inside China’s Emerging Consumer Trends in Lower-Tier Cities
    Nov 3 2025

    Host Wenchi Yu speaks with Olivia Plotnick, a Shanghai-based social media and marketing entrepreneur, who recently completed a marketing research project spanning 30 cities in 60 days in China. The conversation attempted to answer the question: How’s China’s economy faring? Has the trade war’s impact been felt on the ground? How are consumers spending their money? Olivia’s findings of health & fitness, tourism, beauty, and youth trends challenge conventional wisdom and offer surprising insights into the state of China and its consumers across age groups. She discusses the importance of understanding consumer behavior beyond just data and statistics, and highlights the rise of tier two and below cities, the competition between Starbucks and Luckin Coffee, the explosion of milk tea brands, and the impact of EV adoption. She also delves into changing consumer values and the evolving narrative around China's economy.

    Olivia Plotnick's Substack: https://substack.com/@whowhatwai

    0:00 Understanding China's Economic Landscape
    04:57 Exploring Tier Two and Below Cities
    11:35 Diverse Perspectives on China's Economy
    17:33 The Coffee Wars: Starbucks vs. Luckin
    23:03 The Rise of Milk Tea and Local Cafes
    29:37 Trends in Health, Fitness, and Consumer Behavior
    35:20 Debunking Western Narratives on China's Economy

    Perspectives with Wenchi Yu

    YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkK1a7U8kP0TgXhvI5Bj70H4cPPlapCdQ&si=RuA_jZROR2ynRbxH

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6kXiEF08IjtT3j1DyEnBbG?si=68ab3ea172594620

    Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/perspectives-with-wenchi-yu/id1793854395

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    43 Min.