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"Made in China" - Bad or Not?

The prejudice about products from the Middle Kingdom has been haunting the modern domestic consumer for several decades.

And you can't blame him for this, Chinese-made goods during the existence of the Soviet Union and in the nineties were distinguished by their low quality, and sometimes completely absurd design solutions. To this day, observing the Adadis tracksuit or the famous Tetris in the form of a machine gun, we immediately rank it as a Chinese product. Have there really been no changes in Chinese production?

At the end of the last century, China began to rapidly develop its industrial capacities, willingly agreeing to all proposals of foreign investors for the construction of plants and factories of various directions on its territory. Such interest on the part of global corporations is quite understandable - China became a kind of Klondike, where instead of gold there was cheap labor in huge quantities.

However, this medal also had a downside: handicraft and clandestine production of counterfeit products imitating Western counterparts at a very poor level began to emerge in large quantities in the country. Chinese products have not stood the test of time, no matter whether it is clothing or electronics.

The wise Chinese government was able to use the presence of foreign capital to its advantage, which led to the establishment of China as the center of the world industry. What can we say, if today all leading Western companies manufacture most of their products in China - these are Apple, and the previously mentioned Adidas, and the largest automobile concerns. The rapid industrial leap has led to an increase in the technological level of production. Therefore, today, products made in China will not surprise or scare anyone - all the tech giants have long moved their facilities to the homeland of the great Mao.

But now it is worth looking at products from Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia and other "developing countries" with caution. Now they have taken up the baton of making low-quality forgeries, but still handicraft from China has not gone anywhere, but has become a kind of feature of the national economy.