Ranked: The Top 10 EV Battery Manufacturers in 2023

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Despite efforts from the U.S. and EU to secure local domestic supply, all major EV battery manufacturers remain based in Asia.

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/ranked-the-top-10-ev-battery-manufacturers-in-2023/

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https://www.goldmansachs.com/intelligence/pages/the-future-of-four-wheels-is-all-electric.html
 
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It should be no surprise that a country which doesn't protect private property rights, and has almost solved the knowledge problem has the greatest share of production.
 
China has a lot of problems. I talk to people there often. It's not all what it seems.
 
China has a lot of problems. I talk to people there often. It's not all what it seems.
All countries have problems and not the purpose on my post I hope I did not indicate something differently, China is a communist country of course its not an ideal place to live *LOL*, you can talk to anyone in any country, just read our own news reports on the USA, but who is producing the product and getting more powerful militarily on the income?

From my previous post =
"We love to shoot ourself in the foot and attack American industry/corporations only to help our enemies who do not."

Anytime a corporation becomes big and successful here, we look to shoot it down, lately Apple is the primary example. People willingly buy their products for what they are but government looks to change that into something they think it should be. Almost sounds China like. Freedom of choice is interfered with.

Meta, Amazon, Microsoft are others. So let's keep attacking them and let some other country come along with products that dont fall under the restraints of doing business here? (just talking not debating)
 
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It should be no surprise that a country which doesn't protect private property rights, and has almost solved the knowledge problem has the greatest share of production.
I don't think it is because US / Europe does not protect its own private property rights. This look like the DRAM / NAND industry where the manufacturing is really more capital intensive than technology intensive, and government (S Korea, Japan, China, Taiwan have all done this) just want to dominate and penetrate a market quickly by pumping lots of money into building mega factories.

US tend to just want good return on investment and activist investors always want fast and quick return over long term investment that take decades to build up an industry. So, this is why we have "fast companies" instead of new slow and steady industrial giants these days. They make more money doing leveraged buyout and tear apart companies than keeping it functional for decades.
 
I don't think it is because US / Europe does not protect its own private property rights. This look like the DRAM / NAND industry where the manufacturing is really more capital intensive than technology intensive, and government (S Korea, Japan, China, Taiwan have all done this) just want to dominate and penetrate a market quickly by pumping lots of money into building mega factories.

US tend to just want good return on investment and activist investors always want fast and quick return over long term investment that take decades to build up an industry. So, this is why we have "fast companies" instead of new slow and steady industrial giants these days. They make more money doing leveraged buyout and tear apart companies than keeping it functional for decades.
I was implying that China is a leader in part because they do not protect private property rights which lowers the cost of doing business in that country. Emissions, pollution, land grabs, slave labor, etc.
 
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