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We visit the Chinese city where your stuff comes from

STEVE INSKEEP, BYLINE: We've been visiting the source of your stuff - things like hairpins, pots and pans, toys. A lot of it comes to America through a Chinese trading city called Yiwu. That's spelled Y-I-W-U, Yiwu. Thousands of wholesalers there ship products from nearby factories. Our tour gave us news how China responds to U.S. tariffs and a picture of life in the world's second largest economy. The center of the action in Yiwu is a market that I explored with our producer, Aowen Cao.

AOWEN CAO, BYLINE: It says we need to go over there, and, yeah, turn left.

INSKEEP: We were looking for a family-run business, which wasn't easy. It's like a giant shopping mall, next to a giant shopping mall, next to a giant shopping mall. We walked inside, and our editor Reena Advani noticed a store that only sells umbrellas.

REENA ADVANI, BYLINE: They're all made here.

INSKEEP: So there's an umbrella store. Nothing but umbrellas in there.

ADVANI: And there's yoga mats, chess. It looks like parasols, all sorts of things here you can find.

INSKEEP: Light bulbs. Like, a light bulb store. That's what they sell.

Up flight after flight of stairs, we arrived at a wholesaler of hardware.

(SOUNDBITE OF POWER TOOLS)

INSKEEP: I've been going around this store just writing down things that are for sale - spades, saws, staplers, caulk guns, garden shears, wire cutters, bolt cutters.

The owner of this shop is Wang Nan. She was wearing a white business suit with silver-pointed shoes.

WANG NAN: (Through interpreter) I came to Yiwu in 2000. After I saw all kinds of goods that I've never seen before, I didn't want to leave.

INSKEEP: She started in printing, but her relatives manufacture hardware. Today, this hardware shop is essentially a display room for her global business. While we visited, two men from Senegal came in to place an order with the woman in the white suit.

NAN: (Through interpreter) He passed a small order that's a hundred thousand U.S. dollar.

INSKEEP: That's a small order, $100,000 U.S.?

NAN: (Laughter).

INSKEEP: Wang Nan wants to pass this business to her daughter, Wang Xiao Nan, or little Nan. The mother quotes China's Chairman Mao, who said that women hold up half the sky, and she contends that in Yiwu they hold up most of the sky. Her adult daughter studied to be an English teacher for a while, but now travels the world for trade fairs and sales, including to Texas. The company aims to sell more in the United States, even as tariffs take hold. Wang Nan insists that American customers always need tools, and they'll just pay a little more. She says she won't.

(SOUNDBITE OF TIKTOK)

ZIXIN LI: Hi, boss. If you're sourcing from China in 2025, make sure you don't miss out. This tray shells (ph).

INSKEEP: Retailers who can't visit the Yiwu market may discover it online through TikTok influencers who work here. One is Zixin Li, known online as Luna.

(SOUNDBITE OF TIKTOK)

LI: You know, how it looked like when China's top perfume factory opens in the world's largest wholesale market. Let me show you around.

INSKEEP: We met her in person. She's tall. She's confident, and she walked through the halls, which were filling up that day with plastic bags - items just delivered from the factories.

Here's more hairpins.

LI: Yes.

INSKEEP: Thousands and thousands of hairpins. Extra plastic bags full of hairpins.

LI: Hair bands.

INSKEEP: People assembling hairpins for shipment, perhaps.

LI: Yes.

INSKEEP: Around the corner were press-on nails and rows upon rows of stuffed animals, which caught the attention of our producer, Milton Guevara.

MILTON GUEVARA, BYLINE: I do want to get a plushie for my girlfriend.

INSKEEP: You want to get a plushie? Let's go back and get a plushie. Do you have a minute?

LI: Yes.

INSKEEP: Like a lot of people here, Zixin Li is doing what she can to make a buck.

LI: Previously, I did the event planning. Yeah, it's like, luxury events.

INSKEEP: Event planning. Oh, OK.

LI: Yeah, in Shanghai. That's, like, quite popular...

INSKEEP: Sure.

LI: ...Subject in Shanghai, but you just earn too little. So it's easy for me to just explore the land of opportunity. I just...

INSKEEP: Factories pay for her help with sales. As we walk, she introduced us to Nicole Zhang, who sells hairpins and claw clips. She and her husband sell in the U.S., although a client just made a demand. She says Target asked her to share half the cost of the tariffs. She tried to negotiate.

NICOLE ZHANG: And I've said maybe 2 to 3% I can share from our profit - yen.

INSKEEP: Two to 3%.

Instead, Target delayed the order.

So are you losing business?

ZHANG: Yeah, kind of lose business.

INSKEEP: Whatever happens, people in this region keep producing more stuff, as we learned when we left the international trading city. We drove into the mountains to one of the factories that surround this area. The early evening sun was a red ball in the smog, but Jinqi Toys was running at full speed, like it always is.

Oh, we are looking at racks upon racks upon racks of 3D printers.

ZENG HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: All of them at work, at the same time.

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: What are they making?

HAO: Jewelry and the toys.

INSKEEP: Jewelry and toys.

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: Zeng Hao is the owner. Just last year he was trying to make his fortune in crypto, but then he bought a few 3D printers, the kind you can buy on Amazon and set up on a table in your own home. He started producing plastic toys in his apartment. He made money and bought more printers, which made more money. So he bought more printers - so many he moved to this factory. It's like the printers are replicating.

How many are in this room?

HAO: It's about 4,000.

INSKEEP: 4,000 3D printers.

The printers make little plastic fidgets...

(SOUNDBITE OF PLASTIC CLICKING)

INSKEEP: ...And colorful plastic toys.

Here's a little dino...

(SOUNDBITE OF PLASTIC RUSTLING)

HAO: A dino.

INSKEEP: ...With many parts to it.

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: It's cute.

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: A few human workers sit at tables adding eyes to 3D-printed animals.

UNIDENTIFIED WORKER: (Speaking Chinese).

UNIDENTIFIED INTERPRETER: Without eyes, it's pretty dull. So the workers give them soul.

INSKEEP: Zeng's most distinctive fidget is two pieces that seem impossible to fit together but do. The production volume also seems impossible.

HAO: (Speaking Chinese).

UNIDENTIFIED INTERPRETER: Forty thousand...

HAO: Yeah.

UNIDENTIFIED INTERPRETER: ...A day.

HAO: A day.

INSKEEP: Forty thousand a day?

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: Forty thousand a day?

HAO: Yeah.

INSKEEP: I asked Zeng Hao what he dreamed of doing when he was growing up. He said he doesn't really have dreams.

HAO: (Through interpreter) I have a life goal now. I do want to expand my business in this sector, because, you know, for our young people, we don't have much opportunity today compared to our parents.

INSKEEP: In China's economy where young people struggle, this young man hopes to expand, and he's selling everywhere, including the United States. He says one of his American clients asked him to pick up half the cost of the new U.S. tariffs. He said, sure, I'll help, and maybe someday you'll help me. It doesn't matter much to him, because even with the extra cost, he says he is raising his prices.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Steve Inskeep is a host of NPR's Morning Edition, as well as NPR's morning news podcast Up First.
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