Weekly #24: The Li Jiaqi aftermath š, National liquor Moutai halts collabs š, Forecasting holiday tourism spendingš®| Following the yuan
Drawing inspiration from the often misguided forecasts of Michael Burry and Cathie Wood, I'm inclined to believe that the forthcoming tourism spending (esp. in global travel), will disappoint.
Iām going to start todayās newsletter with a rant, or you could see it as constructive feedback.
As Iāve been broadcasting (for attention) in recent weeks ā Iām still recovering from pneumonia, I initially attributed the reason to me not resting enough. But after listening to the latest episode of Bumingbai (translated to āI donāt understandā) podcast, hosted by New York Times Tech Columnist YUAN Li, I suspect part of the reason may have something to do with the problematic commission system of Chinaās medical industry.
When asked whether Chinaās recent medical crackdown means that doctors are wary of prescribing medicines, the doctor said, āTraditional Chinese medicine and supplements have more profitā¦patients wonāt die from it, there are no side effects, and you can earn more.ā That was the main reason why he did that when he was a young doctor, he hasnāt prescribed TCM for over 10 years because he doesnāt believe in it.
Iām reminded that I was a bit surprised when I had a common cold a month ago; the doctor only prescribed me TCM but didnāt probe further. I took it for a week, did not fully recover, but I chose to ignore the minor symptoms. That developed into high fever and pneumonia. Had it been the modern medicine that I usually get, I wouldāve recovered in 3 days. Iād like to give the doctor the benefit of the doubt, but after Bumingbai, I started questioning her incentive. Perhaps itās because she believes in TCM, perhaps itās because sheās a nationalist or, more realistically, she gets more commission from prescribing it.
If this is the case, I think the crackdown and the 14th five year plan for TCM development will affect not only the medical industry but every other industry as well. TCM, from how I see it, is not used to treat symptoms but to improve underlying issues. If doctors are prescribing TCM for minor illnesses that would normally be resolved quickly with modern medicine, then thatās productivity lost for these patients, their companies and their industries. š¤
1. The Li Jiaqi aftermath š
What happened: Every time Li Jiaqi makes a mistake, traffic shifts to other livestreamers and away from Alibabaās Taobao Live.
Last June, when he was temporarily banned after a tank-shaped ice cream cake appeared in his livestream before the Tiananmen anniversary, it helped revive New Oriental Education & Tech Group (NYSE: EDU) to survive after its pivot to a livestream company from Chinaās education crackdown. This time, the traffic is directed to Chinese brands including shampoo producer Bee & Flower čč±, MSG brand Lotus č²č±, and Power28 ę“»å28, a 70-year-old state-owned detergent brand.
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