However, markets do not expand at the same pace as the supply of entrants. The result is classic overcrowding: dozens of small ventures offering near-identical products and fighting for the same customers. Marketing spend, subsidies and hyper-competitive pricing become currencies of survival and a core lived experience of neijuan.
For decades, China’s growth model has centred on fast imitation, adaptation and scaling of business models. E-commerce and mobile payments boomed as entrepreneurs tailored global ideas to China’s vast mobile-first market. As economist Keyu Jin argues, China excels at scaling, cost-cutting “1 to n” innovation even though it is weaker at disruptive, breakthrough “0 to 1” invention.