China | Chaguan

Hard times for China’s micro-industrialists

A rural hub for children’s bicycle-making adjusts to a world with fewer kids

A man on a tricycle cycles up the steep curve on a graph. A riderless child’s tricycle sits  at the bottom of the curve
Illustration: Chloe Cushman

THERE ARE lots of upsides to making bikes for kids, explains Mr Li, a young entrepreneur from Pingxiang, a scruffy county in northern China that has become a centre for the children’s bicycle industry. For one thing, they are easy to build, he says, nodding at a toddler-sized machine parked near his desk, held upright by tiny stabilisers. Teenage mountain bikes are a bit fiddly, but smaller ones “need no special machinery at all”. Also, he grins, children grow. Sell a three-year-old their first ride and two years later their parents have to buy a bigger one, and so it goes on for years to come. The downside? China is running out of children.

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This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “China’s heroic micro-industrialists”

From the February 3rd 2024 edition

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