Letters‘Made in China’ label should be source of pride
Readers discuss the value of goods made in China, and Hong Kong’s mega-event strategy

Since I moved to China, the world has taken on a different rhythm.
A different way of creating. A different relationship with time. I work in the fashion industry, and every day I touch, inspect and evaluate products stamped with “Made in China” – a phrase often printed in small letters, discreetly placed, as if it is still something to hide.
For some consumers, it remains shorthand for “cheap”, “mass-produced” and “soulless”. But that assumption collapses the moment you step inside the factory.
Behind that label are people, not abstractions. Pattern cutters who can adjust a silhouette in seconds. Seamstresses who sew thousands of identical stitches with almost architectural precision. Technicians who calibrate machines to reduce waste by millimetres. Production managers coordinating teams that can execute over 200,000 pieces a month without compromising technical specifications.
Speed here is not chaos. It is coordination.