China’s property crisis has become a massive headache for the world’s second-largest economy. Tens of millions of newly built apartments lie vacant, home prices have tumbled and cash-strapped developers are struggling to finish construction.
On today’s Big Take Asia Podcast, host K. Oanh Ha talks to Bloomberg’s Lulu Chen about what China is doing to try and solve its housing crisis. We go to Zhengzhou, home to the world’s biggest iPhone factory and the city where the housing market first imploded. It's now become a testing ground for government efforts to revive the ailing property sector. We look at whether they’re working, and what it will mean for China’s economy if the big push fails.
Read more: China’s Housing Rescue Falls Short in City That Signaled the Crisis
Further listening: What Comes Next in China’s Property Crisis

China Is Recruiting US Citizens to Work for Its Government
17:21

The DOJ's Campaign to Track Down Anonymous ICE Critics
18:44

Unpacking Trump’s $1.8 Billion Anti-Weaponization Fund
18:37