The Last Word: When predictability becomes the product.
In a hall full of global executives in Beijing last week, the pitch was not what it used to be. No talk of breakneck growth, no grand promises of limitless expansion. Instead, China’s premier, Li Qiang, offered something more subdued, and far more telling: stability. A ‘harbour of certainty’ in an uncertain world.
It was a carefully chosen line. For decades, China’s value proposition to business was built on scale and speed. It was the place where things happened faster, cheaper, and bigger. Now, the message has shifted. China is no longer selling momentum. It is selling predictability.
That shift says less about China than it does about the world it is speaking to. Because certainty, once assumed, has become scarce. Trade flows that once felt frictionless are now political instruments. Supply chains that were optimised for efficiency are being reworked for resilience. Regulation no longer evolves gradually; it arrives abruptly, often shaped by forces far outside the market. In that context, predictability becomes something companies will pay for—even if they’re not sure it’s real but because it is deeply desired.
Read Andrew Wrobel’s full Last Word column at Reinvantage.
Photo: Dreamstime.

