Why Chinese state media love Elon Musk's latest tweets

Elon Musk in 90 Seconds
Elon Musk in 90 Seconds

Chinese state media have gone to town with their coverage of a tweet by Elon Musk.

The Tesla CEO tweeted out a link to a video about a Chinese rail station that was built in less than 9 hours.

"China's progress in advanced infrastructure is more than 100 times faster than the US," he wrote Tuesday.

That was propaganda gold for Xinhua, China's official news agency, which published articles in Chinese and English on Wednesday declaring that Musk was "amazed" by the rail project.

Other big Chinese state news organizations, including Communist Party newspaper People's Daily and broadcaster CCTV, published similar stories about Musk's comments.

Xinhua said it wasn't the first time that people around the world have been "amazed by the 'China speed.'" Its article mentioned a 57-story tower that was built in 19 days in 2015.

Musk's series of tweets was manna from heaven for the Chinese state outlets, which "want China to be seen as the global leader" in infrastructure, said Christopher Balding, an associate professor at the HSBC School of Business at Peking University.

Chinese social media users were less enthusiastic than state media. Many of the people who commented on the reports expressed doubts about the quality of the station's construction.

China, whose rapid economic growth has been helped by huge investment in infrastructure, has a reputation for carrying out big building projects quickly. But there have been regular reports of shoddy work.

"Anyone who has lived in China can tell you story after story of low quality infrastructure projects. Just because they get thrown up fast, doesn't mean they are quality," said Balding, who's based in the southern city of Shenzhen.

Musk appeared to be using the example of the Chinese rail station to highlight US failings in infrastructure, and he pointed to articles about the huge cost of building mass transit projects in California and New York.

Related: Can Elon Musk make subway tunnels cool again?

But it may not be a fair comparison.

Some projects in China are carried out so poorly that they "need to be redone a few years after completion," said Balding. And the economics of infrastructure are very different in a country where wages are far lower.

"In China they throw an astounding amount of people at projects with vast amounts of low skilled labor," he told CNN, adding that safety standards are "non-existent" on some construction sites.

Musk, who wants to build a super fast subway system in Los Angeles, acknowledged those issues in his tweets.

"Higher safety & environmental requirements & labor costs explain only a small part of the difference," he wrote. The real causes of the problems in the US are "an exponential growth in bureaucracy" and "a self-serving private sector consultant industry" whose fees give it an incentive to "maximize cost," he added.

-- CNN's Daniel Shane and Qiaoqiao Yu contributed to this report.

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