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Thursday, 31 July 2014

China Lets 1st Foreigners Into Army News Briefing

Not many years ago, foreign reporters in China trying to call the country’s secretive military couldn’t even get a connection because phone numbers assigned to the journalists were barred from reaching the Defense Ministry.


On Thursday, they were finally permitted to attend the Defense Ministry’s monthly news briefing, marking a small milestone in the increasingly confident military’s efforts to project a more transparent image.


Restrictions still apply and there is no sign of an improvement in the generally paltry amount and poor quality of information released by the People’s Liberation Army, the world’s largest standing military with 2.3 million members.


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After Deadly Clash, China and Uighurs Disagree on Events That Led to Violence

More details emerged Wednesday about a bloody clash between Chinese security forces and ethnic Uighurs in the country’s far west two days ago, suggesting that dozens of people died when a protest against government policies turned violent.


The official news agency Xinhua described the confrontation, in the Xinjiang region, as a “violent terrorist attack that was organized, premeditated and carefully planned.” But Uighur exile groups, citing sources in the region, said that the police had used excessive force on a crowd of protesters outside government offices in Yarkand County and that rioting had later broken out across several rural townships.


A government-run website on Wednesday blamed Islamic fundamentalists for the unrest but provided no evidence for the claim. Xinjiang is home to most of China’s 10 million Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim people who populate the string of ancient oasis towns and cities that were once way stations on the Silk Road.


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Andrew Jacobs, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1m267wm

Zhou Yongkang: oil boss who became China’s third most powerful man

The Chinese Communist party prizes conformity, and many of its aesthetic trademarks – the uniform black suits, the turgid speeches – call to mind a massively powerful machine, its anonymous parts in perfect lockstep. Within this system, the fallen security tsar Zhou Yongkang – China’s third most powerful man until he retired in 2012 – was a rare anomaly. The further he receded from view, the more attention he commanded.


On Tuesday, the Communist party put an end to months of speculation when it announced an inquiry into Zhou, 71, “for grave violations of discipline”, shorthand for corruption. He is the highest-level figure in the party’s history to be investigated for graft. But for years prior, profiles of Zhou painted him as China’s Dick Cheney, his immense power matching only his moral decay. He certainly looks the part: while China’s president, Xi Jinping, carries a perennial expression of enlightened bemusement, Zhou’s steely visage suggests barely concealed malice; his occasional smiles look painful and forced.


During Zhou’s last five years in power, he was the head of the Communist party’s political and legislative affairs committee, in charge of its state security, courts, police and paramilitary. He was known for his frequent use of the term “hostile forces” – an intentionally vague category encompassing a multitude of disparate camps, from pro-democracy campaigners to activists in Tibet. He worked tirelessly to contain them, maintaining a vast “stability maintenance” apparatus involving draconian internet censorship campaigns and extralegal penal systems. Zhou’s only superiors were the president and the prime minister, and during his tenure China’s domestic security budget exceeded that of its military.


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Jonathan Kaiman, The Guardian via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1rMUKvU

Wednesday, 30 July 2014

Sino-US Military Relationship: Vulnerability vs Resilience

The list of initiatives decided at the 2014 Sino-US Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED) strategic track is longer than that of last year. The 116 outcomes, compared with 91 outcomes last year, are impressive not only because of the progress made, but also because of the scope of the issues to be addressed by these important countries.


A lot of attention has been given to progress in the military field since the last S&ED. What really raises eyebrows is the expression of a “new type of military relations,” which is a step higher than the “new level of military relations” coined at last year’s S&ED. It is also the first time that such an expression has appeared in writing. Besides calling for deepening cooperation in counter-piracy, maritime search and rescue, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, both sides affirmed a mutual commitment to the management of crises and prevention of accidental events.


This is good news, especially after senior American officials unleashed an avalanche of criticism about the PLA being “assertive” in the East China Sea and “salami-slicing” in the South China Sea. It looks like the pendulum has swung back and the US has decided to correct itself.


The Sino-American relationship is intrinsically imbued with two distinctive characteristics – vulnerability and resilience. The vulnerability is obvious, but the resilience is often overlooked. For example, in April 2001, a collision between an American EP-3 reconnaissance aircraft and a Chinese J-8 fighter killed a Chinese pilot. No matter how appalling the incident was, soon after the US government delivered its “letter of two sorries,” the Chinese government released the American crew. The crisis was basically resolved, in only 11 days. This year’s Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore appeared to be very much “soured” by the spat between participants from China and the US and Japan. However, the US later announced that four Chinese ships would attend RIMPAC 2014, a multilateral exercise hosted by the US Navy off of Hawaii. And the size of the Chinese participating task force is second to that of the US Navy.


Such seemingly contradictory phenomena reflect a strong resilience and even a kind of maturity in the relationship between the two major powers. That is, if discord is unavoidable, you do what you can to avoid it from becoming a crisis.


The resilience between China and the US has been sustained, first of all, by dialogue. There are over 90 dialogues of all sorts between the two countries, and quite a few of them are at the military-level. Even the S&ED has a security dialogue. The defense and security dialogues can provide a timely exchange of views and are therefore critically important. They help avoid unnecessary surprises and miscalculations and should be encouraged by all means.


Cooperation between the two militaries has thus far been confined to “practical areas,” such as counter-piracy, maritime search and rescue, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief. There are twelve areas that are restricted by a paranoid American Congress for fear that the PLA could benefit more than the US military from the interactions. But in recent years, more bilateral and multilateral exercises are held in “practical areas.” This is a great step forward. The US could continue inviting China for multilateral exercises, such as Cobra Gold and RIMPAC 2014 and accept PLA’s greater involvement. Likewise, the PLA could invite the US military to observe its exercises and visit more military facilities.


The real challenge in the major power relationship is not how good it will be, but the degree to which it could present less risk. Right now, China and the US are discussing a mechanism for notifying each other of major military activities and rules of behavior for air and maritime encounters. The bad news is that the progress is slow; the good news is that the commitment is reaffirmed. Another healthy development, according to the S&ED, is that the US coast guard and PRC maritime law enforcement agency will be included in future discussions on rules for air and maritime behavior.


No region is more dangerous than the seas in the Western Pacific. Unplanned encounters between naval ships and aircraft are not rare, especially between Chinese naval ships and aircraft, and those of the US and Japan. Fortunately on 22 April, 2014, 21 states unanimously voted for a Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES) in Tsingtao. CUES offers safety procedures, a basic communications plan and maneuvering instructions when naval ships or naval aircraft of two states meet unexpectedly at sea. It helps reduce miscalculations and the chance of a conflict.


CUES is the greatest achievement we have had in recent years, in terms of crisis management in the West Pacific. It should be observed in earnest. There should be training exercises so that officers and sailors can become familiar with the rules. This is exceedingly important for the Chinese and American navies, whose ships often get dangerously close to each other.


Zhou Bo is an honorary fellow with Center of China-American Defense Relations, Academy of Military Science.






Zhou Bo, an honorary fellow with Academy of Military Science via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nL8et0

Government Offices Attacked, Dozens Killed in Far-Western China

A group of assailants launched coordinated attacks on government and police buildings in China’s far-western Xinjiang region on Monday, leaving dozens of people dead a day before the mostly Muslim area was set to celebrate the end of Ramadan.


Attackers armed with knives attacked the town of Elixhu, with some later moving on to the town of Huangdi, smashing cars and killing civilians, the official Xinhua News Agency reported on Tuesday.


Xinhua reported that dozens of civilians were killed, at least 30 cars were smashed and six more were set on fire in what it called “an organized, premeditated and carefully planned terrorist attack of vile nature and tremendous violence.” Xinhua didn’t identify the attackers.


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Josh Chin, The Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1o5Cpuo

China Moves to Ease Home-Registration Rules in Urbanization Push

The Chinese government issued proposals on Wednesday to break down barriers that a nationwide household registration system has long imposed between rural and urban residents and among regions, reinforcing inequality, breeding discontent and hampering economic growth.


Yet even as officials promoted easier urbanization and the goal of permanently settling an additional 100 million rural people in towns and cities by 2020, they said changes to the system — which links many government entitlements to a person’s official residence, even if that person has long since moved away — must be gradual and must protect big cities like Beijing.


“This reform of the household registration system will be more decisive, vigorous, broad-ranging and substantive than it’s ever been,” Huang Ming, a vice minister of public security, said at a televised news conference in Beijing where officials explained the proposals set out in a document released Wednesday.


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Chris Buckley, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1o5Crm0

China’s local GDP data points to recovery, rebalancing

China’s regional economies enjoyed a revival in growth in the second quarter, data from provincial governments showed, chiming with earlier figures that suggest a burst of government stimulus measures is re-invigorating activity.


Of the 30 regions and provinces that released their local gross domestic product (GDP) data, 23 reported first-half economic growth accelerated from the first quarter.


About three-quarters posted growth that was higher than the national average of 7.4 percent in the first six months.


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China’s local GDP data points to recovery, rebalancing

China’s regional economies enjoyed a revival in growth in the second quarter, data from provincial governments showed, chiming with earlier figures that suggest a burst of government stimulus measures is re-invigorating activity.


Of the 30 regions and provinces that released their local gross domestic product (GDP) data, 23 reported first-half economic growth accelerated from the first quarter.


About three-quarters posted growth that was higher than the national average of 7.4 percent in the first six months.


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Chinese Stocks Take Off

China’s stocks are soaring as people scoop up investments in one of the world’s cheapest markets, encouraged by signs Asia’s biggest economy has turned the corner and is starting to motor again.


The Shanghai Composite Index jumped for a sixth day to the highest in nine months on Tuesday, bringing the gain to 6.6% so far in July and leaving the market in position to record its best month since December 2012. The index is catching up with a rally in Hong Kong that sent the city’s main stock index to a three-year high last week.


An index of mainland companies traded in Hong Kong entered a bull market Monday, rising more than 20% from a low in March.


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Daniel Inman and Shen Hong, The Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1o5Cnma

Alibaba Entertains Chinese Willingness to Pay

Will Alibaba’s magic touch in online shopping extend to entertainment? That depends on whether it can persuade Chinese consumers to actually pay for content, a tricky task in a land awash in free Web streaming and pirated DVDs.

The Chinese e-commerce giant has thrown around at least $3 billion lately to invest in various bits of entertainment, from a film studio to a stake in a Chinese version of YouTube. Alibaba’s regulatory filings for its U.S. listing don’t make clear how these pieces fit together.


But a fuller picture is now coming into focus, and at its center lies a set-top box. Introduced in April, the box sells for 299 yuan, or just under $50, on Alibaba’s Tmall site, and is stylized with feline features, an allusion to Tmall’s Chinese name, which includes the character for “cat.”


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Aaron Back, The Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1o5CePC

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

China Investigating Microsoft in Monopoly Case

China’s anti-monopoly agency announced an investigation Tuesday of Microsoft Corp., stepping up regulatory pressure on foreign technology companies.


The State Administration for Industry and Commerce said it opened a case in June after complaints Microsoft improperly failed to publish all documentation for its Windows operating system and Office software. It said investigators visited Microsoft’s China headquarters in Beijing and branches in Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu in southwestern China this week.


“The administration believes the previous investigation cannot eliminate that Microsoft engaged in monopolistic behavior,” the agency said on its website. “The administration has launched an investigation of Microsoft’s monopolistic behavior.”


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China Says Former Security Chief Is Under Investigation

President Xi Jinping’s campaign against corruption among the Chinese elite took public aim on Tuesday at its biggest target so far, when the Communist Party announced an investigation of Zhou Yongkang, the former head of domestic security.


Mr. Zhou, who retired from the Politiburo Standing Committee in 2012, accumulated vast power while in office, and his family became enormously wealthy. Now, according to the terse announcement by the party’s anti-corruption agency, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, he is being investigated “on suspicion of grave violations of discipline.”


The news was reported almost immediately on Chinese state media, and delivered by a grim-faced anchor on the main evening news broadcast. The reports gave no details about the allegations, but they pointedly omitted the word “comrade” in referring to Mr. Zhou, a sign that an official has been severed from the party and faces punishment.


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China’s war games don’t faze Japan but disrupt civilian air traffic

China is holding some of its most extensive military exercises this week off its eastern seaboard, and although rival Japan is unperturbed, they are causing massive disruptions in civilian air traffic in Shanghai and other cities.


Live-fire drills will be held for the next five days off China’s coast in the East China Sea opposite Japan starting on Tuesday, the Ministry of National Defence said.


Civil aviation authorities have issued a red alert, resulting in a near shutdown of 19 airports in eastern and southern China between 2-6 p.m. (0500-1000 GMT), at least on Tuesday. Those affected include Shanghai’s two main airports, which cater to tens of thousands of passengers each day.


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Megha Rajagopalan, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1totyri

Monday, 28 July 2014

OSI group to fund food safety

US-based OSI Group, owner of the Shanghai food company accused of selling expired meat, announced on Monday that it would invest 10 million yuan ($1.62 million) for a three-year food safety education campaign in China and establish an Asia Quality Control Center to regain market confidence.


Shanghai Husi Food, a food supplier for a number of global brands such as McDonald’s, KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks, was accused by a television station last week of using expired meat as well as forging production dates to extend shelf time.


The case soon spread from the Chinese mainland to Hong Kong and Japan, and also provoked wide public anger.


David G. McDonald, president and chief operating officer of OSI Group, said the company is conducting an internal investigation, and that preliminary investigations have found issues that he said are absolutely inconsistent with internal product requirements and policies.


“We will fully cooperate with Shanghai FDA for the investigation,” he said.


The group ceased operations of the Shanghai Husi plant for internal and external investigations, and extended their internal reviews to ensure that compliance met their global standards.


But the group didn’t talk about compensation for consumers in China.


“We have put our focus on the investigation. We want to find out the reason behind the misconduct, and made by whom and for what motives,” he said, adding that they will take swift and decisive action against those responsible.


The group also announced a number of changes in the organizational and management structure of OSI China. The operations in China will become a part of the OSI International umbrella, directly embedded into the corporate organization, rather than operating as a separate, decentralized entity. This new organization will be called OSI International China, according to David G. McDonald.


OSI International China will be managed by global management in accordance with global standards of quality management, which includes experienced individuals from around the world, he said.


“We know that we have let down our customers, the government, and the public of China,” said Sheldon Lavin, chairman and chief executive officer of OSI Group, as he apologized at a news conference held in Shanghai on Monday.


“We understand that we need to rebuild and again earn respect, trust, reputation and forgiveness,” he said.


The company reiterated its commitment in China and said it will set up an Asia Quality Control Center in Shanghai. The center will be staffed by a team of international and local teams, providing quality assurance for all OSI sites across the country and support for other Chinese food companies.


Meanwhile, it will launch a three-year food safety campaign in China with a 10 million yuan investment to boost staff training and promote awareness of food safety issues among the Chinese public.


“It is the cornerstone of our business and for our customers. We understand that we still have a lot of work to do to reclaim the respect and trust of our customers, the government and consumers,” McDonald said.


The Shanghai food safety watchdog is still investigating the case, and it said on Monday that it will increase supervision of food safety and also encourage food company employees to report any misconduct.


By WANG HONGYI in Shanghai (China Daily)






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Uygur extremists ‘training in Middle East’, envoy says

Muslim extremists from the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region have gone to the Middle East for training and some may have crossed into Iraq to take part in the upsurge of violence there, China’s special envoy for the Middle East, Wu Sike, said on Monday.


China has repeatedly expressed concern about the upsurge in violence in Iraq and the march of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which has seized much of the north of the country as Baghdad’s forces there collapsed.


ISIL, alternately translated as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, has proclaimed the establishment of a caliphate on land it has captured in Syria and Iraq.


Wu, who has recently returned from the region, said China is extremely worried about the role of extremist groups in the fighting in Syria and Iraq.


“Several hot spot issues in the Middle East have provided living space for terrorist groups. In particular, the crisis in Syria has turned this country into a training ground for extremists from many countries,” he said.


“These extremists come from Islamic countries, Europe, North America and China. After being immersed in extremist ideas, when they return home they will pose a severe challenge and security risk to those countries,” added Wu, who has 40 years of diplomatic experience in the Middle East.


While many analysts question whether these groups could accumulate the abilities that China is worried about, some people from China’s Uygur ethnic group have made their way to Afghanistan and Pakistan in recent years.


Wu did not give a figure for how many Chinese citizens may be in the Middle East either fighting or being trained, saying that he understood from foreign media reports that the number is about 100.


“Mostly they are East Turkestan elements,” Wu said.


“They won’t necessarily all return (to China). Some will remain to participate in the conflict, perhaps crossing into Iraq,” he said, without elaborating.


US intelligence agencies estimate that about 7,000 of the 23,000 violent extremists operating in Syria are foreign fighters, mostly from Europe.


In June, China’s Guangming Daily reported the involvement of ethnic Uygur terrorists in the ongoing Syrian civil war.


All the terrorists, about 100, are members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement – a terrorist organization that pursues the secession of Xinjiang from China, the newspaper quoted a report by Israel’s Meir Amit Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center as saying.


Foreign terrorists have accumulated firsthand battleground experience in the Syrian civil war and will implement what they have learned into waging terrorist attacks or organizing terror groups in their home countries, and that will pose grave menace to these countries, the Israeli report said.


Wu said China would do all it could to help Middle Eastern countries fight terror as this was also in China’s best interests.


“China is a victim of extremist, terrorist activities, and our support for fighting terrorism in this region is beneficial to us, too. As a result, China and those countries are in a closely knit community of shared interests.”


Wu said that despite the violence, he was confident in Iraq’s future and China’s involvement in its energy sector.


“In the long run, China has confidence in the political reconciliation and economic development of Iraq, so we have confidence in the future of this (energy) cooperation,” he said.






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1rVzKoE

China Voice: 8 questions to Mr. Abe

On the 100th anniversary of the beginning of WWI, in Europe old rivals have apologized and forgiven one another.


Asia however, is home to a defeated county with an unfathomable attitude toward history, currently trying to wriggle out of the constraints of its pacifist constitution.


Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has put China and other countries on their guard with worries about the possibility, however small, of a third world war.


We can never undo the catastrophe of 100 years ago, but we can be wise and responsible for ourselves and coming generations. For the sake of peace, Mr. Abe, you deserve the chance to clarify the following questions.


You said the definition of aggression has yet to be established by academia or the international community.


After WWI, Japan captured China’s Qingdao; in 1931. Your country invaded northeast China and launched the war of aggression against China in 1937. Millions of Japanese troops were sent to China before Japan was defeated in 1945.


Question one: From which perspective do you define these wars as not being aggression?


Japan accepted the Potsdam Proclamation and surrendered unconditionally in 1945. The proclamation states that the authority and influence of those who deceived the people of Japan into embarking on world conquest must be eliminated for all time.


Question two: Is the Potsdam Proclamation, achieved only after millions of people lost their lives, still working for Japan today’?


The 1972 Japan-China joint communique reads, “The Japanese side is keenly conscious of the responsibility for the serious damage that Japan caused in the past to the Chinese people through war, and deeply reproaches itself.”


As we see the Japanese government whitewashing the atrocities of their predecessors and portraying the war as a military conflict, in which Japan was forced to engage, to liberate Asia from white colonialism, a third question arises:


Can such actions be rightly called self reproach?


In 1978, convicted war criminals were enshrined at Yasukuni and no Japanese emperor has visited the shrine since. You, however, insisted on visiting the shrine and even reported your work to the war dead. You claim your visit was a prayer for peace and swear that no more war will be waged.


Question four: Would it not be better to swear before the neighbors who suffered at Japan’s hand than to swear before the souls of the murderers who cause that very suffering?


The Japanese public is deeply worried about an economy driven by “Abenomics”. Alongside a shaky economy, you are promoting nationalism and challenging the order of global peace.


A fifth question calls for clarification of whether and how the situation in Japan today is similar to – or how is it different from – that before WWII?


You talk about your political dream to unlock Japan from “a box created 40 or 50 years ago.”


Does that mean bringing Japan back to wartime militarism?


You have been emphasizing the U.S.-Japan alliance, but the fact is, this alliance is nothing more than two sides using one another to achieve their own ends.


Question seven: How long do you think this alliance of strange bedfellows can last?


Question eight: Japan greatly benefited from WWI and started WWII. While the whole world is making efforts to avoid a third world war, what is Japan doing?


Europe’s summer of 100 years ago shall not be repeated in today’s Asia. China does not weigh history as a burden, but cannot forget the great suffering of the Chinese people by Japan’s hand since WWI.


Acknowledging honestly the nature of the war and truly atoning for it are prerequisites for Japan in receiving the forgiveness of its neighbors.


Mr. Abe, you say you want to meet Chinese leaders and ease bilateral relations, but up till now, we have neither heard sincere words nor perceived any mollifying action. Before any meeting at the highest level can take place, Mr. Prime Minister, you have a lot of questions to answer.


By Xinhua writer Li Zhihui






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Western Media Expose Their Prejudice

Usni.org, the official website of US Naval Institute, has created a controversy by posting an article that says, “China sends uninvited spy ship to Rimpac” (Rim of the Pacific Exercise). Quoting anonymous sources, the article says, “the ship was operating south of the Hawaiian island of Oahu, near the USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) carrier strike group (CSG) and the main body of the 50 ships participating in the exercise”.


Several Western media outlets, as if waiting for such an opportunity, immediately swung into action. Chinatopix.com published an article on Monday saying that China “spies” on Rimpac exercise, while The Wall Street Journal said: “Beijing shadows naval exercises in which it is already participating”. The Japan Times added to the media drama by publishing another anti-China article.


Such sensationalizing by the media is deplorable.


The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea approves of navigation and overflight in non-territorial waters, and Chinese ships have always abided by the laws of coastal states while navigating in such waters. In his interviews, as well as his e-mail statement, US Pacific Fleet chief spokesman Darryn James has made it clear that the Chinese ship’s presence was “in accordance with international law regarding freedom of navigation”.


The truth is that the US and its allies have carried out regular surveillances against China in the past years. US surveillance vehicles have left their footprints from the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea to the South China Sea, and from Hainan Island to Xisha Islands. The US uses airplanes, including naval surveillance planes, ocean survey vessels and even nuclear submarines to spy on China. Data show that the US carries out hundreds of surveillances against China every year, much more than those it conducted against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.


Japan as the US’ key ally also conducts frequent surveillances against China, and has intensified their frequency in the past couple of years, that is, since the straining of ties. The two countries continue to spy on China ignoring Beijing’s frequent objections since 2012.


Sometimes these surveillance tools (planes and ships) pose a real danger because they disturb the normal activities of the Chinese navy. For example, US cruisers have entered the waters that China had clearly marked for drills, while Japanese vessels have sailed in front of or even intruded formations of Chinese naval fleets. Such actions could easily cause the situation to spiral out of control, and thus should be immediately stopped.


By sensationalizing a non-incident, American media outlets cannot change the general trend of improving Sino-US relationship. They should know that Darryn James has been quoted as saying that the US “respects” the right of free passage and the Rimpac exercise “goes on smoothly” despite the minor incident.


But the fact that the Western media tried to sensationalize the so-called spy incident shows that opinions are divided in the US over improving military ties with China. Many media outlets even criticized US President Barack Obama’s decision last year to invite the People’s Liberation Army Navy to the 2014 Rimpac.


The 2014 Rimpac is the Chinese navy’s first appearance in the US-led joint exercise, which is key to Sino-US confidence building. The road to better, harmonious Sino-US military relations is long and both countries need to make sincere efforts to complete the journey.


Zhang Junshe is a researcher at the People’s Liberation Army Naval Military Studies Research Institute. This article was originally published by China Daily.






Zhang Junshe, researcher, PLA Naval Military Studies Research Institute via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1pnvaxy

Highlights of Xi’s Journey to Latin America

President Xi Jinping’s recent trip to Latin America fully demonstrated the strategic aspiration of China as an emerging global power, conveying explicit Chinese confidence, capability, philosophy, image, and vision.


Wu Baiyi Highlights of Xi’s Journey to Latin America

Wu Baiyi



Chinese confidence refers to the Chinese initiative for cooperation with BRICS nations and Latin American countries. The emerging partnerships between BRICS nations are one of the newly formulated multi-lateral international governance mechanisms prompted by the global financial crisis. In the post-crisis period, countries joined hands for mutual assistance and policy coordination and successfully revitalized domestic demand through large-scale financial stimulus packages. These efforts were outstanding contributions to stabilizing the world economy.


Over the past two years however, many emerging economies, including BRICS members, have seen growth slowing down amid increasing downward pressure. People are less optimistic about the future of emerging economies, and western nations, who have begun to see signs of recovery, are again raising doubts about the economic prospects of BRICS countries. During a recent BRICS summit, President Xi Jinping made a passionate call for member nations to unite more closely, rise to face these economic challenges, and enhance confidence in fulfilling the goals of inclusive growth.


President Xi and leaders of other member countries presided over the establishment of the New Development Bank, showcasing resolve and a capability for jointly coping with the challenges that resulted from an imbalanced and obsolete international governance regime. The collective consultation between BRICS and Latin American leaders was not only beneficial for BRICS nations, but it was also a great boost to the stagnating South American economy.


Chinese capability was specifically reflected in the new framework for cooperation between China and Latin America, which was proposed by President Xi. With trade, investment, and financial collaboration as the three engines driving the “China and Latin American and Caribbean countries cooperation plan(2015—2019),” he cooperative relationship is expected to bring bilateral trade to $500 billion in 10 years (about the same level of current Sino-US trade). Bilateral financial cooperation between China and Latin America will reach $250 billion in 10 years, including the expansion of local currency settlements and exchanges in trade.


During President Xi’s visits, China signed cooperation agreements with Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, and Cuba respectively. Under these agreements, China will provide $70 billion to those countries via preferential loans and special funds, supporting their collaboration with China in energy and resources, infrastructure, agriculture, manufacturing, scientific and technological innovation, as well as information technologies, thus promoting cooperation between Chinese and Latin American industries. Such cooperation will not only satisfy the latter’s pressing needs for capital, but, at the same time, it will provide a larger market for Chinese products, technologies, and equipment. This further guarantees the safe and sustainable supply of external resources and energy.


Chinese philosophy refers to principles of international cooperation, which President Xi systematically elaborated on during his visits. On several occasions, President Xi expounded on the outlook for political cooperation: “Mountains and oceans can’t prevent those of common ideals from making concerted efforts.” President Xi expressed an outlook on economic cooperation: “Unite and all progress, or each recedes on its own.” On cultural cooperation, “that things differ from each other is a matter of course.” On security cooperation, “don’t do unto others what you don’t want others do unto you.” In Sum, President Xi highlighted the inseparable correlation between the existence and prosperity of China and that of the rest of the world. More importantly, he not only put forward the concept that China and Latin America are one “community of common destiny,” but he also demonstrated through a series of concrete measures of cooperation that China is willing to share with Latin America its experiences and achievements.


China is willing to contribute to the unity and common prosperity of developing countries. Generally improving China-Latin America cooperation, speaking in one voice with Latin America, and promoting a just international order is an increasingly important political consideration behind China’s growing emphasis on Latin America. The birth of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States offers new opportunities for the two parties’ constructive interaction.


The Chinese image has been greatly enriched by President Xi’s visits. First, on various occasions, Xi clearly expressed an understanding of and support for host countries’ domestic and foreign policies, displaying China’s commitment to justice and fairness as an emerging power. Second, he repeatedly accentuated the need for civilizations to learn from each other, as well as knowledge about and respect for the local culture, relating the “Chinese Dream” to the “Latin American Dream”. Third, as personal gifts, he took with him a number of movie and TV products reflecting people’s lives in present-day China. He proposed to set up the “Bridge to the Future” training program for Chinese and Latin American youth leaders to facilitate mutual understanding. Additionally, it is noteworthy that before departing from Argentina, President Xi made an impromptu decision to get off his vehicle and shake hands with local guards, leaving a heart-warming impression of modesty, amicability and affability.


In summary, the Chinese vision refers to a strategic motivation behind the aforementioned four-aspect Chinese outreach: Consolidate and expand South-South cooperation, promote a multi-polar world order; obtain more strategic leverage for future development through enhancing all around cooperation with BRICS countries and Latin America, so as to hedge increasing external risks and challenges; improve awareness and the ability of providing international public goods, thus building the image of a responsible emerging power; Effectively translate the country’s widely accepted development achievements into cultural and social influences, thus upgrading comprehensive competitiveness.


Wu Baiyi is a research fellow at the Institute of Latin American Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.






Wu Baiyi, research fellow, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1tkUsQI

China Retail Billionaire Takes Aim At Children’s Education Market

Zhejiang Semir Garment, the big Chinese apparel retailer controlled by billionaire Qiu Guanghe, has purchased 70% of the licensed China operations of FasTacKids, the U.S. early childhood education provider.


Semir paid 102.2 million yuan, or $16.5 million to Hong Kong’s Everlearn Group on July 17, according to a Semir announcement on Monday. Everlearn operates a total of 103 FasTracKids and FasTracEnglish education centers in China.


Semir, whose Balabala childhood apparel brand is sold in 3,500 stores in China, is seeking ways to integrate its retail, child education and entertainment businesses, according to the company’s statement.


Read Full Article HERE






Forbes via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1znoFzk

China Criticizes New U.S. Tariffs on Solar Products

China’s Commerce Ministry castigated the United States on Monday for setting new import duties on Chinese solar products, saying Washington’s actions risked damaging the industry in both countries.


On Friday, the United States Commerce Department placed heavy antidumping duties on solar panels and cells from China after a preliminary finding that the products were being sold in the United States for less than the cost of production.


The move by Washington, which must still be confirmed, was the latest in a long-running solar industry trade dispute between the world’s two largest economies and came on top of anti-subsidy duties levied last month.


Read Full Article HERE






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China Moves Against 2 Churches in Campaign Against Christianity

In another sign of the authorities’ efforts to contain one of China’s fastest-growing religions, a government demolition campaign against public symbols of the Christian faith has toppled crosses at two more churches in the coastal province of Zhejiang, according to residents there.


On Monday, public security officials in the city of Wenzhou used a crane and blowtorch to cut loose the red, 10-foot crucifix that had adorned the Longgang Township Gratitude Church, witnesses said. Unlike in previous confrontations between the police and parishioners that have unfolded in recent months, the congregants did not offer resistance.


“We didn’t want to get in a fight with them, but obviously what they did was illegal,” said the Rev. Qu Linuo, a pastor from a nearby church, who was among the crowd of believers who held an overnight vigil before the police arrived.


Read Full Article HERE






Andrew Jacobs, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1kjwse8

When China stops copying Western tech giants is when they should start worrying

Why do some of China’s biggest tech companies engage in the sincerest form of flattery? This week Lei Jun, the chief executive of Xiaomi—recently rebranded internationally as Mi—stood on stage in a black T-shirt and jeans and announced a new smartphone with a notable resemblance to the iPhone in front of a slide that said “one more thing…”


Yes, the same “one more thing…” slide that Steve Jobs made famous…Mi thinks “sweeping sensationalist statements” of it copying Apple are off the mark. “We are not the only ones who have adopted the Steve Jobs presentation style,” Mi international vice-president Hugo Barra said. “The whole world has done that.”


But Mi isn’t the only Chinese company to be imitating its Western peers. Lenovo has just unveiled a prototype of a rival to Google Glass, in which the chief innovation appears to be an ungainly-looking neck-mounted battery pack. And Baidu, China’s biggest search engine, is working on a driverless car—though it’s too early to tell how closely its designs match those of Google, which has been developing one for years.


Read Full Article HERE






Kabir Chibber, Quartz via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1pmFNAJ

China puts Microsoft under official investigation

Government investigators visited Microsoft offices in four Chinese cities Monday, according to a company spokeswoman. However, the reason for the visits was not immediately clear.


Microsoft, like other U.S. technology giants in recent months, has been under fire from Chinese media for its perceived role in helping the U.S government conduct cyberhacking against China.


On Monday, investigators from China’s State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) — the nation’s main business authorities — visited Microsoft offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu. Microsoft said the purpose of the visit was to begin an official investigation. It did not elaborate further.


Read Full Article HERE






Calum MacLeod, USA Today via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1pmFMNg

Europe stocks struggle, Asia rises on China data

European stock markets struggled on Monday and Wall Street was expected to dip on the open amid ongoing concerns about earnings and the economic impact of sanctions on Russia. Asian indexes closed higher, however, after China reported strong corporate profits.


KEEPING SCORE: In morning European trade, France’s CAC 40 rose 0.2 percent to 4,337.81 while Germany’s DAX shed 0.2 percent to 9,620.98. Britain’s FTSE 100 was flat at 6,792.45. Futures augured a muted session on Wall Street. Dow and S&P 500 futures were both down 0.1 percent. On Friday, the Dow lost 0.7 percent while the S&P was off 0.5 percent.


ASIA’S DAY: China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index surged 2.4 percent to 2,177.95. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 added 0.5 percent to 15,529.40 and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 0.9 percent at 24,428.63. Investors were mainly buoyed by news that profits at China’s industrial enterprises soared 17.9 percent in June over a year earlier. The figure boosted confidence that the world’s No. 2 economy has stabilized after a slowdown.


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China Currency Gaining Among American Corporations

Here’s a good one for those who think the dollar’s days are numbered. A survey released last week by HSBC Global says more U.S. multinationals are closing trade transactions in…you guessed it…the Chinese yuan.


Of course, this sort of news is right up HSBC’s alley. They are one of the premier financial centers in Hong Kong, where much of the off-shore Chinese currency transactions take place. It’s like a dream come true for the old colonial bank: the yuan increasingly being taken seriously as a viable trade currency.


According to the survey, U.S. businesses have joined a growing number of German and French firms using the yuan and more plan to use it “amid expectations by business leaders that their trade with China will increase in the next 12 months,” HSBC said in a press release on Wednesday.


Read Full Article HERE






Forbes via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1ApMOqd

When China stops copying Western tech giants is when they should start worrying

Why do some of China’s biggest tech companies engage in the sincerest form of flattery? This week Lei Jun, the chief executive of Xiaomi—recently rebranded internationally as Mi—stood on stage in a black T-shirt and jeans and announced a new smartphone with a notable resemblance to the iPhone in front of a slide that said “one more thing…”


Mi thinks “sweeping sensationalist statements” of it copying Apple are off the mark. “We are not the only ones who have adopted the Steve Jobs presentation style,” Mi international vice-president Hugo Barra said. “The whole world has done that.”


But Mi isn’t the only Chinese company to be imitating its Western peers. Lenovo has just unveiled a prototype of a rival to Google Glass, in which the chief innovation appears to be an ungainly-looking neck-mounted battery pack. And Baidu, China’s biggest search engine, is working on a driverless car—though it’s too early to tell how closely its designs match those of Google, which has been developing one for years.


Read Full Article HERE






Kabir Chibber, Quartz via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lN6ydy

Nissan Profit Beats Estimates on China, U.S. Deliveries

Nissan Motor Co. (7201), Japan’s second-biggest carmaker, reported profit that beat analysts’ estimate as deliveries rose in China and the U.S., its two biggest markets.


Net income rose 37 percent to 112.1 billion yen ($1.1 billion) in the April-June quarter, beating the 84.3 billion yen average of 14 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The Yokohama-based automaker maintained its profit forecast.


The profit increase may signal Chief Executive Officer Carlos Ghosn is gaining traction after making dozens of executive changes in November to improve execution and cut incentives in the U.S. Deliveries have outpaced Honda Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) in the U.S. and China this year, as Nissan chases its targets of 8 percent operating margin and global market share.


Read Full Article HERE






Ma Jie and Yuki Hagiwara, Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lN6kTU

Harsher safety measures urged amid scandal

Legal experts and industry insiders are calling for more stringent legislation on food safety after a scandal involving the Shanghai Husi Food Co.


The company, owned by the US-based OSI Group, has been accused of mixing fresh and long-expired meat products.


The food safety scandal has spread across the country, entangling many international fast-food brands, including McDonald’s, KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks Corp.


The case comes as China is attempting the first revision of the Food Safety Law, which took effect in 2009.


“Food safety is an important issue concerning public health and people’s livelihoods. In Shanghai, whoever the violator is, they will be strictly punished,” the city’s Party chief, Han Zheng, said at a work conference on Sunday.


Government departments should strictly supervise every key point in the supply chain, said Han, who praised the media’s important role in uncovering the Husi case.


Shanghai lawyer Yan Yiming said, “We hope that the penalties for food safety offenders can be increased as the country revises the law.” An industry insider, who declined to be named, said: “Over past years, punishment for food safety violators has been increased but it still lags far behind that in developed countries. There should be much higher punishment for offenders.”


Qiu Baochang, head of the legal team at the China Consumers’ Association, said the revised law should clarify who is the responsible party in any food safety incident. This month, the National People’s Congress released a draft version of the Food Safety Law on its website to seek public opinion. The draft promises tougher punishment for offenders and to the establishment of a stricter food safety supervision system.


Zhang Yong, head of the China Food and Drug Administration, said the current law has been “somewhat effective” in improving food safety, but the situation remains severe. The existing system is not effective, penalties are comparatively light and offenders are not deterred, Zhang said. A Shanghai television report last week showed staff members at Shanghai Husi Food Co allegedly mixing long-expired meat into products. The company also allegedly forged production dates.


Five people have been detained by police in connection with the case.


The Shanghai food safety watchdog on Saturday said the company had forged production dates on more than 4,300 cases of smoked beef patties. The dates were altered to January 2014 from May 2013. More than 3,000 cases have already been sold.


In a statement on its website late on Saturday, the OSI Group said it will withdraw all products made by Shanghai Husi from the market. The group said it is conducting a thorough internal investigation and will “take swift and decisive action” against those responsible.


The group also said it had sent a new management team to China to ensure that operations run effectively.


Brent Afman, OSI Group’s general manager for the Asia-Pacific region, said it will cooperate with authorities in China over the investigation.


By WANG HONGYI in Shanghai (China Daily)






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nPgmba

New rules on military awards to take effect

China’s first regulations on military awards and commendations will go into effect on Aug. 1.


The rules stipulate that the number of awards and commendations should be controlled and awarded based on improvement of combat abilities, the People’s Daily reported Monday.


The regulations are meant to consolidate rules on awards and commendations, which were previously contained in multiple documents, according to the report.


Complaints about the large number of awards and commendations given have also been a factor leading to the rules, according to the report.


The new rules stress that more awards and commendations should be offered to combat troops, major operations and troops serving in remote areas or places where life is difficult.


The regulations were jointly written by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) general departments of staff, politics, logistics and armament and endorsed by Xi Jinping, chairman of the Central Military Commission.


The new rules are applicable to both the PLA and the nation’s armed police, according to the rules.






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/UwBAiT

China Maintains Neutrality While Deepening Ties to Israel

Sino-Israeli economic ties are fraught with contradictions. Commercial and trade links are set to deepen over the coming years while military and strategic relations, once the cornerstone of the relationship, will remain limited. Israel seems keen to resume limited sales of defence equipment and dual use technologies to China, even though Beijing maintains close ties with Iran and does not recognize Hamas or Hezbollah as terrorist organizations. That Hamas rockets fired into Israel are eerily similar to Chinese rockets, only further complicates matters. Diplomatically, deeper engagement in the region will lead to pressure on Beijing to take a more proactive role in the peace talks, but China’s traditional “hide and bide” will remain the guiding principle in the Middle East.


Dr. Michal Meidan China Maintains Neutrality While Deepening Ties to Israel

Michal Meidan



Against this backdrop, it may be somewhat surprising that Sino-Israeli bilateral trade is booming, yet it has increased almost 220-fold, from as little as $51 million in 1992, when diplomatic ties were established, to almost $11 billion in 2013. Today, China (including Hong Kong) is Israel’s second top export destination after the United States and the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics estimates that by the end of 2014, China will have displaced the US. The trade balance is still largely skewed in China’s favour as it exports manufactured goods including diamonds, electrical and electronic equipment, food, textiles and clothing. Israeli exports (roughly $3 billion in value) to China are concentrated in three main sectors: electronic components, minerals and chemicals.


Over the past year, however, both sides have been working to deepen the relationship and expand it beyond two-way trade. High-level delegations have been actively exploring avenues for collaboration on trade, technology transfer, agriculture and public works following Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to China in May 2013. This impetus in bilateral ties dovetails with China’s efforts to engage more actively with Middle Eastern countries. While the lion’s share of Chinese interests in the Middle East revolves around energy, Israel is all about hi tech. Chinese interest in Israel’s military technology and innovations is increasing, just as Israeli companies are finding more ways to align themselves with China’s ambitious economic rebalancing agenda. As such, they are targeting sectors including hi-tech, renewable energy, water treatments, medical equipment, communications, agriculture and consumer products. For Chinese firms, Israel offers specialized high-tech innovation, which is often in search of financing, and a highly skilled workforce in an investment destination that is less politically charged than the US. At the same time, Israel is actively encouraging Chinese investments in Israeli infrastructure. Over the past few years, Chinese foreign direct investments in Israel have increased substantially with Sinochem’s $1.4 billion acquisition of a 60% stake in Makhteshim Agan (one of Israel’s largest agrochemicals maker) and a $240 million purchase of Alma Lasers by Focus International. China’s Bright Food group has also recently acquired a controlling interest in Israel’s Tnuva Food Industries Ltd.


The crown jewel for China remains the resumption of military cooperation with Israel. But while strategic and military relations were the cornerstone of Sino-Israeli relations in the 1980s and 1990s, they have all but ground to a halt since Washington’s strong objections forced Israel to cancel a $1.1 billion sale of a Phalcon early-warning aircraft to China back in 2000. Both Israel and China may be looking to resume some form of defence exports, but these will likely take a back seat to other ventures as Washington remains firmly opposed to any such ties. For now, Israeli companies still rely heavily on the US market, while the Israeli government relies on US government aid.


As China’s footprint in Israel continues to expand, it will also fuel the debate in Israel about the impact of closer ties with China on Israel’s relations with the US. Israel must balance its burgeoning relationship with China with its deep and established ties with Washington. Even though trade and investment dynamics may well be changing and could lead China to surpass the US as Israel’s largest trade and investment partner in a number of years, it is the $3 billion a year of US government aid, most of it earmarked for purchases from American military manufacturers, that officials in Israel are loathe to jeopardize. Beyond trade figures, Washington’s support for Israel in the UN or on regional issues is priceless for Israel.


While US concerns over Israel’s relations with China will cool ties, China’s ties with other countries in the region, first and foremost with Iran will also complicate matters. For example, Israel and China are far apart in their assessment of the threat related to the Iranian nuclear program. Moreover, Beijing also has long-standing relations with the PLO, recognizes the Palestinian state in the UN and does not consider Hamas and Hezbollah as terrorist organizations. Moreover, the M-302 rockets fired by Hamas into Israel may have been manufactured by Syria, and their design is based on the Chinese Weishi-2 (WS-2) rockets.


Indeed, as China seeks to deepen ties with Israel while at the same time maintaining its neutrality on Syria, as well as fostering good working relations with Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, it will not only live with the inherent contradictions in its ties with Israel, it will embrace them.


Dr. Michal Meidan is director at China Matters , an independent consultancy firm that advises investors and government officials on their China strategies, with particular emphasis on the politics of the Chinese energy sector. She was also a senior analyst at the global political risk consultancy firm Eurasia Group in New York and London. Prior to that, she headed the Energy and Environment Program at the Asia Centre of Sciences Po in Paris. Dr. Meidan holds a Ph.D in Political Science and East Asian Studies from Sciences Po.






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nPgc3K

Friday, 25 July 2014

China probes more than 25,000 people for graft in first half of year

China investigated more than 25,000 people for corruption in the first six months of 2014, state media said on Friday, amid a nationwide crackdown on graft.


Nearly 85 percent of the cases investigators pursued involved bribes of more than 50,000 yuan ($8,000) or embezzlement of 100,000 yuan, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing the country’s top prosecutor, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP).


Such “major cases” were up nearly 14 percent over the corresponding period last year, Xinhua said.


Read Full Article HERE






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Bill Clinton on China’s Xi Jinping, Disputes in South China Sea

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton said he’s impressed by China President Xi Jinping’s corruption crackdown and reforms to the one-child policy, but he also cautioned China’s new leadership not to intimidate smaller countries in disputes in the South China Sea.


Clinton spoke Friday in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou at a conference hosted by Pacific Construction Group, a private Chinese infrastructure builder that ranked this year as No. 166 on Fortune’s Global 500 list. (Fortune wrote about Pacific in its last issue.)


“If China and Japan are arguing over a couple of islands, the rest of the world can watch because we feel you’re arguing on more or less even terms,” Clinton said as a part of a Q&A with Pacific’s founder Yan Jiehe, after a question about the disputed Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands in the South China Sea.


Read Full Article HERE






Scott Cendrowski, Fortune via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1rDVkho

State media promoting China’s leader Xi with intensity unseen since Mao era

For decades, China has shunned the cult of personality, a result of the tumultuous years when Mao Zedong elevated his personal brand to mythic proportions.


But state worship of leaders appears to be making a comeback, according to a new study by University of Hong Kong media researchers. They say China’s state-controlled media have been promoting the image of President Xi Jinping with a frequency and intensity unseen since the Mao era.


The study comes as China experts and outside observers debate whether Xi is positioning himself to be a Mao-like strongman with a more firm grip than his predecessors over all levers of power. Or whether he is simply channeling the Communist Party’s desire for stronger action and control.


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William Wan, The Washington Post via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1pSSOkr

Jaguar Land Rover to Cut Prices on Three Models in China

Premium car maker Jaguar Land Rover PLC has slashed prices for certain Range Rover and Jaguar models by up to 19% in China amid increased scrutiny by the Chinese government of foreign car makers’ pricing policies.


The luxury car maker said Friday it will reduce prices for three models in its portfolio in response to an investigation by the pricing and antimonopoly division of the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning agency.


“We will do everything possible to work together with our Chinese retail dealer partners to offer customers the highest levels of support in all respects, whether that is vehicle sales or after-sales service,” said Bob Grace, regional president at Jaguar Land Rover Greater China, in a statement.


The NDRC didn’t respond to requests for comment.


Read Full Article HERE






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China to declare Qualcomm a monopoly

Chinese regulators have concluded Qualcomm Inc., one of the biggest makers of chips used in mobile devices, has a monopoly, a government newspaper reported Friday.


Regulators have completed an investigation of Qualcomm, the China Daily newspaper said, citing Xu Kunlin, director of the anti-monopoly bureau of the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s economic planning agency.


Xu said Qualcomm “has a monopoly,” the newspaper said. It gave no indication what possible penalties or orders to change its business practices the San Diego, California-based company might face.


Read Full Article HERE






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Thursday, 24 July 2014

Full-Year GDP Target Within Reach

With the pro-growth measures implemented by the central and local governments bearing fruits, China’s economy is expected to grow 7.6% in the second half of the year, possibly achieving the full-year GDP target of around 7.5%.


The forecast is based on key economic data for the first half, the government’s economic restructuring resolve and the financing support for the real economy. In the first quarter of this year, GDP growth slowed down to 7.4% year-on-year. But this downward trend was basically checked in the second quarter amid various targeted and mini-stimulus measures, with the economy gaining momentum and growing by 7.5%. Another two indicators pointing to a stabilizing economy are inflation and employment.


In the first half of this year, Consumer Price Index rose 2.3% year-on-year, far below the full-year goal of 3.5% set at the beginning of the year. The CPI hovered between a range of 1.8% and 2.5% during that period. In the first half, more than 7 million new jobs were created in towns and cities, and this was equivalent to 73.7% of the full-year employment target. The rising employment amid a slowing economy showed that the government’s macro-control capability was improving.


In the first half, progress also was made in economic restructuring and upgrading, which is an important task in the new era. The improvement could be illustrated by the following facts.


First, the proportion of the added value of the tertiary (services) industry in the GDP amounted to 46.6% in the first half, 1.3 percentage points higher than in the same period a year earlier, and the growth rate of the services industry was 8%, higher than the GDP growth. This is an evidence showing the industrial structure is being optimized amid economic restructuring and upgrading.


Second, the contribution by consumption to GDP was 54.4%, 5.9 percentage points higher than that generated by capital and investment. This was a new trend, indicating that consumption has become a new driver to the country’s economic growth.


Third, high-tech industry and high-end manufacturing industry maintained momentum for growth. Driven by new technologies and technological innovations, the development pace of high value-added industries and emerging strategic industries accelerated. In the first six months, the growth rate in added value of high-tech industry was 12.4%, 3.6 percentage points faster than the average of industrial enterprises at the designated scale.


And fourth, the income gap between urban and rural residents was further narrowed. In the first six months, the actual growth in per capita cash income of rural residents was 2.7 percentage points higher than the growth of disposable income of urban residents, and the income gap between urban and rural residents further shrank by 0.06 from a year earlier to 2.77. Furthermore, the growth rate of residents’ average income was two percentage points and one percentage point faster than the growth rates of fiscal revenue and corporate profits, respectively, and this indicated that residents are sharing the fruits of economic growth.


In the first half, the financing system effectively played its role in supporting the growth of the real economy, with credit supply and social financing data all beating expectations. The central bank also flexibly applied various monetary policy tools to maintain an appropriate level of liquidity.


At the end of June, the outstanding amount of M2, or the broad money supply, was 120.96 trillion yuan, a year-on-year growth of 14.7%. The growth rates for M2 in March, April and May were 12.1%, 13.2% and 13.4%, respectively, showing a steady pace of accelerated money supply to shore up the economy.


In this period, the scale of social financing also expanded remarkably. In the first six months, social financing amounted to 10.57 trillion yuan, a record high, or 414.8 billion yuan more than the same period of last year. The amount was even 2.08 trillion yuan higher than in the same period of 2009 and 2010, when the country was battling the spillover effect of the global financial crisis.


At the end of June, the balance of yuan loans was 77.63 trillion yuan, an increase of 14% year-on-year, or an increase of 659 billion yuan from a year earlier. The loan structure was also further optimized, as evidenced by higher loan growth rate in the western region than in the central and eastern regions, faster rise of medium- and long-term loans for enterprises, rapid increase in agriculture-related loans, significant rise in loans to small and micro enterprises, and rising loans to government-subsidized housing projects, and a dropping growth rate in medium- and long-term loans to industries with excess capacity.


In the second half of the year, with stimulus measures being implemented and favorable internal and external factors emerging, the economy could develop faster, and the full-year target of 7.5% GDP growth is within reach.


The favorable factors for the acceleration of economic growth include a recovery in global economy, which will help drive China’s exports, the central government policies to stabilize and promote growth, local governments’ enthusiasm in implementing mini-stimulus measures, and a rising electricity consumption, which is a key indicator for a warming economy.


In the first half of the year, power use rose 5.3% year-on-year. And in April, May and June, the growth rates were 4.6%, 5.3% and 5.9% respectively, and the month-on-month rise in electricity consumption bodes well for the expectations for a stabilized and accelerating economy in the second half of the year.


The central government recently pledged to achieve the social and economic goals set at the beginning of the year, and called for the construction of a comprehensive, integrated transport system and the development of the maritime and land “Silk Roads” and the Yangtze River economic belt. With the central government showing a strong resolve in achieving the growth goals, local officials are more enthusiastic in bringing local economies back to the growth path. These could translate into growing infrastructure investments and consumption.


Real estate market, however, is an unfavorable factor, which might drag the economic growth. In the first six months of this year, investment in the property market rose 14.1% year-on-year, a drop of 6.2 percentage points from a year earlier, and housing sales and sales value declined 6% and 6.7% respectively. Housing prices in the second- and third-tier cities are on a declining trend. Since the realty sector has a direct bearing on a number of industries, adjustments in the housing market may have a negative impact on GDP growth.


But with the pro-growth approach by the central and local governments producing the anticipated effects, the economy in the second half of the year is expected to grow faster than in the first half, probably at 7.6%, and this means that the full-year target of 7.5% could be attained.


Qi Jingmei is a researcher at the department of economic forecasting at the State Information Center.






Qi Jingmei, a researcher with the State Information Center via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/UwBHL9

China’s Manufacturing Sector Expands at Swifter Pace

Factory activity in China expanded at its fastest pace in 18 months in July as new orders surged, a preliminary HSBC survey showed on Thursday, the latest indication that the economy is picking up as government stimulus measures take effect.


The HSBC/Markit Flash China manufacturing purchasing managers’ index, or P.M.I., rose to 52 in July from June’s final reading of 50.7, beating a forecast of 51 in a Reuters poll.


It was the highest reading since January 2013, and it was the second consecutive month that the reading had risen above the 50-point level that separates growth in activity from contraction.


Read Full Article HERE






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China probes food businesses; Hong Kong bans imports in meat safety scare

China’s food regulator has visited close to 600 restaurants, businesses and food distributors as it investigates a fast-spreading food safety scare that has dragged in a number of global brands and hit food outlets as far away as Japan.


Hong Kong said on Thursday it suspended, with immediate effect, all imports from the U.S.-owned Chinese supplier at the center of the latest scare. It was unclear when the company last shipped its products to Hong Kong.


Shanghai police detained five people on Wednesday, including the head and the quality chief of Shanghai Husi Food, a supplier to foreign fast-food brands including KFC, McDonald’s Corp and coffee chain Starbucks Corp over allegations it supplied out-of-date meat. Shanghai Husi Food is owned by Illinois-based OSI Group.


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China’s Energy Plans Will Worsen Climate Change, Greenpeace Says

China’s plans for 50 coal gasification plants will produce an estimated 1.1 billion tons of carbon dioxide per year and contribute significantly to climate change, according to a report released Wednesday by Greenpeace East Asia.


The plants, aimed in part at reducing pollution from coal-fired power plants in China’s largest cities, will shift that pollution to other regions, mostly in the northwest, and generate enormous amounts of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas produced by fossil fuels, said the organization, which is based in Beijing.


If China builds all 50 plants, the carbon dioxide they produce will equal about an eighth of China’s current total carbon dioxide emissions, which come mostly from coal-burning power plants and factories, the organization said. Two of the plants have already been built as pilot projects, three more are under construction, 16 have been given the green light to be built and the rest are in various planning stages, according to the report.


Read Full Article HERE






Edward Wong, The New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1mJePPu

China conducts successful land-based missile interception test

China has announced the success of a missile interception test conducted from land.


The test, conducted within its territory late on Wednesday, “achieved the preset goal”, according to a statement posted on the website of the Ministry of National Defense.


Military authorities provided no other information about the operation.


China has already successfully completed two mid-course land-based missile interception tests, in 2010 and 2013, both of which “attained preset objectives.”


By developing the ability to intercept incoming warheads such as ballistic missiles, it is hoped that the tests can help strengthen China’s air defense.


It is reported that such interception technology requires sophistication in information processing, reconnaissance, early warning, transportation of weaponry, guidance and precision.


Analysts say the strategic importance of mid-course land-based missile interception could be compared to that of atomic and hydrogen bombs and man-made satellites.


Missiles can be intercepted in three stages of their trajectory: boost phase, mid-course phase or terminal phase.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1ofPGRu

48 dead, 10 injured in Taiwan plane crash

Forty-eight people have been confirmed dead and 10 injured in a Taiwan plane crash Wednesday, the airline said in a statement Thursday morning.


Flight GE 222, carrying 54 passengers and four crew members, smashed into residential buildings after a failed emergency landing in the outlying island county of Penghu Wednesday evening.

Twelve people were injured and sent to hospital. The rest remain missing.

According to the transport authority, the passengers included two French nationals. No one from the Chinese mainland was on board the plane.


One of the black boxes has been found, according to the authority.


The twin-engine ATR-72 turboprop aircraft was originally scheduled to take off at 4 p.m., but left Kaohsiung at 5:43 pm due to bad weather.


As the plane was preparing to land at Magong Airport in heavy rain, it was forced to pull up due to poor visibility.


The aircraft requested to circle above before trying to land but lost contact with the tower, said Jean Shen, director general of Taiwan’s civil aeronautics administration, at a press conference.


On its second attempt at landing, the flight crashed into residential buildings in the village of Xixi in Penghu. Several villagers were also injured in the crash, according to local media reports.


A flurry of reports have generated somewhat chaotic information, with earlier local media reports quoting also sources from local transport authority as saying that 47 people had been confirmed dead in the plane crash.


It is not instantly clear what had led to the failed landing. Wang Hsing-chung, head of Taiwan’s aviation safety council, said it is still too early to speculate the cause of the crash.


But many have blamed foul weather conditions, for the accident took place just as typhoon Matmo slammed the island with heavy rains and strong winds, shutting financial markets and schools.


There had been 11 aviation accidents in waters off the Penghu islands since 1967, resulting in 289 people dead or missing.


Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou expressed deep sorrow on Wednesday night after learning of the plane crash, and has instructed relevant authorities to investigate the accident in a timely manner, according to his office spokeswoman Ma Wei-kuo.


Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, also conveyed condolences personally and on behalf of the mainland people.


Xi, who is on a Latin America tour, felt “deeply grieved” after learning the tragedy has caused heavy casualties, said a statement from the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office (SCTAO).


Xi told the SCTAO to convey to relevant Taiwan departments his deepest sympathies over the loss of lives, and extended condolences to the relatives of the victims.


According to TransAsia Airways, the pilot of the 13-year-old plane had 22 years of flying experience and the co-pilot had professional experience of two and a half years.


TransAsia Airways, founded in 1951, is Taiwan’s first private airline, mainly focusing on the island’s market and short trip overseas flights. It is now the third airline company in Taiwan.


The ATR 72 is a twin-engine turboprop short-haul regional airliner built by the French-Italian aircraft manufacturer ATR. It can take more than 70 people on board.






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Beijing’s ‘Micro-Stimulus’ and the Future of China’s Economy

On Wednesday, Beijing’s National Bureau of Statistics announced that the Chinese economy grew a better-than-expected 7.5% in the second quarter of this year, up from 7.4% in Q1. Analysts hailed the result and pronounced Premier Li Keqiang’s “micro-stimulus” plan a success.


Who has the hardest job in the world? One candidate is Li, responsible for keeping China’s growth on track. The Q1 figure, for example, was the product of an agonizing series of compromises, and challenges he faces in the quarters ahead will be far tougher than the ones he has overcome up to now.


Li’s principal problem is that his predecessor as premier, Wen Jiabao, chose to defer the ill effects of last decade’s global downturn with a large stimulus plan, announced in November 2008, to spend 4 trillion yuan. That effort, when combined with massive state bank lending, created the biggest governmental spending program this century.


Wen engineered high growth in 2009 and 2010—9.1% and 10.4%, respectively—with essentially unrestrained spending, but he left Li with, among other things, “ghost cities,” an overly large state sector, a monumental property bubble, and a debt mountain. The former premier postponed a reckoning, but by doing so made the underlying imbalances in the economy larger, thereby ensuring a severe adjustment after he left office.


Li had to figure out how China would make that inevitable adjustment. He has decided to try to let the air out slowly, maintaining growth with “micro-stimulus” while adopting structural reforms to move from an investment-led growth model to one based on consumption. His plan is pitch-perfect, but it is almost impossible to implement well.


Why? Among other reasons, it now takes ever-larger amounts of debt to produce the same amount of gross domestic product. In 2007, China created 83 cents of GDP for every dollar of new lending. At the beginning of last year, that output had fallen to 17 cents. Today, we’re talking something like a dime. So more debt still equals more gross domestic product, but the math for Beijing is becoming increasingly unfavorable. China is now accumulating debt at least two times faster than it is growing, and perhaps seven times faster, once official estimates of growth are properly deflated.


The problem for Li is that his “soft landing” scenario contemplates the continual rolling over of bad loans, many of them created by Wen’s lending splurge. As the volume of loans continually increases, there is less credit available for new projects. At some point, financial institutions will run out of capacity to lend. For an economy requiring debt to grow, the eventual unavailability of credit is a prelude to a precipitous fall in growth rates—and perhaps to even a wrenching contraction. Economists call the final break in confidence a Minsky moment. In common parlance, that’s known as the Lehman tipping point, where asset values plunge and an economy goes into freefall.


How much time does Li have to get China on sustainable ground? The widely followed Michael Pettis of Peking University’s management school argues that, although no one can know for sure, “the current rates of credit expansion can continue at most for another 3-4 years.”


That assessment sounds reasonable if analysts such as Haibin Zhu of JPMorgan are correct in believing that China is coming out of a trough. “Overall, the key message is significant recovery in the second quarter,” Zhu told the Wall Street Journal.


Yet Zhu seems too optimistic. The economy appears to be in worse shape than headline economic indicators suggest. “The real news,” write Leland Miller and Craig Charney of China Beige Book International, “is that this slowdown may be the beginning of something much more important: weakness, perhaps of unprecedented degree, in both capital expenditure and loan demand.”


Miller’s and Charney’s China Beige Book, a private survey of 2,200 businesses across China, shows that in Q2 companies, because of a lack of promising opportunities, did not apply for much new credit, unlike the corresponding quarter in 2013. Alarmingly, rates in the shadow banking sector, where much lending takes place, were lower than in the state bank sector, an indication of failing demand.


Premier Li, of course, is putting the best face on the situation. “We will keep up our composure and not adopt strong stimulus,” he said this month. “Instead, we will increase the strength of targeted measures.” Yet there are signs he in fact panicked in the early part of last quarter. For instance, he dispatched eight inspection teams to localities around the country to make sure cadres spent all their allotted sums quickly. The effort was successful because in June fiscal spending hit 1.652 trillion yuan, 26.1% more than in the same month last year.


The real sign that Li lost his nerve, however, is the big increase in lending last month. Chinese financial institutions issued 1.08 trillion yuan in new renminbi loans compared to 870.8 billion in the preceding month. Total social financing skyrocketed 40.7% from May, largely the result of off-balance sheet credit. M2, the broad gauge of money in circulation, was up 14.7% year-on-year. If the China Beige Book survey is correct, the June loans largely went to state entities, especially the semi-legal local government financing vehicles, some of the least creditworthy borrowers in the country.


As Chester Liaw of Forecast in Singapore noted, “the money swirling in the market reflects the urgency of the authorities to ramp up economic activity.” Li, by borrowing his predecessor’s short-term tactics, is choosing growth over reform.


As a result of this unfortunate choice, we can expect impressive growth in the next several quarters, but the expansion will not necessarily be a positive sign. After all, today no one praises Wen Jiabao’s wholesale dumping of cash into the economy, and that is exactly what Li is doing at this moment.


Gordon G. Chang is a U.S.-based writer. Follow him on Twitter @GordonGChang and at Forbes.com.






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Wednesday, 23 July 2014

China Needs More Stimulus to Meet Growth Goal

China’s efforts to stimulate the world’s second-largest economy are insufficient so far to achieve the government’s growth target of about 7.5 percent, according to a survey of analysts.


Fourteen of 22 respondents to a Bloomberg News survey this month said China will need to “somewhat” increase stimulus to meet the 2014 expansion goal, even after growth accelerated to that pace in the second quarter. The property-industry slump poses the biggest risk to growth in the second half, 16 economists said.


Any additional steps would follow a mini-stimulus of sped-up infrastructure investment, tax cuts and moves to free up more money for bank lending. Premier Li Keqiang, coping with a 16.4 percent plunge in new property construction in the first half of this year, is trying to meet the growth target he announced in March without resorting to broad-based stimulus that may exacerbate debt risks.


Read Full Article HERE






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China Detains Employees of Suspect Meat Seller

Five employees of a company accused of selling expired beef and chicken to McDonald’s, KFC and other restaurants were detained by police Wednesday after an official said illegal activity was an organized effort by the supplier.


China’s food safety agency said on its website that its investigators found unspecified illegal activity by Husi Food Co. but gave no confirmation expired meat had been found or other details.


Some of the illegal conduct was an “arrangement organized by the company,” the deputy director of the agency’s Shanghai bureau, Gu Zhenghua, told the official Xinhua News Agency.


Read Full Article HERE






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Apple’s growing faster in China than anywhere else in the world

Apple on Tuesday proved once again with its quarterly earnings that it’s practically minting money selling iPhones. The company posted quarterly revenues of $37.4 billion, up six percent from last year, and a profit of $7.7 billion, up 12 percent from last year.


And there’s nowhere in the world that Apple is growing faster than in China.


“It’s very, very exciting what we’re seeing there,” said chief executive Tim Cook on an earnings call Tuesday evening.


Read Full Article HERE






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China Should Actively Establish A Currency Swap Pool

Since the start of the global financial crisis and the emergence of regional trade alliances in the global economy, “a currency swap network” has emerged in financial and monetary fields, setting off a wave of currency swaps. Especially since the US subprime crisis triggered the global financial crisis, more and more central banks have been signing currency swap arrangements. The financial structure based on this network will therefore likely become more common in the development of the global monetary system.


zhangmonan 1 China Should Actively Establish A Currency Swap Pool

Zhang Monan



Currency swaps are important instruments of international financial cooperation and liquidity management among central banks. In November 2011, in order to inject dollar liquidity into the market and maintain the confidence of dollar assets, the US Federal Reserve established “temporary dollar liquidity swap facilities” with the European Central Bank, Bank of England, the Swiss Central Bank, and the Bank of Japan. In October of 2013, the US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, Bank of Canada and the Swiss Central Bank restarted the dollar swap lines. However, these six major central banks turned temporary bilateral liquidity swap arrangements into long-term currency swap arrangements.


As a result of these long-term currency swap arrangements among the six central banks, the US Federal Reserve has once again become the last lender. In 2008, when the global financial crisis was at its worst, it was the temporary currency swap facilities approved by the US Federal Reserve that supplied about US$600 billion worth of liquidity to the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan, thus avoiding an intensification of the global crisis because of a shortage of the US dollar.


In fact, an exclusive supply and demand network of international reserve currencies has formed, centered around the US Federal Reserve and joined by the central banks of developed economies. This network has integrated various currency supply and demand mechanisms into one. It is worth noting that this currency swap involves not only the currency liquidity of the swapping countries, but also their exchange rate arrangements, as well as the coordination of their macro-economic policies.


For a long time, the capital of the global financial and monetary system circulated in two ways. Firstly, countries with a trade-deficit had to pay trade-surplus countries for goods, thus bringing capital liquidity to the current account. Secondly, countries with a trade-surplus reinvest their accumulated foreign exchange assets into the assets of the trade-deficit countries, bringing the capital liquidity to the financial account. These two tactics form a complete monetary circulation. This means that the more serious the imbalance of the global trade is, the more liquidity will be produced.


However, since the global financial crisis, this situation has changed, and started to reverse. Developed economies have tightened their consumption and increased investment; and newly emerging economies have reduced their trade surplus. On the whole, the global trade imbalance has become smaller than before the global financial crisis in 2008, so the liquidity produced by the global trade imbalance has been driven lower. This improvement is more evident, especially as the US has substantially adjusted its quantitative easing policy, and will start the process to raise its interest rates.


In view of the central role of the US dollar in deciding global liquidity, the actions of the US Federal Reserve to gradually reduce its monthly purchase of securities, will certainly stagnate or reduce the global monetary base. This is the important driving force behind the reflow of international capital, and the Fed’s actions will certainly lower the level of China’s “capital pool”.


China has no other choice but to actively head off this challenge, as the upcoming cycle of the global currency swap network will certainly have a large impact on the international financial pattern and will present fresh challenges to China’s economic and financial security.


China should actively participate in “bilateral swap lines,” advocated by the US. Although China’s foreign exchange reserves are as high as US$3.95 trillion, the Chinese central bank should also put forward a currency swap with the US Federal Reserve, just like Japan in 2008, despite having US$1 trillion worth of foreign exchange reserves. If this happens, when capital begins to flow out of China and foreign exchange reserves are needed, the Chinese central bank will have more US dollar options because of the currency swap with the US Federal Reserve.


Besides, China should promote the “Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization”, expand the scope of an Asian bilateral swap, raise the existing loose bilateral assistance network to a closer multilateral capital bailout mechanism and, in particular, push the financial cooperation in Asia to a new level, in order to ward off any financial risks.


In the longer run, from the strategic perspective of promoting the globalization of the Renminbi, China should actively establish a Renminbi swap pool in order to effectively guard against any international financial risks. In the system where Renminbi is swapped and cleared in many other currencies, establishing a swap pool can greatly expand the system, thus further consummating the clearance function. To be specific, China can follow the practices of the Bank For International Settlements and make an annual bilateral balance swap and settlement, including both the current-account system and a gradual establishment of the capital-account system, so as to quickly get integrated into the global currency swap network.


Zhang Monan is a researcher at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges.






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