Archive for the 'China' Category :

Technology: the world at China’s feet

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 21/03/10

Keith Bradsher’s article in the New York Times of 17 March is breath-taking but worrying for the West. 
It confirms the incredible drive by China to lead in all relevant technological developments. Just imagine that China may produce this year two-thirds of the global output of PV panels, despite Europe’s long start.   And last, and most [...]

Chinese hard-line security policies will lead to social unrest

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 19/03/10

I’ve just come across a speech by Yu Jianrong on 26 December 2009. Professor Yu is director of social issues research at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and advises top leaders – clearly an insider. What he said is disturbing – and surprising. It is rare for someone of Yu’s official [...]

Heavy-handed propaganda alienates Europeans from China

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 17/03/10

The following interview appeared in Global Times on 15 March 2010:
Editor’s Note:
China constantly complains of being misperceived by the West, but how much of that is China’s own fault? Do Europeans still see China through an ideological lens, or does China fail to present itself in a way acceptable in the modern world? Global Times (GT) [...]

Copenhagen: a tale of ‘undiplomacy’ (continued)

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 15/03/10

Yesterday’s post reported on the non-attendance of Premier Wen Jiabao at the small leaders’ meeting on 17 December.  Wen’s explanation of what happened was the same as previously reported in the Chinese media, except that the latter said that the meeting was held by the US.  Wen did not repeat this.  It’s hard to understand [...]

Chinese yuan: currency manipulation?

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 14/03/10

Writing in BusinessWeek on 12 March, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman said global economic growth would be about 1.5% higher if China stopped restraining the value of its currency and running trade surpluses.   “We should not be afraid of what the Chinese might do if we pressure them to stop this currency manipulation,” Krugman said.
Krugman [...]

Copenhagen: a tale of ‘undiplomacy’

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 14/03/10

This morning in Beijing, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao explained at his press conference what actually happened in Copenhagen on 17 December 2009 on the eve of the UN Climate Change Conference, which gave rise to criticism of Chinese behaviour and even allegations of arrogance.  It is remarkable that this is the first official version of [...]

Fighting corruption in China

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 13/03/10

My blog post of 12 March reported Premier Wen Jiabao, in his annual address to the National People’s Congress, stating that corruption threatened the rule of the CCP.  China’s former state auditor, Li Jinhua has, in the official ‘People’s Daily’ on-line, identified the business dealings of Party officials as the main source of public dissatisfaction.  [...]

Will US declare China a “currency manipulator”?

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 13/03/10

The US Treasury, in its semi-annual report delivered every April and October, can formally label China as a “currency manipulator” on account of the yuan’s substantial undervalue.  This would allow the Department of Commerce to impose countervailing duties on a wide range of Chinese products.
US Treasury Secretary-designate Timothy Geithner told the Senate Finance Committee at [...]

Corruption threatens Chinese Communist Party rule

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 12/03/10

Corruption has always been addressed by Premier Wen Jiabao in his annual address to the National People’s Congress, but this year he went much further than before by stating that corruption threatened the rule of the CCP. 
In his speech on 5 March 2010, the Premier affirmed  that the battle against graft would be a critical [...]

A European Monetary Fund

Posted by Stanley Crossick on 09/03/10

An objective of the Maastricht Treaty was EMU - Economic & Monetary Union. 16 countries have achieved monetary, but not economic, union. Indeed, even economic policy cooperation still leaves a lot to be desired. The original criticisms of the euro were the lack of economic coordination and the absence of any central fund. Greece has [...]

Stanley’s blog rss

European of British nationality, for nearly 30 years Bruxellois. Deep believer in the principle of ’mutuality’ and Monnet’s axiom ”Thought cannot be divorced from action”, equivalent to Wang Yangming’s ”Zhixingheyi”. more.



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