Latest Posts
The pros and cons of warrior diplomacy – Ian Johnson
China and the US have continued their warrior diplomacy, also after US president Joe Biden took over from Donald Trump. CFR-scholar Ian Johnson sees both upsides and downsides in the fierce language both countries use to define their relationship, he tells at ShanghaiEyes.Read More →
Xi’s “common prosperity” is here to stay – Victor Shih
China’s Xi Jinping is framing his new policies as a new way to diminish the gap between poor and rich in China. While under his predecessors’ new policies were a matter of waiting until they would be replaced by the next slogan, Xi’s slogans like those on the “common prosperity” are here to stay, says political analyst Victor Shih in Asia Times.Read More →
What makes livestreaming different in China – Ashley Dudarenok
More than 50 platforms in China offer live streaming as a highly sophisticated tool, say innovation expert Ashley Dudarenok at her vlog. Compared to their counterparts in the West, live streaming in China offers a wide range of tools the reach out to their viewers.Read More →
You do not need to be on all 60+ social media platforms in China – Ashley Dudarenok
Entering the China market means you have to be extremely active on social media, says marketing expert Ashley Dudarenok, although you do not need to be on all 60+ media platforms, she adds.Read More →
China’s tricky relationship with the Taliban – Ian Johnson
China has been talking informally to the Taliban, but now the Islamic group has taken over neighboring Afghanistan, the situation is more tricky, says CFR-scholar Ian Johnson, author of The Souls of China: The Return of Religion After Mao to CNBRead More →
China’s stock downturn is not business as usual – Sara Hsu
China’s most talked-about downturn in stock value is business as usual, says JP Morgan’s Santos at Bloomberg. Financial analyst Sara Hsu disagrees and sees a more structural change in how China is dealing with its business compared to previous regulatory interventions, she says at her vlog China Rising. “She misses out at the political risks,” Hsu adds.Read More →
Holograms, livestreaming: trends you cannot miss in China – Ashley Dudarenok
Following trends in China is not an option, but a must, says marketing expert Ashley Dudarenok on her latest vlog. Holograms are such a must, and live streaming is squeezed by government regulations and marketing needs, she adds.Read More →
China’s new religious policies – Ian Johnson
Scholar Ian Johnson, author of The Souls of China: The Return of Religion After Mao, looks back at how China’s government has embarked into new policies on religion at the conference of the 28th International Conference of the US-China Catholic Association, “China, Christianity, and the Dialogue of Civilizations”Read More →
Shein: global aspirations in a tense regulatory climate – Matthew Brennan
Fashion firm Shein developed a new global position, managing through domestic regulatory difficulties and tense relations between China and the US. Internet watcher Matthew Brennan looks at CNN Business how a new kid at the block is faring and looks in many ways like the successful Tiktok.Read More →
How can NGOs survive in China? – Mark Schaub
In recent years NGOs have been seeing tougher regulatory oversight, including visits from the police forces, urging them to comply with China’s regulations for NGOs. China lawyer Mark Schaub dives into the recent law for NGOs and concludes that survival in China is possible, he writes for the China Law Insight.Read More →
How Xi Jinping’s rules will benefit the tech sector – Shaun Rein
China’s crackdown on tech firms is in the longer run benefiting consumers and the industry itself, says business analyst Shaun Rein about the governmental efforts to curtail free-wheeling companies.Read More →
How China moves into Africa – Howard French
Former New York Times correspondent Howard French, author of China’s Second Continent: How a Million Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa, discusses at the International Peace Institute how now two million Chinese immigrants and 2,500 Chinese companies build up an over US$200 billion trade between China and Africa.Read More →