Wandering China

An East/West pulse of China's fourth rise from down under.

Online retailer Alibaba eyes markets outside China [AsiaOne/AFP] #RisingChina #DigitalEconomy

Alibaba: Expanding its grasp on the digital marketplace by connecting first with its overseas Chinese to build on 500m existing users

Taobao is expected to be part of the listing vehicle for an expected initial public offer by Alibaba, which analysts say could value the group at between US$60 billion (S$74 billion) and US$100 billion, prompting comparisons with Facebook’s blockbuster IPO.

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Online retailer Alibaba eyes markets outside China
AFP
Source – AsiaOne, published May 10, 2012

20130512-090517.jpg

HANGZHOU, China – China’s online retail giant Alibaba aims to expand beyond its home market by targeting overseas Chinese through its flagship e-commerce website Taobao, an executive said Friday.

Taobao is China’s most popular e-shopping platform, and has more than 90 per cent of the online market for consumer-to-consumer transactions in the country. It had more than 800 million product listings and over 500 million registered users as of last year.

“We hope to provide services to markets of overseas Chinese consumers first so we can have the experience and ability to further promote Taobao in other markets of non-Chinese consumers,” said Daphne Lee, director of overseas business for Taobao.

Such a move could eventually make Taobao, which marks its 10th anniversary Friday, a threat to US giants eBay and Amazon.

Please click here to read the full article at AsiaOne.

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Filed under: AFP, AsiaOne, Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Communications, Domestic Growth, Economics, History, Ideology, Influence, Mapping Feelings, Modernisation, Overseas Chinese, Peaceful Development, Reform, Social, Technology, The Chinese Identity, Trade

Escape From China: One-Fifth Of Affluent Chinese Plan To Emigrate [IBT] #RisingChina #Emigration

Third wave of emigration = more agents for Chinese public diplomacy?

To access the International Emigration Report 2012, go here.

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Escape From China: One-Fifth Of Affluent Chinese Plan To Emigrate
By Sophie Song
Source – International Business Times, published May 07 2013

According to China’s International Emigration Report (2012), jointly published by the Center for China & Globalization and the Beijing Institute of Technology School of Law, China is now experiencing a third wave of emigration, one that will take its newly accrued wealth abroad.

20130510-071707.jpg

Photo: REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil Chinese immigrants eat during the Chinese New Year celebrations in Lima.

“The most significant difference between the current group of emigration and previous emigrants is that the masses are now emigrating by investment,” Wang Huiyao, the director of the Center for China & Globalization, said in an interview with China Youth, a Chinese newspaper focused on China’s young people.

The first Chinese citizens to emigrate en masse left at the end of the 1970s, when China first rolled out its economic reforms, according to Wang. Many from China’s coastal provinces emigrated illegally. The second wave came at the end of the 1980s, when the first generation of Chinese with advanced, often technical, degrees emigrated. Now, with the third wave taking place, China’s richest are bringing their newly acquired wealth elsewhere. They will, or at least their destination countries hope they will, create work opportunities for natives by investing in businesses there.

According to the Chinese Affluent Class Wealth White Paper published by Forbes China, 10.26 million Chinese could be considered affluent. Of this group, 2.6 percent have already emigrated, and 21.4 percent plan to do so. Significantly, when asked whether they want to send their kids to attend school outside of China, 74.9 percent answered yes.

Please click here to read the full article at its source.

Recently, the emigration fever has spread from coastal towns to large cities and even, at a slower pace, to smaller cities.

“Previously, most emigrants came from coastal regions,” said Zhang Yuehui, an immigration expert. “Fujian province, for example, even had whole villages that emigrated together. In Fujian, there might not be anyone willing to loan you money if you wanted to go to college, but if you want to illegally emigrate, many people will lend you money, because they can reasonably expect a higher return.”

Traditionally, Chinese emigrants have aimed for highly developed Western countries. The U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with their welcoming environments and open immigration policies, have been especially popular.

“These countries are more welcoming toward talented, skilled immigrants,” Wang said. “Their policies are really meant to attract the best talent from China.”

With the recent debt crisis, many smaller countries in Europe are now hoping to attract investors from abroad. Policies have been relaxed so that it is possible to immigrate to some of these countries merely by purchasing a home.

Traditionally, Chinese living abroad have resided in Chinese communities. With considerable language and cultural barriers as well as less than ideal economic conditions, immigrants often could not or were not willing to partake in their host countries’ political and social life. Now, as recent emigrants’ overall wealth and education levels increase, and as the earliest emigrants settle into their host countries, ethnic Chinese are beginning to take a larger, more active role in their communities, notes China Youth.

Filed under: Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Chinese overseas, Collectivism, Culture, Domestic Growth, Economics, Ethnicity, History, Ideology, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Modernisation, Overseas Chinese, Peaceful Development, Public Diplomacy, Reform, Social, Soft Power, Strategy, Tao Guang Yang Hui (韬光养晦), The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities

Rhodes East: Why is the Schwarzman Scholarship in China? [New Yorker] #RisingChina #SchwarzmanScholarship #CrossPollination

200 scholars annually to bridge a great divide in bilateral relations:

For more, see

China’s Internet Users to Schwarzman Scholarship: Meh (Tea Leaf Nation blog, April 24, 2013)

The Limits of Stephen Schwarzman’s Scholarship Diplomacy (The Atlantic, April 26, 2013)

Private equity titan eyes China for a rival to Rhodes Scholarship (The Conversation, April 24, 2013)

Related on WanderingChina
S$370m scholarship aims to cool Beijing-West tensions [TODAYonline] April 22, 2013

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Rhodes East: Why is the Schwarzman Scholarship in China
By Evan Osnos
Source – New Yorker, published April 26, 2013

“Remember that you are an Englishman, and have consequently won first prize in the lottery of life.” So said Cecil Rhodes, the diamond miner and an ardent believer in British colonialism, who, in 1902, established the Oxford scholarship that bears his name, so that some of the world’s best young minds could come as near as they might hope to being English.

This week, Stephen Schwarzman, the chairman and chief executive of the Blackstone Group, invoked Rhodes’s gift as the inspiration behind a large new scholarship for study not in America but in China. He is hoping that familiarity with the world’s rising superpower will blunt growing American anxiety about changes in status. “Anger can lead to trade problems, and ultimately to military confrontation,” he told me. “We had to find a way to stop or ameliorate that situation.” The scholarship will draw two hundred students a year to a one-year English-language master’s program at a dedicated new college inside Tsinghua University. Twenty per cent of the winners will be from China, forty-five per cent from America, and the remainder from elsewhere. Schwarzman is giving a hundred million of a personal fortune estimated at $6.5 billion, and raising another two hundred million largely from blue-chip companies with big investments in China, to create an endowment that the Times calls “one of the largest single gifts to education in the world and one of the largest philanthropic gifts ever in China.”

In the China-watching world, the announcement created a stir, and a few questions: Will this inspire more giving from Chinese tycoons? When will the program expand to include African applicants? How much of China can one learn in one year?

Before Schwarzman announced it at the Great Hall of the People, I sat down with him in Beijing. Here is an edited transcript.

Please click here to read the full article at its source.

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Filed under: Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Communications, Culture, Economics, Finance, History, Influence, International Relations, Peaceful Development, Public Diplomacy, Soft Power, Strategy, Tao Guang Yang Hui (韬光养晦), The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities, Trade, U.S.

A life by the wall [China Daily] #RisingChina #GreatWall #CrossPollination

Epic journey through decades that inspires – for myself, trekking along the Great Wall in an ‘interface’ with history is high up the agenda; but to even contemplate running the distance, wow. Kneecaps and joints of steel!

For more on William Lindesay’s work, go here or here.

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A life by the wall
By Mark Graham
Source – China Daily, published April 28, 2013

20130428-083101.jpg
William Lindesay walks on the grassland of Mongolia in search of a previously unknown section of the Great Wall. James Lindesay / for China Daily

Not even a Chinese knows the Great Wall of China as well as this British adventurer and writer. Mark Graham talks to the man who has spent much of his life exploring the whole length of mankind’s most ambitious building project.

When, as a schoolboy, William Lindesay announced grand plans to explore the Great Wall, nobody took him too seriously. But Lindesay achieved his goal – and much more – by running the length of it, spending four years of his life on the iconic structure and becoming one of the world’s foremost experts on its rich history.

More than a quarter of a century has passed since Lindesay’s solo run along the Great Wall, an epic journey from the far west of China to the point where the structure meets the sea, and to mark the occasion, he has released a new book, The Great Wall Explained, with a series of stunning photographs and fascinating essays.

Please click here to read the rest of the article at its source.

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Filed under: Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, China Daily, Communications, Culture, Environment, Government & Policy, Great Wall, History, Influence, Infrastructure, Peaceful Development, Public Diplomacy, Soft Power, The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities

Don’t exaggerate scope of Hong Kong quarrels with mainlanders [Global Times] #RisingChina #HongKong

Global Times Op-Ed on the need for acknowledging changing relative positions between Hong Kong and China.

One urgent priority for us is to quickly adapt to our new relative positions. Hong Kong is no longer an almsgiver and Chinese mainlanders are no longer poor and weak. China’s rise is the outcome of decades of efforts, but the achievements haven’t been so obvious until recent years. Not only foreigners, but also Chinese have to adjust our mentality.

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Don’t exaggerate scope of Hong Kong quarrels with mainlanders
Op-Ed by Shu Meng
Source – Global Times, published April 21, 2013

A video showing a quarrel between the staff of a ferry in Hong Kong and a man from the Chinese mainland has been forwarded by many people recently on social media.

In the video, a man from the Chinese mainland insisted on putting a baby carriage on a sidelined aisle on the ferry because a Hong Kong staff member on that ferry told him it’s all right. However, after a while, another staff member told the mainlander he should move the baby carriage to another place.

The mainlander refused, and a quarrel started. In the fight, the mainlander shouted “Don’t think mainlanders can be easily bullied!” Some Hongkongers yelled back “You mainlanders get out of Hong Kong!”

Please click here to read the full article at its source.

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Filed under: Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Culture, Domestic Growth, Economics, global times, Government & Policy, History, Hong Kong, Ideology, Internet, Mapping Feelings, Media, Peaceful Development, People, Public Diplomacy, Social, The Chinese Identity, ,

Gillard’s quest for front row seat before the music stops [The Age] #SinoAustralianTies #RisingChina

Will this round of significant bilateral affirmation come to naught if the Aussie leadership changes hands come September?

This is a multifaceted harvest for Australia. It includes direct convertibility sidewinding the USD$ in trade, strategic military partnerships and the unprecedented move for an institutionalized annual leaders’ face to face meetings to lock in its number one customer for the longer run. See – China deal paves way for ‘frank talk‘ (The Age]

However, also consider -
Professor Hugh White (The Age TV) on the pitfalls of over stretching this trilateral dance with the US and China

For the Chinese perspective,

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard delivers a speech at the China Executive Leadership Academy Pudong (CELAP) during her visit in Shanghai, east China, April 8, 2013. (Xinhua/Chen Fei)

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Gillard’s quest for front row seat before the music stops
By Laurie Pearcey
Source – The Age, published April 9, 2013
66 comments as of April 10, 2013

20130411-022853.jpg
Taking initiative: Prime Minister Julia Gillard in Shanghai as part of her six-day China visit.

Gillard lands big one with China deal

Comment: PM puts name on board and gets relationship on track

It is surely one of history’s great ironies that Richard Milhous Nixon, champion of the McCarthy era and fierce anti-communist, is remembered with great fondness and nostalgia in China as America’s finest statesman.

With this week’s Newspoll showing the Gillard government still destined for electoral oblivion, it’s not too cheeky to ask how Sino-Australian history will remember the Gang of Four Labor frontbenchers finishing up their six-day visit to China.

That three of her cabinet colleagues and no fewer than three business delegations accompanied the Prime Minister demonstrates to Beijing that Australia is well and truly committed to the bilateral relationship.

This stuff matters in the world of Chinese diplomacy.

When Xi Jinping last visited Australia in 2010 he was accompanied by a retinue of ministers, vice-ministers and a business delegation of more than 300 company executives from the length and breadth of China’s provinces and powerful state-owned enterprises.

Please click here to read the rest of the article at its source.

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Filed under: Australia, Beijing Consensus, Boao Forum 2013, Charm Offensive, Communications, Culture, Domestic Growth, Economics, Government & Policy, History, Influence, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Media, military, New Leadership, Peaceful Development, Politics, Public Diplomacy, Resources, Soft Power, Strategy, The Age, The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities, Trade, U.S.

Cartoon – Chinese Base in Australia to defend against American Imperialism #SinoAustralianRelations #Cartoon [The Age]

… contemplating Australia’s twenty-first century dilemma – choreographing between two great powers.

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Ron Tandberg
Source – The Age, published April 9, 2013

Source - CARTOON OF THE DAY by Ron Tandberg (The Age, 2013)

Source – CARTOON OF THE DAY by Ron Tandberg (The Age, 2013)

Further reading:
Tasmania visit for Chinese leader on the cards soon? (Mercury News)  Apparently in Xi Jinping’s former political roles he had a chance to visit every Australian state save for Tasmania.

Filed under: Australia, Beijing Consensus, Communications, Economics, Government & Policy, Hard Power, History, Influence, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Media, New Leadership, Peaceful Development, Politics, Resources, Soft Power, Strategy, The Age, The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities, Trade, U.S.

3 Daily Chinese Headlines on Rising China [WanderingChina05042013] #RisingChina

3 Daily Headlines on Rising China:

From abroad
#1 Skepticism of China’s rhetoric and intent on global leadership. Source – Slate

Domestic
#2 Bird flu becoming a threat in China, transparency promised. Source – China Daily

Picture paints a thousand words
#3 Photo – to counter all the negative press, a stunning image of a terraced paddy field in SW China – ancient harmony Source – Xinhua/Global Times

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#1 China’s Empty Dreams
If Beijing wants to be taken seriously as a global leader, it needs to begin to deal with the nightmare that is North Korea.
By Anne Applebaum|

Source – Slate, published April 3, 2013, at 7:11 PM

Which is all fair enough: China is a large and rapidly growing economic power. It’s only natural that China should begin to play an important international role. But if that’s what Beijing wants, why doesn’t it seize the opportunity? The Chinese could begin to play a valuable and prominent international role right now, one that would win their government friends and admirers and might even, over time, reduce the U.S. military presence in North Asia by eliminating one of the region’s most serious potential conflicts: Starting today, the Chinese could put an end to the grotesque farce that is the North Korean regime and, together with the United States, usher in the reunification of the Korean peninsula.

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#2 Transparency promised in fight against virus
by Wang Qian
Source – China Daily, published April 5, 2013

14 cases confirmed, five die from new strain of bird flu

China’s health authorities have promised transparency and pledged to mobilize resources nationwide to combat a new strain of deadly bird flu that has killed five people.

By Thursday night, the country’s total number of confirmed bird flu cases increased to 14 – four in Jiangsu, six in Shanghai, one in Anhui and three in Zhejiang. One of the latest victims was a 48-year-old man from Jiangsu province, who transported poultry for a living. He died of H7N9 bird flu in Shanghai on Thursday.

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#3 Paddy fields under golden sunlight in SW China
Xinhua
Source – Global Times, published April 5, 2013

Source - Global Times

Source – Global Times

This bird eye view shows paddy fields in golden sunlight at Jiangping Village of Wuzhuan Town in Donglan County, southwest China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region on April 4, 2013. (Xinhua/Zhou En’ge)

Filed under: 3Daily, Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Culture, Domestic Growth, Government & Policy, Hard Power, Health, History, Infrastructure, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Modernisation, New Leadership, Peaceful Development, Politics, Public Diplomacy, Reform, Soft Power, South Korea, Strategy, Tao Guang Yang Hui (韬光养晦), The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities

Inside Story : Russia and China: Cementing ties [Al Jazeera Video] #ChinaRussia

Al Jazeera’s Inside Story on March 23 has a panel talk about Russia and China strengthening ties.

Optimistically speaking – we have two former giants demonstrating how two former foes can be at least in today’s terms, friends. This relationship hasn’t been without cycles of ups and downs. See China and Russia: Best frenemies forever? (Fortunate Magazine, March 28, 2013)

That they do so today whilst they rejuvenate themselves seems on paper, a synergistic pivot necessary for the times. A case for symbiotic realism perhaps.

Both members of BRIC with permanent seats on the UN security council, they share a long border, complement each other economically and it makes a lot of sense to form a tag team. That they largely share consensus on major international issues not beholden to the US, has also stirred into the symbolism of this combined charm offensive.

It is also noteworthy Xi Jinping already made an important visit to US as Vice President last year.

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Inside Story : Russia and China: Cementing ties
Source – Al Jazeera on Youtube, published March 23, 2013

As China’s Xi Jinping chooses Moscow for his inaugural state visit, we look at the ties that bind the two countries. Inside Story, with presenter Hazem Sika, discusses with guests: Victor Gao, the director of China National Association of International Studies. He was former China policy advisor; Dimitry Babich, a political analyst at Russia Profile magazine; and Roderic Wye, a China analyst at Chatham House and senior fellow with the China Policy Institute at Nottingham University.

Filed under: Al Jazeera, Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Communications, Economics, History, Influence, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Media, Modernisation, New Leadership, Peaceful Development, Politics, Public Diplomacy, SBS, Soft Power, Strategy, Tao Guang Yang Hui (韬光养晦), The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities, Xi Jinping

How Social Darwinism Made Modern China [American Conservative] #China #US

A deft flick from the US to suggest it is Chineseness, that is foremost responsible for China’s latest rise.

Please click here to download article in PDF format.

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How Social Darwinism Made Modern China
A thousand years of meritocracy shaped the Middle Kingdom.
By RON UNZ
Source – American Conservative, published March 11, 2013

Source - American Conservative, 2013

Source – American Conservative, 2013

During the three decades following Deng Xiaoping’s 1978 reforms, China achieved the fastest sustained rate of economic growth in human history, with the resulting 40-fold rise in the size of China’s economy leaving it poised to surpass America’s as the largest in the world. A billion ordinary Han Chinese have lifted themselves economically from oxen and bicycles to the verge of automobiles within a single generation.

China’s academic performance has been just as stunning. The 2009 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) tests placed gigantic Shanghai—a megalopolis of 15 million—at the absolute top of world student achievement.1 PISA results from the rest of the country have been nearly as impressive, with the average scores of hundreds of millions of provincial Chinese—mostly from rural families with annual incomes below $2,000—matching or exceeding those of Europe’s most advanced and successful countries, such as Germany, France, and Switzerland, and ranking well above America’s results.

These successes follow closely on the heels of a previous generation of similar economic and technological gains for several much smaller Chinese-ancestry countries in that same part of the world, such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore, and the great academic and socioeconomic success of small Chinese-descended minority populations in predominantly white nations, including America, Canada, and Australia. The children of the Yellow Emperor seem destined to play an enormous role in Mankind’s future.

Please click here to read the rest of the article at its source.

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Filed under: Beijing Consensus, Charm Offensive, Chinese Model, Chinese overseas, Communications, Culture, Domestic Growth, Economics, Government & Policy, Greater China, History, Influence, International Relations, Mapping Feelings, Modernisation, Overseas Chinese, Peaceful Development, Politics, Public Diplomacy, Reform, Social, Soft Power, Strategy, Tao Guang Yang Hui (韬光养晦), The Chinese Identity, The construction of Chinese and Non-Chinese identities, U.S.

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