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Chinese Military,Political and Social Superthread

My guess is that both Taiwan and the USA are coming to the realization that Taiwan's preferred future is is within a modernized China - initially as part of a "one country three systems" regime.

I sense an ever increasing 'connection' between China, proper, (that is Mainland China) and Taiwan and, by and large, the 'connection' is friendly.

Absorbing Taiwan will be a challenge for China. Taiwan will require at least as much real autonomy and democracy as it has now - which is more than Hong Kong has, thus 'three systems' will be required until, eventually, Chinese governance 'catches up' with Hong Kong and, later, Taiwan.

China needs Taiwan, in part, to provide a wholly Chinese impetus for legal/commercial reforms. The old pitch ( by Anson Chan et al) that Hong Kong would take over China did not come to pass because Hong Kong (and its legal/commercial system) remains too 'foreign' for China. Even those who know that reforms are necessary and urgent do not want to be seen to be adopting alien Hong Kong style methods and institutions. Taiwan, however, will offer China different, but familiar and, above all, Chinese model for methods and institutions.

Let's face it: Taiwan IS Chinese and, logically and historically, it is part of China; Taiwan as a Chinese province autonomous region - but far, far more autonomous than, say, Tibet or Xinjiang will ever dream of being - is the 'natural' order of things. Taiwan as the catalyst for a Sino-American war doesn't make sense and I doubt that many American would see Taiwanese independence as an issue for which they would be willing to send hundreds of thousands of their children to an early grave.

None of this is to deny that there is a strong independence movement in Taiwan or to minimize its importance. As I said reunification (because Taiwan was, for a long time, part of China) will not be easy or quick but I think it is inevitable.
 
Taiwan as the setting of the latest Hollywood feature film:  :boring:

"Formosa Betrayed" movie site link

*note that the 2-28 date you see in the protest signs in the trailer refers to the infamous 2-28 massacre of 1947 which saw many Taiwanese civilians killed by Guomindang troops.
 
A PLA officer urges that China take a more aggressive stance towards the US through his new book titled The China Dream (Zhong Guo Meng/ 中國夢)  :

Reuters link

BEIJING (Reuters) - China should build the world's strongest military and move swiftly to topple the United States as the global "champion," a senior Chinese PLA officer says in a new book reflecting swelling nationalist ambitions.

China

The call for China to abandon modesty about its global goals and "sprint to become world number one" comes from a People's Liberation Army (PLA) Senior Colonel, Liu Mingfu, who warns that his nation's ascent will alarm Washington, risking war despite Beijing's hopes for a "peaceful rise."

"China's big goal in the 21st century is to become world number one, the top power," Liu writes in his newly published Chinese-language book, "The China Dream."
"If China in the 21st century cannot become world number one, cannot become the top power, then inevitably it will become a straggler that is cast aside," writes Liu, a professor at the elite National Defense University, which trains rising officers.

His 303-page book stands out for its boldness even in a recent chorus of strident Chinese voices demanding a hard shove back against Washington over trade, Tibet, human rights, and arms sales to Taiwan, the self-ruled island Beijing claims as its own.

"As long as China seeks to rise to become world number one ... then even if China is even more capitalist than the U.S., the U.S. will still be determined to contain it," writes Liu.

Rivalry between the two powers is a "competition to be the leading country, a conflict over who rises and falls to dominate the world," says Liu. "To save itself, to save the world, China must prepare to become the (world's) helmsman."

"The China Dream" does not represent government policy, which has been far less strident about the nation's goals.

Liu's book testifies to the homegrown pressures on China's Communist Party leadership to show the country's fast economic growth is translating into greater sway against the West, still mired in an economic slowdown.

The next marker of how China's leaders are handling these swelling expectations may come later this week, when the government is likely to announce its defense budget for 2010, after a 14.9 percent rise last year on the one in 2008.
"This book represents my personal views, but I think it also reflects a tide of thought," Liu told Reuters in an interview. "We need a military rise as well as an economic rise."

Another PLA officer has said this year's defense budget should send a defiant signal to Washington after the Obama administration went ahead in January with long-known plans to sell $6.4 billion worth of arms to Taiwan.

"I think one part of 'public opinion' that the leadership pays attention to is elite opinion, and that includes the PLA," said Alan Romberg, an expert on China and Taiwan at the Henry L. Stimson Center, an institute in Washington D.C.

"I think the authorities are seeking to keep control of the reaction, even as they need to take (it) into account," Romberg said in an emailed response to questions.

Liu argues that China should use its growing revenues to become the world's biggest military power, so strong the United States "would not dare and would not be able to intervene in military conflict in the Taiwan Strait."

"If China's goal for military strength is not to pass the United States and Russia, then China is locking itself into being a third-rate military power," he writes. "Turn some money bags into bullet holders."

China's leaders do not want to jeopardize ties with the United States, a key trade partner and still by far the world's biggest economy and military power.

Yet Chinese public ire, echoed on the Internet, means policy-makers have to tread more carefully when handling rival domestic and foreign demands, said Jin Canrong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University in Beijing.

"Chinese society is changing, and you see that in all the domestic views now on what China should do about the United States," said Jin. "If society demands a stronger stance, ignoring that can bring a certain cost."


Liu's book was officially published in January, but is only now being sold in Beijing bookstores.

LIGHTING A FIRE IN AMERICA'S BACKYARD

In recent months, strains have widened between Beijing and Washington over trade, Internet controls, climate change, U.S. arms sales to Taiwan and President Barack Obama's meeting with Tibet's exiled leader, the Dalai Lama, who China reviles.

China has so far responded with angry words and a threat to sanction U.S. companies involved in the Taiwan arms sales. But it has not acted on that threat and has allowed a U.S. aircraft carrier to visit Hong Kong.

Over the weekend, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said he wanted trade friction with the United States to ease. U.S. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg is due to visit Beijing this week.

Liu and other PLA officers, however, say they see little chance of avoiding deepening rivalry with the United States, whether peaceful or warlike.

"I'm very pessimistic about the future," writes another PLA officer, Colonel Dai Xu, in another recently published book that claims China is largely surrounded by hostile or wary countries beholden to the United States.



"I believe that China cannot escape the calamity of war, and this calamity may come in the not-too-distant future, at most in 10 to 20 years," writes Dai.

"If the United States can light a fire in China's backyard, we can also light a fire in their backyard," warns Dai.

Liu said he hoped China and the United States could manage their rivalry through peaceful competition.

"In his State of the Union speech, Obama said the United States would never accept coming second-place, but if he reads my book he'll know China does not want to always be a runner-up," said Liu in the interview.


(Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim and Jeremy Laurence)
 
This from Jane's Naval Newsbrief:

-------------------------​
[first posted to http://idr.janes.com - 25 February 2010]

US believes China is poised to field ballistic anti-ship missile
This is a revised version of an article first published on 22 February. The US naval intelligence community believes that China is getting close to fielding the world's first anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM), prompting concerns as to the survivability of United States Pacific Fleet carrier strike groups in the face of such a threat. Identified as the DF-21D - indicating its lineage in the DF-21 medium-range ballistic missile - the ASBM would be fired from mobile, land-based launchers and be capable of achieving a range in the order of 1,500 km
-------------------------​

 
Another increase in defence spending by China, though reportedly smaller than in recent years:

China announces 7.5 pct jump in defense spending
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN (AP) – 11 hours ago

BEIJING China on Thursday announced its smallest increase in defense spending in more than two decades, a likely result of both financial constraints and growing concern over perceptions of Beijing as a regional military threat.

The planned 7.5 percent boost in defense spending in 2010 follows at least 20 years of double-digit increases in the budget for the People's Liberation Army — the world's largest standing military with more than 2.3 million members.

Rapid military modernization and the acquisition of cutting-edge jet fighters, warships and submarines have aroused suspicions in Washington, Tokyo, New Delhi and elsewhere over China's intentions, further fueled by Beijing's growing diplomatic assertiveness and booming economic might.

The increase will be used to enhance China's ability "to meet various threats," said Li Zhaoxing, spokesman for China's parliament, the National People's Congress, at a news conference held on the eve of the opening of its annual legislative session.

"China is committed to peaceful development and a military posture that is defensive in nature," Li said.

He said this year's defense budget of 532.11 billion yuan ($77.9 billion) remained relatively low, particularly in relation to the country's vast territory and population. Li said Chinese defense spending has accounted for about 1.4 percent of gross domestic product in recent years, as opposed to more than 4 percent in the United States and more than 2 percent in Britain, France and Russia.

The increase over actual military spending in 2009 was 37.12 billion yuan, Li said. Defense expenditures account for 6.3 percent of China's total budget, a decline from previous years, he said.

Officials say about one-third of China's spending goes to salaries and improving living conditions for soldiers, with the rest split between replacing equipment and military research and development.

However, many overseas analysts believe the official figure accounts for only a part of actual military spending, with estimates on the total amount ranging up to twice or more what Beijing claims.
 
China's "Tea Party"?

;D

Police harassment backfires as China's troublemakers bond over 'drinking tea' tales
Wed Mar 10, 8:04 PM


By Cara Anna, The Associated Press

BEIJING - Like the United States, China is having its own tea party movement, but this one has a very different agenda.


Police have long tried to shush and isolate potential activists, usually starting with a low-key warning, perhaps over a meal or a cup of tea. Now, the country's troublemakers are openly blogging and tweeting their stories about "drinking tea" with the police, allowing the targeted citizens to bond and diluting the intimidation they feel.



The movement is an embarrassment for officials, who are suspicious of anything that looks like an organized challenge to their authority. And it can't help that "drinking tea" stories seem to be spreading among ordinary Chinese, including ones who signed a recent online call for political reform.


The country's top political event of the year, the National People's Congress, has given the stories another bump. More than 200 people say they've been invited by police to "drink tea" since last Friday, when the congress began, said independent political blogger Ran Yunfei.


"That's according to what I gathered from the Internet," he said Wednesday. "And that doesn't include the people who didn't identify themselves." There was no way to independently verify the number.


Twitter is blocked in China, but that hasn't stopped people from getting around Internet controls and posting sometimes hour-by-hour diaries of their police encounters on the social networking Web site. Some give advice to nervous newcomers facing their first invitation to "chat." Some, tongue in cheek, suggest restaurants for the usually uncomfortable meal.


Writer Yu Jie tweeted last week about going to the movies with police, who drove him there and followed him inside. "They bought tickets, but maybe they get reimbursed," he wrote.


Yu spoke by phone Wednesday while shopping at a branch of the French supermarket Carrefour, with two officers following him a few steps away.


"More and more people have conquered their fears and written about what happened to them," Yu said.


Xiao Qiang, director of the China Internet Project at the University of California-Berkeley, is excited about the potential of the "drinking tea" movement. He used to translate people's stories, but now there are too many.

"The way to control dissidents' activities is by creating fear and isolation. Other people don't dare to become your friends. You feel threatened," he said. "But the Internet countered that effort by connecting those people. They have a sense of community, which makes them bolder and stronger."


A new Web site, the "Drinking Tea Chronicles," appeared in China on Feb. 27, a few days before the political meetings began in Beijing. It encourages people to share their own stories by emailing them to the site.


The "Drinking Tea Chronicles" and a similar blog, "Invited to Drink Tea Chronicles," remained unblocked Wednesday.


The "Tea Party" movement in the United States, an entirely different phenomenon, emerged as anti-tax protests partly in response to the government's stimulus package of early 2009. It takes its name from the Boston Tea Party of 1773 when activists in the then-British colony of Massachusetts dumped shipments of tea into Boston Harbor to protest a new tea tax.


In China, the "drinking tea" stories started appearing in 2008 but took off in recent months as authorities cracked down on the signers of Charter 08, a daring call for political reform in China that was signed by hundreds of people, including some of the country's top intellectuals. Co-author Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in prison.


"Many of the people who signed are students, lawyers, businesspeople," Xiao said. For some, signing the petition brought their first visit from police. Their stories, some startled, some angry, have appeared on "drinking tea" sites and other blogs.



Xiao has a name for the newcomers, who had no political background until now: "They're what I call the conversions," he said.

But some Chinese don't need to sign petitions to get attention.

On Wednesday, a factory worker in the southern city of Shenzhen put out an alert on his Twitter feed, saying police wanted a meeting. He worried it would mess up his first day in a new job.

In a phone call, Fang Zhixiong told The Associated Press that he must have drawn attention by discussing human rights and constitutional issues online.

"I tweeted so if I miss work tomorrow, people will know I ended up in the police station," he said.

Within a couple hours of his alert, Fang was thanking worried readers - with the proper lingo.

"I haven't had tea yet," he tweeted. "Thank you for your concern."
 
A look at China's National People's Congress:

link

BEIJING (AFP) - China's lawmakers may have scant political powers, but they are not lacking in ideas. They offered a pile of drafts -- some serious, others far-fetched -- at this year's session of parliament.


The winner for most original proposal to the National People's Congress -- which wrapped up its 10-day meeting on Sunday -- came from the elegant Zhang Xiaomei, the editor-in-chief of China Beauty magazine.


Zhang suggested that all husbands pay their wives for doing the housework, raising the children and taking care of older relatives, an idea that has captured a fair bit of media attention.



"If a couple gets a divorce, the housewife usually has trouble getting compensation for the work she had done," Zhang said, adding she had been inspired by examples from overseas.


Other delegates shocked at the high divorce rate in China -- 1.71 million couples ended their marriages in 2009, a 10.3 percent increase over 2008 -- have called for laws making it more difficult to untie the proverbial knot.


They proposed a return to the practices of the 1960s and 1970s, when couples needed the approval of the "danwei" (work unit) to separate.



Businesswoman Yan Qi learned the hard way that lawmaking has its drawbacks.


When she proposed a ban on banning private Internet cafes in an effort to curb pornography and video game addiction, the country's massive online community retaliated, hacking the website of her restaurant chain.


Sports made the list of topics considered, with one delegate suggesting China should end its practise of judging sports officials by the number of Olympic gold medals won by the country's athletes.


In a nation that hosted its first Olympic Games less than two years ago, Zhao Long's proposal took many by surprise.


Zhao said there was nothing wrong with winning gold medals, but that the quest for gold had driven local officials to illegal means, such as doping and age fraud, to bring home the medals.


Some complained that proposals like the one made by Zhao were nothing but a blatant attempt at self-promotion, and failed to take into consideration the issues vital to China's future.


"Where are the important topics that affect people's lives such as housing prices, social equality, education, the fight against corruption and the household registration system?" wrote Beijing News journalist Pan Caifu.


"Have you delegates forgotten your mission? And you journalists who have chased after interviews with famous (delegates) -- do you have the courage to face your readers?"


The NPC, with up to 3,000 delegates, is regarded as the world's biggest parliament but is also widely seen as a body that merely rubber-stamps the decisions of China's ruling Communist Party elite.


But some observers say dissenting voices do get heard -- behind closed doors -- in the process of shaping legislation.


Most of the most outlandish proposals came from delegates to the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, which meets at the same time as the parliament, but only has the power to advise the government.


Although the members of the NPC are less active than the CPPCC delegates, they are more serious, often tackling major social issues that stir heated debates, like whether to abolish China's "one-child" family planning policy.

Other proposals called for an end to "re-education-through-labour," a penal system that authorities have long used to jail political opponents, as well as people who repeatedly petition Beijing over injustices committed by local officials.

The system allows the authorities to jail offenders without trial for up to four years, according to the last major reform in 2004 -- a situation that has long drawn criticism from international human rights groups.
 
Thinking big. I wonder if there are enough resources (capital, physical, political) available to actually do this:

http://nextbigfuture.com/2010/03/china-considers-high-speed-rail-line.html

China Considers High Speed Rail Line Connections to Europe

EU Observer - China is exploring the possibility of extending its high-speed train network as far as Europe, potentially cutting rail travel time between London and Beijing to as little as two days. Officials hope to see the project completed over the next ten years, enabling passengers to travel the roughly 8,000 kilometre journey at speeds of up to 320 kilometres per hour. China is currently in the middle of a vast railway expansion project that aims to build nearly 30,500 kilometres of new railways in the next five years, connecting all its major cities with high-speed lines. China's internal high speed rail plans were reported here along with a comparison of the US high speed rail plans

NY Times reports China will spend $88 billion constructing intercity rail lines, the highest priority in the plan. It spent $44 billion last year and just $12 billion as recently as 2004.

    The government has nearly finished the construction of a high-speed rail route from Beijing to Shanghai at a cost of $23.5 billion — almost equal to the price of the entire Three Gorges hydroelectric dam project on the Yangtze River. The authorities recently disclosed that they had 110,000 workers laboring to finish the route as quickly as possible.

    Two lines to Europe are reportedly being considered under the proposals, one passing through India, Pakistan, and the Middle East, while a second would head to Germany via Russia. Exact routes are currently undecided however. A third line would extend south from China to connect Vietnam, Thailand, Burma and Malaysia.

  Financing the project appears to be the main question, with China offering to bankroll the Burmese line in exchange for the country's rich reserves of lithium, a metal used in batteries.

    "We will use government money and bank loans, but the railways may also raise financing from the private sector and also from the host countries," said Mr Wang, indicating the new lines would also be used to carry freight.

    European experts say the current low maritime transport costs make it harder to justify an EU-China rail line on commercial grounds however.


FURTHER READING
Network Rail has proposed a new £34bn ($55bn) high-speed railway line linking Scotland and London by 2030.

High speed rail is displacing short haul (less than 3 hour) plane routes

    High-speed railways will connect all of China’s provincial capitals and cities with more than 500,000 citizens by 2020, serving more than 90 percent of the population, the Ministry of Railways said.


China's high speed rail present and future

    Times Online UK: Continental Europe now has 3,600 miles of high-speed line in operation, with a further 2,000 under construction. China will have 6,000 miles open by 2012.

    NY Times: China is investing $292.9 billion (2 trillion RMB) in a nationwide high-speed, energy efficient rail network.

    China accelerated its high-speed-rail development plan last year in the wake of the global financial crisis, saying it would increase the passenger network by a third to 16,000 kilometers, or about 10,000 miles, by 2020. The centerpiece of the service is a 1,318-kilometer line with 16 kilometers of tunnels that will cut the trip between Beijing and Shanghai to five hours from 10. The Beijing / Shanghai high speed line is set to open 2012.

    The Chinese Railway Ministry says that the new system makes economic sense: A two-track bullet train can transport 160 million people a year, compared with 80 million for a four-lane highway.
 
Why China will not become a superpower (or even a regional hegemon). If and when the Chinese demand for commodities collapse, our own economy will suffer (and the downstream effects on the US economy will also have serious effects on Canada):

http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/0316/China-the-coming-costs-of-a-superbubble

China: the coming costs of a superbubble

China may seem to have defied the recession and the laws of economics. It hasn't. When China's bubble bursts, the global impact will be severe, spiking US interest rates.

By Vitaliy N. Katsenelson
posted March 16, 2010 at 2:34 pm EDT
Denver —

The world looks at China with envy. China’s economy grew 8.7 percent last year, while the world economy contracted by 2.2 percent. It seems that Chinese “Confucian capitalism” – a market economy powered by 1.3 billion people and guided by an authoritarian regime that can pull levers at will – is superior to our touchy-feely democracy and capitalism. But the grass on China’s side of the fence is not as green as it appears.

In fact, China’s defiance of the global recession is not a miracle – it’s a superbubble. When it deflates, it will spell big trouble for all of us.

To understand the Chinese economy, consider three distinct periods: “Late-stage growth obesity” (the decade prior to 2008); “You lie!” (the time of the financial crisis); and finally,  “Steroids ’R’ Us” (from the end of the financial crisis to today).

Late-stage growth obesity

About a decade ago, the Chinese government chose a policy of growth at any cost. China’s leaders see strong gross domestic product (GDP) growth not just as bragging rights, but as essential for political survival and national stability.

Because China lacks the social safety net of the developed world, unemployed people aren’t just inconvenienced by the loss of their jobs, they starve; and hungry people don’t complain, they riot and cause political unrest.

Remember the 1994 movie “Speed”? A young cop (Keanu Reeves) had to save passengers on a bus that would explode if its speed dropped below 50 m.p.h. Well, China is like that bus with 1.3 billion people aboard. If the Communist Party can’t keep the economy growing at a fast clip, the result will be catastrophic.

To achieve high growth, China kept its currency, the renminbi, at artificially low levels against the dollar. This helped already cheap Chinese-made goods become even cheaper. China turned into a significant exporter to the developed economies.

Normally, if free-market economic forces were at work, the renminbi would have appreciated and the US dollar would have declined. However, had China let this occur, demand for its products would have declined, and its economy wouldn’t have grown at roughly 10 percent a year, which it did during the past decade.

The more China sold to the United States, the more dollars it accumulated, and thus the more US Treasuries it bought, driving our interest rates down. US consumers responded to these cheap goods and cheap home loans by going on a buying binge.

However, companies and countries that grow at very high rates for a long time will inevitably suffer from late-stage growth obesity. Consider Starbucks: In 1999, it had 2,000 stores and was adding 1.8 stores a day. In 2007, when it had 10,000 stores, it had to open 5.5 stores a day in a desperate bid to keep growth rates up. This resulted in poor decisions and poor quality – a recipe for disaster.

In China, political pressure for full employment has led to similar late-stage growth obesity. In 2005, China built the largest shopping mall in the world, the New South China Mall: Today it’s 99 percent vacant. China also built up a lavish district in a city called Ordos: Today, it’s a ghost town.

You lie!

All good things come to an end, and great things come to an end with a bang. When the financial meltdown erupted in 2008, US and global banks started dropping like flies. Countries everywhere suffered contraction.

Even China.

During the crisis, Chinese exports were down more than 25 percent, tonnage of goods shipped through railroads was down by double digits, and electricity use plummeted.

Yet Beijing insisted that China had magically sustained 6 to 8 percent growth. 

China lies. It goes to great lengths to maintain appearances, including censoring media and jailing those who write antigovernment articles. That’s why we have to rely on hard data instead.

Steroids ‘R’ Us

Today the global economy is stabilizing, thanks to Uncle Sam and other “uncles” around the world. But the consumers of Chinese-made goods are still in debt, unemployment is high, and banks aren’t lending. You might think the Chinese economy would be growing at a lower rate. But no, it is growing again at nearly 10 percent, as though the financial crisis never occurred.

Though this growth appears to be authentic – electricity consumption is back up – it is not sustainable growth, because it is based on an unprecedented stimulus package and extraordinary government involvement in the economy.

In the midst of the financial crisis, in late 2008, Beijing fire-hosed a $568 billion stimulus into the Chinese economy. That’s enormous! As a percentage of GDP, it would be like a $2 trillion stimulus in America, nearly triple the size of the one Congress passed last year.

It gets even more interesting. Unlike Western democracies, whose central banks can pump a lot of money into the financial system but can’t force banks to lend or consumers and corporations to spend, China can achieve both at lightning speed.

The government controls the banks, so it can make them lend, and it can force state-owned enterprises (one-third of the economy) to borrow and to spend. Also, because the rule of law and human and property rights are still underdeveloped, China can spend infrastructure project money very fast – if a school is in the way of a road the government wants to build, it becomes a casualty for the greater good.

Government is horrible at allocating large amounts of capital, especially at the speed it is done in China. Political decisions (driven by the goal of full employment) are often uneconomical, and corruption and cronyism result in projects that destroy value.

To maintain high employment, China has poured money into infrastructure and real estate projects. This explains why, in 2009, new floor space doubled and residential real estate prices surged 25 percent. This also explains why the Chinese keep building new skyscrapers even though existing ones are still vacant.

The enormous stimulus has exacerbated problems that already existed, threatening to turn China into a less shiny but more drastic version of debt-riddled Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

What happens in China doesn’t stay in China. A meltdown there – or even a slowdown – would have severe consequences for the rest of the world.

It will tank the commodity markets. Demand for industrial goods will fall off the cliff. Finally, Chinese appetite for our fine currency will diminish, driving the dollar lower against the renminbi and boosting our interest rates higher. No more 5 percent mortgages and 6 percent car loans.

No shortcuts to greatness

We look at China and are mesmerized by its 1.3 billion people, its achievements of the past decade, its recent economic resiliency, and its ability to achieve spectacular results on the fly. But we have to remember that economic bubbles are usually just a good thing taken too far. The Chinese economy is no exception. Its long-term future may be bright, but in the short run we’ve got a bubble on our hands.

Everyone wants a shortcut to greatness, but there isn’t one. China has been trying to bend the laws of economics for a while, and with the control it exerts over its economy it may seem that it’s succeeded.

But this is only a temporary mirage, which must be followed by a painful reality. No, there is no shortcut to greatness – not in personal life, not in politics, and not in economics.

Vitaliy N. Katsenelson is a portfolio manager/director of research at Investment Management Associates in Denver. He is the author of “Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets.”
 
There is a peculiarly American need to create false expectations so that the normal course of events can be made to appear as a catastrophe.

I don't think that any of the sane, responsible China watchers are forecasting a steady, problem free, uninterrupted climb to superpower status for China. It took Britain, arguably, 200 years to grow to great power status (circa 1585 to 1785) and it took America less than 100 years (1865 to 1945) to do the same. It is reasonable to expect China to need 50 years (1990 to 2040ish) to do the same. There were stumbles and falls in both the American (great depression) and British (American revolution) ascensions. The same must be expected for China.

But the (inevitable?) problems do not, necessarily, foretell a Chinese collapse and a return to the 1830s, 1920s or even the 1970s any more than the great depression, Smoot-Hawley and all that foretold the collapse of America.
 
Why members of China's Gong An Bu/Public Security Bureau will have more headaches in the coming years.

;D

MSNBC link
(...)


It is the latest example of Chinese Internet users being targeted for their budding grass-roots activism — ordinary people spreading the word about grievances from every corner of the country with postings on Twitter, microblogs and other Web sites.

"Netizens are using the Internet to talk about injustice," said Liu Xiaoyuan, You's lawyer. "But local officials just use their public power to suppress them."

Dozens of bloggers showed up outside Mawei Distrist People's Court on Friday in Fuzhou city where the verdict was to be announced, tweeting constantly and posting photos from the scene online. They reportedly were met by more than 100 uniformed and plainclothes police. The case was indefinitely postponed.

China blocks online materials it deems to be harmful or pornographic, which frequently includes information that contradicts the views of the ruling Communist Party. Such restrictions prompted Internet giant Google to announce in January that it may close China-based Google.cn because it no longer wanted to cooperate with Beijing's Internet censorship.

But there is a vibrant community of tech-savvy users who can easily hop over the "Great Firewall" that blocks access to sites like Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. They are a minority of the 384 million people online in China but among the most vocal: young, educated, liberal-minded and unafraid of questioning the Communist government.Twitter in particular has been harnessed by Chinese users who revel in having a forum where they can speak freely about politically sensitive matters — in 140 characters or less, of course.

(...)

But there have been a few victories, too.

Authorities dropped charges against a man in the eastern province of Shandong who was detained after accusing his local Communist Party secretary of corruption. An unpopular garbage incinerator project in the southern city of Guangzhou has been put on hold. A karaoke bar waitress went unpunished after fatally stabbing a drunk government official who cornered her and demanded sex. Each case got strong attention from Chinese citizens online as details spread through blogs and forums.

Guo Baofeng, who works as a translator in the southern city of Xiamen, was among those taken away by police after posting a video interview of Lin on an overseas Web site. He became famous among Chinese netizens for sending Twitter updates while in police custody.

"Pls help me, I grasp the phone during police sleep," and "i have been arrested by Mawei police, SOS," he tweeted in English from his cell phone, avoiding Chinese characters that take longer to input. Guo was released from detention after about three weeks, though he is still under police monitoring.
 
These photos have been released showing the aftermath of the terrorist attack on an unsuspecting police unit three years ago. The photos are graphic. China Defense Mashup is one of my favorite sites on the PLA. So if you would rather skip the gore follow the second link.

http://www.china-defense-mashup.com/?p=5648

Main site.

http://www.china-defense-mashup.com/
 
China Eyes Investment in Iceland
William Underhill
By William Underhill

China has become famous in recent years for its ask-no-questions checkbook diplomacy, especially toward resource-rich nations in the developing world. Now it seems Beijing may have a new target: Europe. The latest object of Chinese interest is Iceland, which is teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, thanks to the excesses of its bankers. China's new embassy in Reykjavík will be the largest in the capital, and the Nordic country's official investment agency has noted a surge of inquiries from China. 

As ever, Chinese investment reflects long-term thinking. At issue in this case? According to a report this month from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Beijing is interested in new trade routes across the Arctic as polar ice vanishes, slashing the journey time between the Middle Kingdom and its trading partners in Europe and North America. China already has an Arctic research station in Norway and plans to spend $300 million on a new icebreaker vessel.

Once the Arctic is navigable by commercial traffic year-round, Iceland could serve as a friendly and well-equipped way station for China in the North Atlantic (the U.S. military left some handy facilities in place when it quit the country in 2006). The idea is appealing to Iceland, as well. President Ólafur Ragnar Grimmson recently talked of his country's future as a logistics hub and cited Chinese interest. This comes just as an ongoing fight over a $5 billion debt to Britain and the Netherlands has soured Iceland's relations with Europe. So why not some new friends from Asia?

Newsweek blog link

   
 
Chump change for China, but boy....the interest rate.... ::)
 
Reuters link

Geely signs $1.8 billion deal for Ford's Volvo car unit

Sun Mar 28, 11:33 AM


By Victoria Klesty

GOTHENBURG, Sweden (Reuters) - Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, China's largest private-run car maker, agreed on Sunday to buy Ford Motor's Volvo car unit for $1.8 billion, the country's biggest overseas auto purchase.

The takeover underscores China's arrival as a major force in the global auto industry and ends nearly two years of talks with Geely over Volvo -- the last sale from Ford's former premier group, which also held Aston Martin, Jaguar and Land Rover.

(...)

 
I do not think China will use force to retake the island unless Taiwan does something outrages or out of the ordinary such as publicly declaring independence. The current Taiwanese government is so far unwilling to do that; they are preoccupied with internal matters such as the economy.

China is more likely to use a soft power approach in dealing with Taiwan. Chinese government is a very patient government. It does not have to worry about elections or appeasing the common populaces. Consider China's rise in economic development; no other state in history have risen so fast in so short time. In around 60 years ever since Deng became the head of the Chinese government till now China have become truly a capitalist. China of course proclaim it is a Communist state, Deng once said Black or White cat it does not matter as long it catches the mice. It means it may have to sacrifice communist ideology to move China forward. China has now become the world largest producer of goods and have many important trade treaties with some of the world's largest consumers and these consumers are now dependent for cheap goods. China understand that and to continue this trend it had depressed the currency to insure exports are cheap. In most western countries banks are not controlled by the government, in China the Chinese Central Bank is. This made China a wielder of economic force.

In recent years China have signed economic treaties with Taiwan such are opening a direct air and sea corridor for commercial use. Also it had open its market to import Taiwanese goods such as fruits. China is slowly integrating Taiwanese dependent on the Chinese market. On the political scale China had made great strides in the international community to not recognize Taiwan's government as legitimate. In the opening of the 2010 Winter Olympic, the name Taiwan was not use by the IOC but instead replace with a more political neutral name of City of Taipei.

China can wait it out; in the long run as distasteful as it maybe China will take over Taiwan in a couple of generations if current economic and political trend continues. Using force to take Taiwan is viable but politically and economically it will not benefit the Chinese government. However this prediction is not certain; China is facing a huge internal unrest. Due to state policy to develop it had made many to be angry at the government. Every month this is over 100 "mass incidents", riots as we coin it. Tibet and the western Muslim majority provinces continue to cause problems.

 
I agree with burnaby's appreciation of the situation. Most All of the Chinese I have met take for granted that Taiwan is, and must be a province of China. Absolute independence for Taiwan would be politically and strategically impossible for any Chinese government, but waiting is possible and popular.

One country/two systems works; one country/three systems will work, too. The third system sees Taiwan with levels of independence even greater than those enjoyed by Hong Kong.
 
Han Bao Da Xue/漢包大學? (A Hamburger University?)  ;D

As McDonald's celebrated the opening of its Hamburger University training center in Shanghai -- the first such facility in mainland China -- the company also shared growth plans for the region. According to Financial Post, McDonald's Corp. plans to have more than 2,000 stores in mainland China by the end of 2013, with the country the primary growth engine in the Asia Pacific market...

McDonald's plans aggressive China expansion
 
More S300s for China:

Business Week link

By Anastasia Ustinova

April 2 (Bloomberg) -- Russia delivered anti-aircraft missiles to China under a contract that may be valued as high as $2 billion.

OAO Air Defense Concern Almaz-Antei, a state-run weapons manufacturer, sold 15 batteries of S-300 missiles in 2007-2009
, Zarina Gurieva, a company spokeswoman, said by phone today.

China, once the largest customer for Russian arms, has bought about 27 S-300 batteries from Russia beginning in the 1990s, the “bare minimum” for its arsenal, Konstantin Makienko, a defense analyst at the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies in Moscow, said by phone.

He valued the latest contract at about $2 billion. Gurieva declined to comment on the price.

Russia, the world’s second-biggest arms exporter to developing nations according to the U.S. Congressional Research Service, is stepping up efforts to sell weapons to the Middle East, Latin America and Africa as orders from China decline. The country’s contract to supply S-300s to Iran has been delayed after the United States and Israel said Tehran could use the missiles to thwart attacks on its nuclear facilities.

The missile, also known in the West as the SA-20, is able to destroy non-stealth aircraft as far as 100 miles (160 kilometers) away.
--Editors: Nathaniel Espino, Jeffrey Donovan

To contact the reporter on this story: Anastasia Ustinova in St. Petersburg at austinova@bloomberg.net.
 
Elsewhere I have alluded to the weakness in the US that results in the Obama administration kowtowing to e.g. China. If more proof is need, it is here, in a report reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, in which we can see that the USA, represented by Timothy Geithner in its latest faceoff with China, blinked:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/geithner-gives-china-room-to-move-on-yuan/article1522493/
Geithner gives China room to move on yuan
U.S. Treasury Secretary delays delivery of key report on charges of currency manipulation over yuan

Andy Hoffman

Asia-Pacific Reporter, Vancouver — Globe and Mail

Monday, Apr. 05, 2010

The White House has blinked in its escalating war of words with China , delaying a key report looking into whether the Asian economic superpower is a currency manipulator, and betting instead that diplomacy will convince Beijing officials to let the yuan rise.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner moved over the weekend to postpone a report scheduled to be delivered to Congress on April 15 investigating China's policy of keeping the yuan's value pegged to the U.S. dollar for almost two years. Experts say it will pave the way for China to allow its undervalued currency to begin strengthening sooner than anticipated.

“The move by Geithner suggests that an agreement is more than likely and that the Chinese yuan will start appreciating within a band somewhat earlier than had been thought,” said Sebastien Galy, senior currency strategist at BNP Paribas.

Many U.S. lawmakers charge that Beijing is keeping its currency artificially low, giving Chinese exporters an unfair advantage over international competitors, exacerbating a massive trade imbalance with the United States and hurting American factories and jobs. If it finds that China has been manipulating the value of its yuan, the report to Congress will allow the U.S. to impose duties on imports from China.

Yet instead of heavy-handed threats, Mr. Geithner and the Obama administration are now banking on a series of upcoming meetings with Chinese government officials, including the June G20 Summit in Toronto, to spur a revaluation of the yuan, which is also called the renminbi.

“China's inflexible exchange rate  has made it difficult for other emerging market economies to let their currencies appreciate,” Mr. Geithner said in a statement. “A move by China to a more market-oriented exchange rate will make an essential contribution to global rebalancing.”

The Treasury's softening stance follows a decision by China's President Hu Jintao to attend a summit on nuclear security in Washington slated for April 12 and 13. Mr. Geithner said a series of meetings with Chinese government officials over the next few months will be “critical” to bringing policy changes that lead to a “more balanced” global economy.

In response to the global financial crisis, China has kept its currency pegged at 6.83 yuan to the U.S. dollar for more than 20 months. Beijing keeps its currency tied to the U.S. dollar by using its yuan to buy U.S. government bonds and Treasury bills. But a recent recovery in Chinese exports has sparked debate, even within China, that the yuan should now be allowed to rise to levels more reflective of China's fast-growing economy.

Such a move would strengthen the buying power of Chinese consumers, a critical plank in Beijing's long-term goal of creating strong domestic demand for its goods. At the same time, China's massive export industry, whose key market is the United States, remains the dominant sector of China's economy, and officials are loath to create challenges for exporters.

Yang Yuanqing, the chief executive officer of Chinese computer making giant Lenovo Group Ltd., has said a stronger yuan would boost Chinese consumers' purchasing power. Chen Daifu, chairman of Hunan Lengshuijian Iron & Steel Group Co., has suggested a higher currency would reduce China's import costs. Chinese central bank officials have also called for measures to let the yuan rise.

But Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has taken a hard line against the rising calls from the West and within China to let the yuan appreciate. “The Chinese currency is not undervalued,” Mr. Wen said last month at the close of the National People's Congress in Beijing. “We oppose all countries engaging in mutual finger-pointing or taking strong measures to force other nations to appreciate their currencies.”

Mr. Geithner's new tack will give Chinese officials breathing room to relax currency controls “without looking like they're kowtowing to U.S. pressure,” David Gilmore, a partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics in Essex, Conn., told Bloomberg News.

Still, with the U.S. unemployment rate near its highest level in more than a quarter century, many U.S. lawmakers and manufacturing industry representatives were unhappy with the White House's decision to back away from immediate threats against China.

“We are disappointed, but not surprised, by the administration's decision,” Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat said in an e-mailed statement. “After five years of stonewalling, punctuated by occasional but halting action by the Chinese, we have lost faith in bilateral negotiations on this issue.”

China's international relations have also been strained lately by Google's threats to pull out of China because of censorship restrictions imposed by the government on the internet search company's Chinese website. A guilty verdict and stiff jail terms imposed by a Chinese court against four Rio Tinto employees charged with bribery and stealing commercial secrets has also hurt China's relations with foreign business interests.

With files from Bloomberg

It is not that the USA, per se, is weak but, rather, a very large minority of American appear to have taken counsel of their fears and, de facto, have surrendered their accustomed position as the greatest of the great powers. (The brief interregnum of America as a hyper-power could not be sustained beyond a decade.) 

It is neither simple nor easy for the USA to deal with China on economic/fiscal and monetary matters; the Chinese are strong and they are demanding their due in respect from America, Europe and Japan. Amerca cannot push China too hard. But kowtowing, again, is not the answer.
 
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