Tag Archive | "Путешествия"

Scandal Erodes China’s Soft Power

Скандал подрывает Мягкая сила Китая

Hidden power struggles, repression, belie unified government that can deliver reforms Power, hard and soft: Escaped dissident, Chen Guangcheng, reunites with family as US diplomats watch (top); China’s top legislator Wu Bangguo unveils the new Confucius Institute at Minsk State Linguistic University in Belarus HONG KONG: Buoyed by its massive foreign-exchange reserve, China has spent billions of dollars to boost its soft power. Direct Chinese television broadcasts and Confucius Institutes around the world are aimed at winning the world’s respect. But a series of political scandals showing a total lack of regard for China’s rule of law have punctured claims about the Chinese system’s superiority. Chinese netizens’ claims that dissident Chen Guangcheng, who had escaped house arrest, was in “the 100 percent safe place” in China – the US embassy – sum up China’s challenge. На самом деле, the Chen incident represents a loss of face, reflecting a lack of trust by Chinese citizens in their own government. As the old saying goes, actions speak louder than words, and actions in China of late have been deafening. A quick survey of world newspaper opinion pages shows the damage to China’s soft power. In February, Chongqing Vice Mayor Wang Lijun spent a mysterious 30 hours in the US Consulate in Chengdu and subsequently “left of his own volition,” according to the US State Department. Obviously he thought the US mission was the best place for his personal safety. Now in custody in Beijing, he faces treason charges and, apparently, assists in the investigation of former Chongqing party chief Bo Xilai and his wife, Gu Kailai, who is suspected of murdering British businessman Neil Heywood.

The Bo saga dominated headlines for weeks, with salacious details leaked, including massive amounts of money involved and the poison administered to Heywood, who, it’s alleged, wanted a bigger cut for laundering money. Chinese citizens treated the news as unusual only because it was public, which certainly does not boost China’s soft power based on Confucian morality. Chinese citizens treated news of the Bo saga as unusual only because it was public, not a boost for China’s soft power.

Then, just as the Bo saga was beginning to run out of steam, came another sensational development: the escape from house arrest of blind legal-rights activist Chen, who managed to travel from Shandong to Beijing, before finding refuge inside the US Embassy. Chen left the embassy after six days, again of his own free will, according to both the Chinese and US governments. Only a few hours passed before he changed his mind and wanted to leave China with his family. Like China, the United States does not welcome Chinese citizens seeking shelter in its diplomatic missions, whether they’re former police chiefs implicated in human rights abuses or dissidents mistreated by Chinese authorities. В конце концов, the United States has no means of sheltering dissidents for prolonged periods or spiriting them out of the country. Ongoing events show that the Chinese government’s often belligerent and extra-legal behavior to a large extent influences how China is perceived by the rest of the world.  Such actions have a greater impact on Chinese soft power – or its lack thereof – than programs beamed by Xinhua or CCTV around the world, at a cost of billions of dollars. Last October, China’s Communist leadership endorsed a decision to enhance the nation’s soft power. Even before, что, в 2010, China launched 24-hour global English TV news. In February, CCTV America, based in Washington, was launched. В дополнение, China has set up more than 320 Confucius Institutes around the world to promote the teaching of Chinese language and culture, at a cost of roughly $150 million a year as of three years ago. Ongoing events in China play a much greater role in shaping how people view China than “new perspectives” or “alternative views” presented by spin doctors or professional western journalists on China’s payroll. Countering the Confucius Institutes spreading word about the virtues of family cohesion is the heartrending account of Chen’s family held hostage by the government. Events in China do more to shape how the world views the nation than versions presented by TV spin doctors. In the Chen case, the United States crafted an agreement under which the Chinese government agreed to relocate the dissident and his family to another part of the country where he could enroll in a university to study law. Chen insisted that he wanted to leave the country as soon as possible, and stated he feared for his family’s safety in a phone call to an emergency US congressional hearing on his case. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman announced today that Chen could also apply to study abroad.

This is unprecedented. If China carries out its part of the bargain, it could mean loosening of the grip that security authorities have had on the country in recent years, ostensibly for maintaining social stability. Little of this is known to the Chinese public because of official censorship. Однако, while China can gag its own media with directives from the party’s propaganda department, it can do little about news reports from other countries. Despite China spending billions on public relations, editorial comments in the free media reflect what the world thinks of China. Major western media, конечно, have been unstinting.

Referring to the fall of Bo Xilai, Businessweek called it “the most serious threat to the authority” of China’s Communist party since the 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising.

The Chinese government has insisted that the Bo case – including allegations that his wife committed murder – was no more than a “criminal case.” Publications, in Asia and elsewhere, though wonder about China’s opaque power struggle, belying the image of a unified China preparing for orderly succession. Japan Times, in an April 30 editorial, commented on reports that Bo had wiretapped telephone conversations of President Hu Jintao and concluded that the former’s downfall “points to a possible power struggle at a time when China is preparing for leadership transition.” Hu, the party leader, is expected to step down later this year as part of a once-in-a-decade changeover. In South Korea, the Joongang Daily, in a March 16 editorial, called for political reform, arguing that “China’s stable development is not its problem alone, as it is tied to the interests of the world.” Global media wonder about an opaque power struggle, belying images of a unified China or orderly succession. An  editorial in the Korea Herald  suggested: “The scandal represents absurdities of today’s China, where power is connected with money…. How the collective leadership will handle the Bo Xilai event will show whether the system in China is durable.” Still in Asia, the China Post in Taiwan carried an editorial on the Bo case April 15 in which it called for “the institution of a truly independent judiciary that does not bow to the rich and powerful.” In South Africa, one of China’s BRICS partners, The Star carried an opinion piece May 2 on Chen.

Titled “A Chinese Puzzle,” the essay called the drama being played out at the US Embassy “a microcosm of a conflict between the two powers” and said the crisis “needs to be defused – but not at the expense of Chen’s new-found hope of freedom.” For weeks, Germany’s Der Spiegel has asserted that China’s leaders “have been embroiled in a bitter power struggle that could jeopardize a carefully planned transition in the national leadership.” But because of censorship controls, “many Chinese have become so cynical that they don’t even trust the party media, such as state-run television, when they actually tell the truth….” So, while Chinese censorship is successful, it only extends as far as the country’s borders. In other countries, the media is free to draw its own conclusions about China, based on what’s happening on the ground. If Beijing is serious about increasing its soft power, it must first change the way it treats its own people. But that might embolden critics to question one-party rule, which remains non-negotiable.  

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Скандал подрывает Мягкая сила Китая

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Disruption Comes (Finally!) to Commercial Real Estate

Нарушение приходит (В конце концов!) для коммерческой недвижимости

How Jason Freedman and 42Floors cooked up a killer business idea that could turn commercial real estate on its head.Jason Freedman hunches his shoulders against New York City’s December chill and walks faster, nudged both by the cold and by being late. He and David Woodworth, co-founders of an Internet company called 42Floors, both stand out a bit with their buoyant, vulnerable Californianess as they swim against the trudging, elbowing crowds.Focused on the iPhone he clutches a foot in front of his face for navigational purposes, oblivious to how dorky and unsafe this seems on these streets, Freedman races on to the next stop in a two-day string of meetings, Woodworth trailing a few feet behind.Freedman and Woodworth are several months into

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Нарушение приходит (В конце концов!) для коммерческой недвижимости

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Shine Comes Off Chinese Jewelers

Shine Comes Off Chinese Jewelers

Jerome Favre/Bloomberg

Walking through the streets of Hong Kong with its endless rows of jeweler stores packed full of Chinese shoppers, it may seem like the bling business is sparkling.

Chow Tai Fook Jewellery Group Ltd., controlled by Hong Kong billionaire Cheng Yu-tung, made waves through a US$2.8 billion initial public offering last December, educating investors all over the world of the insatiable Chinese appetite for gold.

But after hitting its record high in late January, Chow Tai Fook’s share price has come down by around 21%. Its rival, Luk Fook Holdings (International) ООО, is down 16% year-to-date.

The stocks have been pummeled by slowing growth in Hong Kong retail sales for the December to February period. В январе, retail sales in Hong Kong rose 14.9% year-on-year – which, for an economy heavily reliant by discretionary spending by visitors from across the border, just didn’t quite cut it. As  a comparison, December’s year-on-year increase was 23.5%.

Seasonal factors played a role. Brokerage UOB KayHian said in a note that the proximity of the Lunar New Year this year to Christmas slowed visitor arrivals to Hong Kong. An exceptionally cold January also delayed the traveling plans of some visitors.

But Citigroup sees signs of a recovery in retail sales in March. Figures for the month will be released in the next few days. CIMB believes a slowdown is only natural, after the spectacular run jewelers enjoyed over the past two years, and that there are no grounds to think Chinese people’s appetite for jewelry is abating.

See more on this story at Deal Journal

Китай как правило, осуществляются реформы в постепенных или частям.

Экономическое развитие было более быстрым в прибрежных провинциях, чем в интерьере, и примерно 200 миллионов сельских рабочих и членов их семей переехали в города в поисках работы.

Республика Китайская Народная является вторым по величине экономикой в ​​мире после Соединенных Штатов как номинальный ВВП ($5 trillion in 2009) и по паритету покупатрлнй способности ($8.77 trillion in 2009).

Тем не менее, главных препятствий продолжать сдерживать рост.

Два сектора отличались во многих отношениях.

В докладе UBS в 2009 к выводу, что Китай пережил общего роста производительности фактор 4 процентов в год, начиная с 1990, одним из самых быстрых улучшений в мировой экономической истории.

К началу 1990-х годах эти субсидии начали быть устранены, в значительной степени из-за вступление Китая во Всемирную торговую организацию (ВТО) в 2001, которая несет в себе требования для дальнейшего экономической либерализации и дерегулирования.

На вершине этого, прямых иностранных инвестиций (ПИИ) В этом году была установлена ​​на “превосходить $100 миллиард”, по сравнению с $90 млрд. в прошлом году, должностных лиц министерств предсказал.

В 2009, глобальной ODI объем достиг $1.1 триллион, и Китай приходится около 5.1 процентов от общей.

Китай стремится стать крупным новым в мире автомобиль энергетического рынка путем 2020 с 5 млн. автомобилей.

Хотя Китай остается развивающейся страной с относительно низким доходом на душу населения, он пережил огромный экономический рост с конца 1970-х.

Сельское хозяйство на сегодняшний день является ведущим оккупации, с участием более 50% населения, Хотя обширные грубые, высокой местности и больших засушливых районах – особенно на западе и севере – предел культивации для всего около 10% от поверхности земли.

За исключением сельского хозяйства оазис в Синьцзяне и Цинхай, некоторые орошаемых земель во Внутренней Монголии и провинции Ганьсу, и защищенных долинах в Тибете, сельскохозяйственное производство ограничено на востоке.

Благодаря усовершенствованной технологии, Рыбная промышленность значительно выросла с конца 1970-х годов.

Нефтяные месторождения открыты в 1960-х годов и после сделал Китай является нетто-экспортером, и к началу 1990-х годов, Китай пятое место нефти в мире производителя.

Глинозема встречается во многих частях страны; Китай является одним из крупнейших мировых производителей алюминия.

Уголь является единственным наиболее важным источником энергии в Китае; угольных тепловых электрических генераторов обеспечивают более 70% электроэнергии в стране.

Большинство крупных городов Китая, как Шанхай, Тяньцзинь, и Гуанчжоу, также основные порты страны.

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Shine Comes Off Chinese Jewelers

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As Sanctions Begin Easing, Burma’s Economy Under Scrutiny

As Sanctions Begin Easing, Burma’s Economy Under Scrutiny

The election success of Burma’s opposition has led to the easing of some sanctions imposed by the United States and pressure from neighboring countries to drop them entirely. Although there is a surge in interest in Burma’s economy from foreign investors, analysts warn there remain major economic and political challenges.

Key Facts About Burma

  • Adopted a political system based on democratic principals in 2011 after almost five decades of military rule.
  • The new government is made up mostly of retired or serving generals.
  • Population is estimated at 55 миллионов человек.
  • The largest ethnic group is Burman, 68 percent of the population.
  • 89 percent of the population is Buddhist.
  • The military moved the capital from Rangoon to the newly-built city Naypyitaw in 2005.
  • At least 2 years military service is compulsory for men and women.

This week, the United States dropped travel bans against some senior Burmese officials and eased restrictions on some U.S. investment and financial services.

Positive reaction

The moves were welcomed by the chief executive of the investment house Leopard Capital, Douglas Clayton.

We’re very bullish on the development and we believe that this is the beginning of Myanmar’s [Burma's] transformation into a modern economy and that there will be a role for foreign investors to play in that. Sanctions in the past should be unwound because the reasons for sanctions have been largely met,” сказал он.

Although the United States has said it is preparing to nominate an ambassador to the country, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the reform process still has a long way to go.

ASEAN divided

That position remains at odds with Burma’s neighbors in the Association of Southeast Asia Nations, who has called for an end to all sanctions.

Despite that show of support from ASEAN, not all members are in agreement.

ASEAN politicians within the ASEAN Inter-parliamentary Myanmar Caucus say the lifting of all sanctions could be premature, inviting instability within the country.

Kraisak Choonhavan, Thailand representative within the Caucus, says ending fighting in ethnic minority regions should be the priority before sanctions are fully lifted.

These pressures [to ease sanctions] are strong and much stronger still, as it is represented by the ASEAN call for the lifting of sanctions to please the regimewhich remains very much a vicious and undaunting regime on the maintenance of its absolute power over Shan State, Karen State, Kachin State [и] Mon State,” said Kraisak Choonhavan.

Права человека

The Burmese government has been holding ceasefire talks with the Kachin and Karen in recent days. Rights organizations say on-going military operations have led to human rights abuses and attacks on civilians in Kachin state in recent months.

Kraisak fears the NLD, Burma’s main opposition party, having secured seats in the national parliament in the by-election, may turn its back on ethnic minority communities’ concerns.

Other pro-democracy groups say sanctions should be lifted only after all political detainees are released. The Thailand based Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP) says there are still 900 political prisoners in jail.

Human Rights Watch, in a release, called for caution in any easing of sanctions, saying while positive steps by Burma’s government should be matched by the European Union, there should be no “wholesale withdrawal of sanctions”.

The rights group says a further easing on visa bans and increases in humanitarian and development assistance should be considered by European Union foreign ministers.

While the sanctions may remain for now, there already has been a surge in tourism from foreigners eager for a first hand look at the country.

Sean Turnell, an associate professor of economics at Australia’s Macquarie University, says Asian investors are already trying to capitalize on the foreign interest.

Asian investors have always been there of course. But some of them are getting excited about potential Western interest in the sense that if they see a great advance of Western tourists into the country then I think there’s a lot of Asian investors interested in hotels and tourist infrastructure,” said Turnell.

Burma’s economy in recent years has grown up with the sanctions, which has led to pain for some industries but benefits for others.

Uneven benefits

Academics and rights workers have argued the trade and financial sanctions hit workers in export-oriented industries such as textiles, forcing many who would prefer factory jobs into informal sectors such as entertainment or the sex industry.

Aung Zaw, editor of the newsmagazine The Irrawaddy says there are many businessmen and state-owned enterprises that have benefited from the restricted economic competition resulting from the foreign sanctions.

There are some tycoons, those ministers, whose [business] is not competitive; particular those billionaires inside the country,” сказал он. “They are not competitive enough and they don’t want to see sanctions being lifted because they are enjoying so much with the monopolythey monopolize everything.

But all analysts agree Burma faces major challenges and opportunities as it tries to rebuild an economy long mismanaged after five decades of military rule.

Timeline of major political events in Burma

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Дети будущего Китая - Часть I

На гастролях в Европе, Китай привилегированные дети отражают неравенство и самостоятельно confidenceBRUSSELS: В ветреный вечер февраля в тирольском городе Куфштайн, столпотворение царило внутри обычно мрачные Талер отель. Gaggles of Chinese children swarmed the corridors. “Hi!” one called out. My Chinese was rusty, but adequate. “Ni hao,” I replied. “Have you had a fun day?” Nonplussed, the boy fell momentarily silent. “Are you Chinese?” asked another bespectacled child with braces flashing silver across his teeth. “Do I look Chinese?” I countered. “You speak Chinese,” he parried. A girl with bobbed hair and grownup expression sighed. “Don’t you know?” she said with a frown. “These days it’s normal for foreigners to speak Chinese. It’s no big deal.” And it’s also increasingly normal to see hoards of Chinese children hitting Europe’s ski slopes, shopping malls and chocolate shops. If it’s school-vacation holiday in China, then it’s study-tour time in Europe.  I joined one of six groups of children visiting Europe for the Chinese New Year break in late January, a trip arranged by a German company, ECS Tours.

Run by a young couple – German lawyer Rudolf Reiet and Xing Li – ECS is a new player in the lucrative market for Chinese study groups in Europe. In a country where many workers earn an annual income of around $1,500, parents paid up to RMB 60,000, or US$9,500, to send their children on whirlwind tours of the continent’s sights. In addition to holiday photos, the children were expected to bring home skills like eating with a fork and knife and learning the appropriate time to clap at a classical music concert. If it’s school-vacation holiday in China, then it’s study-tour time in Europe. Chinese tourists, some 3 million of whom visited Western Europe in 2010, have already remade the traditional European Grand Tour according to their own tastes and consumer culture.

Typical stops include Paris for romance and Louis Vuitton; Switzerland for mountains and chocolates;  German towns like Trier, the birthplace of Karl Marx; and Metzingen, home to several factory outlets and the headquarters of Hugo Boss. Chinese travelers have also emerged as the travel industry’s knights in shining armor, riding to the rescue of Europe’s industries suffering the effects of stagnant economic growth. В 2011, Chinese travelers accounted for 62 percent of Europe’s luxury goods sales according to one estimate.

The 35 children in my group were from a primary School in Chongqing and receive a truncated version of the new Chinese Grand Tour with a few days each in Germany, Switzerland and Austria.

Talking with them offered a glimpse into the attitudes and aspirations of the country’s future workforce.

These children were born in 2000 amid  anticipation of China’s imminent rise to superpowerdom, an idea that would have seemed improbable even a decade earlier. Collectively, the children provide a snapshot of China’s new elite. Many are sons and daughters of officials of China’s ruling Communist Party. “They talk just like little lingdao leaders, ready to launch into a politically correct speech at the asking,” Reiet said. Others are children of entrepreneurs.

Reiet smiled, recalling a child who had brought along packets of instant noodles to sell to classmates bored with European fare at the inflated price of €5 each. Over dinner, the conversation at our table was about money. One jolly, plump 11-year-old grinned and pointed to her friend: “Do you know how much cash her father gave her for this trip?” Chinese travelers are the travel industry’s knights in shining armor, riding to the rescue. “Stop it, stop it!” gasped Xue, trying to put a hand over her friend’s mouth. “€4000!” the girl exclaimed, undeterred. “Can you believe it?” Fan then happily explained that her father had given her €2,000.

The children were comfortable talking about money, but ask a question about politics, even something as basic as whether their parents were party members, and they immediately went quiet. Another girl at our table had looked on, disapproving of the conversation, and when others demanded to know how much spending money she carried, she refused to tell. I asked what her father did.

Reluctant to answer, she finally confided that he was a bank executive. One girl let out a whoop. “You must be really rolling in it!” she laughed. China’s per capita GDP might still be about a sixth that of the United States, but these are China’s children of privilege.

The West would not automatically associate the professions of some parents– including policemen, municipal government officials, army officers and investment bureau bureaucrats – with wealth. Despite decades of economic reform, China’s state-led capitalism has created a murky, often corrupt world, where the line between government officials and entrepreneurs is blurred. Local officials still have power to dispense patronage and lubricate business deals.

The result is scenes as when the scrawny 11-year-old daughter of a police officer waved a platinum credit card a Swarovski Crystal shop. She had picked out a crystal-encrusted watch that cost €2,800 and explained she was buying it for an auntie. Over the course of the next hour she spent a total of €4,200 on gifts for her family. Another son of a policeman joined children snapping up crystals like candy and held up his crystal dog. “You know what I like about this?Сказал он. “It’s not ‘made in China!’” Half the staff at the Swarovski shop were Chinese, and some of the local Austrian clerks had even learned basic Mandarin. Most of the children took this in stride. And for children of an emerging superpower, first impressions of Europe only confirmed their childlike sense of cultural superiority.

There was a distinct touch of condescension when I asked the children how they had enjoyed Europe thus far.  For children of an emerging power, first impressions of Europe confirmed a childlike sense of superiority. “The hotel rooms are rather small here,” said the bank executive’s daughter. Another 11-year-old girl was critical of the traffic. “So many rules to follow on the road. I’m not sure who gets right of way. It must be scary to drive here!” Another girl, whose father is an engineer and mother a housewife, dissed the breakfasts. “All that ham,” she muttered darkly, missing the typical morning fare for Chinese, hot buns stuffed with pork or a rich bowl of congee, rice porridge. “But,” she continued, “it’s a lot more peaceful out here than in China. Quiet.” I thought about the children’s hometown, Чунцин, a municipality in China’s southwest and one of the largest urban centers in the world – home to 32 миллионов человек, four times that of Austria’s population. What I remembered most from my own visit to Chongqing in 2008, was the ceaseless aural assault: churning cement mixers, sizzling spicy noodles at roadside stands, spluttering exhaust pipes and heavy thudding of wrecking balls. Everywhere were sounds of trade and movement, the old giving way to the new. “You mean it’s a lot more boring out here,” giggled another girl. Both grinned in agreement. For a vast, emerging country like China, defined by continuous change and a headlong rush towards trade and infrastructure development, Old World Europe could understandably appear a tad dull. And while the children did accomplish their mission of learning proper use of fork and knife and filling cameras with pretty pictures, they took away more – a conviction that China is more developed and urban than Europe, though Europe is cleaner, quieter, with plenty of expensive crystals and watches to buy. And yes, foreigners speaking Chinese is normal.  

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Дети будущего Китая - Часть I

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Private Jets Fly Into Southeast Asia

Private Jets Fly Into Southeast Asia

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Private Jets Fly Into Southeast Asia

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Business Partners: 3 Essential Ingredients

Business Partners: 3 Essential Ingredients

One individual (or four) may embody these characteristics. In one way or another, you need these three traits to make your business thrive. By Vanessa Merit Nornberg | @vanessanornberg | Читать полностью

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No Crowds for China’s New Year

Нет толпы на Новый Год Китая

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Green bicycles prepared for the new year gala at the Temple of Heaven Park on Friday.

Every year on Dec. 31, a number of cities stand out as being the hottest spots to ring in the New Year: New York, Лондон, Sydney and Tokyo. Now Beijing wants to join that list too—and hopes doing so will help boost tourism to the city.

And if not many people show up to the party? Well, that’s part of the plan, слишком.

The city is unveiling its first-ever western New Year’s extravaganza, rolling out a digital light show surrounding one of the city’s most renowned cultural icons–the Temple of Heaven, where Chinese emperors in centuries past went to pray for good harvests.

As midnight approaches, digital lights will transform part of the temple grounds into a giant, skyward-facing analog clock. Hundreds of local students will ride stationary green bikes that have been placed facing the temple and will light up—an intended salute to the importance of environmental protection. Тем временем, LED lights will shoot colored beams into the sky and a countdown of the final seconds left in 2011 will be projected onto the temple itself, a triple-tiered gable structure built in the early 1400’s, creating 3-D visual effects.

But there will be one major difference between Beijing’s attempt and other hyped international celebrations, such as New York’s famed ball-dropping and the ringing chimes coming from Big Ben in London.  Unlike Times Square, where one million people flock each New Year’s Eve, according to the Times Square Alliance, Beijing’s festivities won’t be open to the public.

“The park isn’t big enough to hold that many people,” said Sun Weijia, the vice chairman of Beijing Municipal Commission of Tourism Development and one of the event’s organizers. Organizers have, Однако, contacted travel agencies to extend invitations to more than 500 foreign tourists who will be in the city, and journalists have also received invitations, Г-н. Sun said, predicting a total audience of more than 3,000 люди.

The goal of the event is not to draw big crowds to one site but to serve as an advertisement to the world’s tourists, Г-н. Sun said, adding that the city gained global attention in the run-up to the Olympics and that the spotlight has since faded.

“Some zones [at the event] won’t have an audience,Сказал он, adding, “we designed them especially for television broadcasts.”

Some might point out that China is home to one of the world’s largest public squares, a space that dwarfs Times Square and could fit many more people.

But China’s leaders have long opposed big public gatherings, especially at Tiananmen Square. The image of thousands of students rallying for democratic rights in 1989 remains a fresh threat in the minds of many officials. In this upcoming year of leadership transition, the focus will be on stability.

China’s masses will have to watch the celebration from their televisions at home. Events will be broadcast by those lucky enough to invited to the Temple of Heaven — camera crews and other media types who can broadcast the show across the nation and to the rest of the world.

Beijing’s New Year’s bash will differ from those in many cities in another respect, слишком: a lack of fireworks. Fireworks of the tube-launched, explosive variety are by no means rare on the streets of Beijing, and their public use can be a substantial fire hazard in the period around Chinese New Year (which will fall in late January in 2012).

But the Beijing government’s countdown won’t have any. “Beijing doesn’t allow the use of fireworks, especially in imperial parks,"Г-н. Sun said.

–Laurie Burkitt and Owen Fletcher; follow Laurie at @ Lburkitt and follow Owen at @owenfletcher.

В последние годы, В Китае снова активизировались о своей поддержке ведущих государственных предприятий в секторах, он считает важным, чтобы “экономическая безопасность,” явно ищет для содействия глобальной конкурентоспособности национальных чемпионов.

Китайское правительство сталкивается с многочисленными экономическими проблемами развития, в том числе:
(a) снижая его высокая норма внутренних сбережений и, соответственно, низкий внутренний спрос за счет увеличения корпоративных переводы и укрепить социальную защиту;
(б) поддержания достаточного роста числа рабочих мест для десятков миллионов мигрантов, а также новых участников рабочей силы; (с) борьбу с коррупцией и другими экономическими преступлениями; и
(г) содержащие ущерба окружающей среде и социальной розни, связанных с быстрой трансформации экономики.

Республика Китайская Народная является вторым по величине экономикой в ​​мире после Соединенных Штатов как номинальный ВВП ($5 trillion in 2009) и по паритету покупатрлнй способности ($8.77 trillion in 2009).

Некоторые экономисты считают, что китайский экономический рост был на самом деле занижены на протяжении большей части 1990-х и начале 2000-х, не выполнил в полной фактором роста с ведущей ролью частного сектора и степени, при которой Китай зависит от экспорта преувеличены.

2 наиболее важных секторов экономики традиционно сельское хозяйство и промышленность, , которые вместе работают более 70 процентов рабочей силы и производят больше, чем 60 процентов ВВП.

Китай приобрел некоторые весьма сложные производственные мощности за счет торговли, а также имеет встроенный ряд передовых машиностроительных заводов способна производить более широкого спектра современного оборудования, в том числе ядерного оружия и спутников, но большая часть промышленного производства по-прежнему исходит от относительно плохо оснащенные заводы.

усиление интеграции Китая в мировую экономику и ее растущее стремление использовать рыночные силы, регулирующие внутреннее распределение товаров усугубляют эту проблему.

Китай сейчас занимает пятое место глобального инвестора в исходящих прямых инвестиций (ODI) с общим объемом $56.5 миллиард, по сравнению с 12-й рейтинг в 2008, Министерство торговли сообщает в воскресенье.

В прошлом году была восьмой год подряд, что ODI страны вырос.

Китай стремится стать крупным новым в мире автомобиль энергетического рынка путем 2020 с 5 млн. автомобилей.

В значительной мере в результате политики экономической либерализации, ВВП в четыре раза между 1978 и 1998, и иностранные инвестиции выросли в 1990-е.

Даже с этими улучшениями, на сельское хозяйство приходится лишь 20% валового национального продукта страны.

За исключением сельского хозяйства оазис в Синьцзяне и Цинхай, некоторые орошаемых земель во Внутренней Монголии и провинции Ганьсу, и защищенных долинах в Тибете, сельскохозяйственное производство ограничено на востоке.

Лошади, ослы, и мулы являются рабочих животных на севере, в то время как быки и буйволы используются для вспашки главным образом на юге страны.

Уголь является наиболее распространенным минералом (Китай занимает первое место в добыче угля); высокого качества, легко добытого угля находится на территории всей страны, но особенно на севере и северо-востоке.

Китай ведущих полезных ископаемых экспорт вольфрама, сурьма, верить, магний, молибден, ртуть, марганец, барит, и соли.

Китай также имеет большой гидроэнергетический потенциал энергии, в частности, в провинции Юньнань, W Сычуань, и Е Тибете, хотя гидроэнергетики приходится лишь 5% от общего производства энергии в стране.

Металлургическая промышленность организована вокруг нескольких крупных центров (в том числе Аньшань, один из крупнейших в мире), а тысячи малых металлургических заводов были также созданы по всей стране.

См. статью здесь:
Нет толпы на Новый Год Китая

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