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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) Ltd., 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. In January, 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.

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China has generally implemented reforms in a gradualist or piecemeal fashion.

Economic development has been more rapid in coastal provinces than in the interior, and approximately 200 million rural laborers and their dependents have relocated to urban areas to find work.

The People’s Republic of China is the world’s second largest economy after the United States by both nominal GDP ($5 trillion in 2009) and by purchasing power parity ($8.77 trillion in 2009).

Nevertheless, key bottlenecks continue to constrain growth.

The two sectors have differed in many respects.

A report by UBS in 2009 concluded that China has experienced total factor productivity growth of 4 per cent per year since 1990, one of the fastest improvements in world economic history.

By the early 1990s these subsidies began to be eliminated, in large part due to China’s admission into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, which carried with it requirements for further economic liberalization and deregulation.

On top of this, foreign direct investment (FDI) this year was set to “surpass $100 billion”, compared to $90 billion last year, ministry officials predicted.

In 2009, global ODI volume reached $1.1 trillion, and China contributed about 5.1 percent of the total.

China is aiming to be the world’s largest new energy vehicle market by 2020 with 5 million cars.

Although China is still a developing country with a relatively low per capita income, it has experienced tremendous economic growth since the late 1970s.

Agriculture is by far the leading occupation, involving over 50% of the population, although extensive rough, high terrain and large arid areas – especially in the west and north – limit cultivation to only about 10% of the land surface.

Except for the oasis farming in Xinjiang and Qinghai, some irrigated areas in Inner Mongolia and Gansu, and sheltered valleys in Tibet, agricultural production is restricted to the east.

Due to improved technology, the fishing industry has grown considerably since the late 1970s.

Oil fields discovered in the 1960s and after made China a net exporter, and by the early 1990s, China was the world’s fifth-ranked oil producer.

Alumina is found in many parts of the country; China is one of world’s largest producers of aluminum.

Coal is the single most important energy source in China; coal-fired thermal electric generators provide over 70% of the country’s electric power.

Most of China’s large cities, like Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou, are also the country’s main ports.

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Shine Comes Off Chinese Jewelers

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China’s Rise: Opportunity or Threat for East Asia?

China’s Rise: Opportunity or Threat for East Asia?

China’s rise has had very different consequences for its North Asian and Southeast Asian neighbors, in particular, making it difficult for Southeast Asia to break out of the middle income trap.

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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 million people.
  • 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,” he said.

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 regime – which remains very much a vicious and undaunting regime on the maintenance of its absolute power over Shan State, Karen State, Kachin State [and] Mon State,” said Kraisak Choonhavan.

Human rights

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,” he said. “They are not competitive enough and they don’t want to see sanctions being lifted because they are enjoying so much with the monopoly – they 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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As Sanctions Begin Easing, Burma’s Economy Under Scrutiny

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Wen Jiabao’s Reform Push More Than Just Political Theater

Wen Jiabao’s Reform Push More Than Just Political Theater

By Russell Leigh Moses

Is Premier Wen Jiabao taking a run at reform again?

That’s the question that has been rattling around in China-watching circles ever since Wen’s final press conference at the National People’s Congress last month, during which he warned in sharp terms about the dangers of nostalgia over mass movements and insisted that without political reforms “it is impossible to continue economic reform, and the gains we have made may be lost.”

Associated Press
Wen Jiabao

One view is that Wen is not being genuine in his efforts at reform—in other words, that’s he’s Beijing’s consummate actor, wheeling out the rhetoric to burnish his legacy for the history books. Other analyses have portrayed Wen as a lone champion of restructuring, fighting a solitary battle against the dark forces of oppression and hardline gunslingers.

But Wen’s no performer. Nor is he some sort of cowboy. Instead, he is the sharp and public end of a larger reform-minded posse within the Communist Party – a group of cadres who believe short-term stability may have been largely achieved but the long-term legitimacy of the Party remains unsecured.

That legitimacy, in their view, can only be achieved by loosening up the current system–and by preventing the political Left from taking to the streets to force social change.

Thus far, the reformers have been frustrated from moving forward with political experiments. They’ve been thwarted by the hardline emphasis on change within the Party—those pushing for more morality and better training for cadres, instead of transparency and accountability. “Purity” is the new watchword, with political restructuring pushed aside.

But now Wen and his colleagues have started shoving back. During a recent inspection tour in southern China, Wen was especially blunt about setbacks in China’s economic situation. He noted the hardships caused by “insufficient domestic demand, rising costs of exports, and the downward pressure on businesses generally”. Wen also blasted the monopoly enjoyed by State banks, right on the heels of his sponsorship of an initiative to let Wenzhou experiment with a new type of financing scheme.

China’s number two also took a further step away from State companies, emphasizing the crucial role played by small firms and entrepreneurship.

On one level, Wen’s focus on these issues appears to be in keeping with the current Party line, which calls for an emphasis economic questions over other concerns.

But there’s also ample reason to see Wen’s latest moves in a larger light: as an effort to get his comrades to start reorganizing the economy, in the hope that political reform might then follow. Populist policies that rebalance the economy could then evolve into political restructuring.

By focusing on economic restructuring, reformers pledge loyalty to the Center’s new approach—talk about economics, not about politics—while bringing to light what ails the system: State cartels and other vested interests controlling finances and natural resources, stifling innovation and suffocating reorganization. There’s agreement in many circles for the need to weaken State economic control somehow; but previous efforts to do so have miscarried. Wen and his camp seem to be moving to take another shot.

Why is Wen saddling up to move now? To figure out the answer, one can turn editorials and commentaries in the official press, which increasingly are calling for “unity” and “stability” — indications that neither is necessarily in abundance right now.

The purpose of these essays in mainline Party media is clearly to rally support in the ranks. Evidently, some cadres have been slow in responding.

And then there’s the fast-disappearing article about the meaning of a Communist Party General Secretary in China. The essay appeared with little fanfare some days ago, while President (and Party General Secretary) Hu Jintao was still abroad. Ostensibly a historical review about the origin and evolution about the position and role of a Party leader, the piece spoke of the restricted role of the General Secretary, noting that the “the Party forbids any form of personal worship” and that Party also “ensures that the activities of the party’s leaders fall under the supervision of the party and the people.”

How did such an article get to appear in the first place? Was this a blast by Leftists still irate over the sacking of Bo Xilai? Or did reformers who want to limit Hu’s authority to freeze conversations about political reform sponsor its appearance?

Whatever the case, by yesterday, the essay was getting more difficult to find, with a number of official websites reporting its removal. Meanwhile, local media in South China praised Wen’s visit and advised cadres to study it carefully — a possible precursor to wider favorable coverage.

Despite some of the rumors floating around in recent weeks, there’s no reason to think that the party is so riven by dissension that it’s ready to implode. In fact, there continue to be brave and healthy debates throughout the state media about everything from spawning “social trust” to different responses to rumor-mongering.

Still, this recent political uncertainty does provide the opportunity for those pushing restructuring to make their case again. Perhaps Wen thinks he might still know the way: to use economic distress to show that political reform is still the solution.

Russell Leigh Moses is a Beijing-based analyst and professor who writes on Chinese politics. He is writing a book on the changing role of power in the Chinese political system.

In recent years, China has re-invigorated its support for leading state-owned enterprises in sectors it considers important to “economic security,” explicitly looking to foster globally competitive national champions.

The Chinese government seeks to add energy production capacity from sources other than coal and oil, and is focusing on nuclear and other alternative energy development.

China is also the second largest trading nation in the world and the largest exporter and second largest importer of goods.
The PRC government’s decision to permit China to be used by multinational corporations as an export platform has made the country a major competitor to other Asian export-led economies, such as South Korea, Singapore, and Malaysia.

Available energy is insufficient to run at fully installed industrial capacity, and the transport system is inadequate to move sufficient quantities of such critical items as coal.

The disparities between the two sectors have combined to form an economic-cultural-social gap between the rural and urban areas, which is a major division in Chinese society.

China has acquired some highly sophisticated production facilities through trade and also has built a number of advanced engineering plants capable of manufacturing an increasing range of sophisticated equipment, including nuclear weapons and satellites, but most of its industrial output still comes from relatively ill-equipped factories.

By the early 1990s these subsidies began to be eliminated, in large part due to China’s admission into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, which carried with it requirements for further economic liberalization and deregulation.

Both forums will start on Tuesday.

“The growth rate (for ODI) in the next few years will be much higher than previous years,” Shen said, without elaborating.

China is expected to have 200 million cars on the road by 2020, increasing pressure on energy security and the environment, government officials said yesterday.

Although China is still a developing country with a relatively low per capita income, it has experienced tremendous economic growth since the late 1970s.

Agriculture is by far the leading occupation, involving over 50% of the population, although extensive rough, high terrain and large arid areas – especially in the west and north – limit cultivation to only about 10% of the land surface.

Except for the oasis farming in Xinjiang and Qinghai, some irrigated areas in Inner Mongolia and Gansu, and sheltered valleys in Tibet, agricultural production is restricted to the east.

Horses, donkeys, and mules are work animals in the north, while oxen and water buffalo are used for plowing chiefly in the south.

Growing domestic demand beginning in the mid-1990s, however, has forced the nation to import increasing quantities of petroleum.

There are also deposits of vanadium, magnetite, copper, fluorite, nickel, asbestos, phosphate rock, pyrite, and sulfur.

Coal is the single most important energy source in China; coal-fired thermal electric generators provide over 70% of the country’s electric power.

China’s economy, though strengthened by the more liberal economic policies of the 1980s and 90s, continues to suffer from inadequate transportation, communication, and energy resources.

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Wen Jiabao’s Reform Push More Than Just Political Theater

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US lifts travel ban on Burmese officials

US lifts travel ban on Burmese officials


Hillary Clinton
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says some senior Burmese officials and parliamentarians will now be allowed to visit the United States and that Washington will lift its ban on the export to Burma of U.S. financial services and investment to help accelerate modernization and reform.

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Domestic demand has also shown signs of life, but the severe weather, the withdrawal of consumption-based fiscal stimulus and political uncertainty should be a drag on growth. With a large fraction of the population still occupied in agriculture or working in rural areas, agriculture is a critical variable for the performance of household consumption.
Policies that could contribute to reducing Thailand’s dependence on foreign demand include a phased liberalization of the services sector, boosting transport infrastructure, a reform of educational curricula and improved access and quality of higher education to boost skills of the labor force, better integration of universities, firms and government, and improved social safety nets

‘‘In part, the gains in the market are a function of wealth creation. Asian and Middle Eastern household wealth is growing faster than in the United States and Europe,’’. The broadening and deepening of the Asian capital markets has helped draw savings away from traditional asset classes such as bank deposits and mutual funds to equities.
The TSRs for the two groups are similar.

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Thailand a regional hub for internet ? Seriously ?

Thailand a regional hub for internet ? Seriously ?


Thailand as a regional hub for internet ? No thanks
Thailand has probably the worst and the slower internet service in all Asean countries, except maybe for Myanmar. 3G is still a distant dream, while even Cambodia and Laos have their third generation data netwok. Not to mention widespread censorship wich can hardly stand for an example for other countries of the region.

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Thailand a regional hub for internet ? Seriously ?

On the demand side, the importance of external demand can be fully appreciated by recognizing that the bulk of inventories in Thailand are primarily inputs and finished goods for the export-oriented manufacturing. In the fourth quarter of 2009, for example, net exports and the change in inventories contributed 44 percent of the quarterly growth.
While the Thai government is aware of the need for these reforms, political uncertainties have made it more challenging to pursue them

Thailand’s equity market bounced back strongly from the global crisis in 2009, with a total shareholder return (TSR) of 91% for the year 2009 against a 36% decline the year before. Ultra-lax monetary policies and massive public spending across the globe helped spur a quick turnaround from the worst global downturn since the Great Depression.
Thai valuations still trail the region considerably. Price-to-earnings multiples for the Thai market were 18.9 times for 2009, compared to, say, 25 to 30 times for the Australian, Japanese and Shanghai markets and valuations could be higher, if not for the political instability in Thailand over the past several years.

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Gloomy Hiring Prospects in Hong Kong

Gloomy Hiring Prospects in Hong Kong

Jerome Favre/Bloomberg
Job applicants wait in line to submit applications at a job fair organized by the Labour Department in Hong Kong, China, on Thursday, Oct. 29, 2009.

Stocks are sizzling in Hong Kong, up 16% this year, but when it comes to hiring it looks more like a bear market, with the city’s employers feeling the gloomiest they have since 2009.

According to survey of 810 local employers conducted by ManpowerGroup, employer hiring expectations are the weakest they’ve been since the fourth quarter of 2009. Over 80% of those surveyed expect that their staffing levels will stay flat in this upcoming quarter, while just 11% anticipate that such levels may expand.

That’s in sharp contrast to the mood last year around this time, when optimism over China and Hong Kong’s economy prompted nearly 70% of Hong Kong respondents to a Hudson Highland Group Inc. survey to say they planned to increase hiring.

Hong Kong’s GDP growth dropped from 4.3% in the third quarter of 2011 to 3% at the end of last year, notes Lancy Chui, Managing Director of ManpowerGroup Hong Kong, resulting in “less confidence” in employment prospects. She also cites “surging retail rents” as a factor in explaining Hong Kong’s tamped-down job creation, as well as financial headwinds more globally.

Plus, the banking sector that lies at the heart of the city has endured job cuts, especially at Western banks  suffering the fallout from Europe’s debt crisis and a generally weaker global economy.

Students about to graduate are still feeling relatively optimistic about their prospects, said Herman Chan, who directs careers and placement at the University of Hong Kong. However, he said, the number of companies that have posted jobs online to target HKU students has dropped slightly, as have the number of jobs they’ve been offering.

“People are always asking me if I have a crystal ball,” Mr. Chan said in an interview, describing himself as “rather cautious” in his attitude toward those current job-seekers. “My expectation is [the job market] will be similar to 2011 for graduates, but not better.”

Across the Asia Pacific region, Manpower reports, their survey found that employers are feeling most buoyant about new hires in India, Taiwan, New Zealand and Singapore—and most wary of adding new staff in Hong Kong and Japan.

Still, if local employers hesitant to invest in more staff needed more persuading, they could refer to a new report (pdf) by the Economist Intelligence Unit that shows Hong Kong’s workforce boasts the highest level of human capital in Asia—earning top marks on quality of education and healthcare, as well as levels of risk-taking and entrepreneurship among its citizens.  Globally, only Dublin outranks Hong Kong on that measure.

– Te-Ping Chen. Follow her on Twitter @tepingchen

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Cumulative appreciation of the renminbi against the US dollar since the end of the dollar peg was more than 20% by late 2008, but the exchange rate has remained virtually pegged since the onset of the global financial crisis.

Economic development has been more rapid in coastal provinces than in the interior, and approximately 200 million rural laborers and their dependents have relocated to urban areas to find work.

China has emphasized raising personal income and consumption and introducing new management systems to help increase productivity.

Nevertheless, key bottlenecks continue to constrain growth.

Its mineral resources are probably among the richest in the world but are only partially developed.

China has acquired some highly sophisticated production facilities through trade and also has built a number of advanced engineering plants capable of manufacturing an increasing range of sophisticated equipment, including nuclear weapons and satellites, but most of its industrial output still comes from relatively ill-equipped factories.

The market-oriented reforms China has implemented over the past two decades have unleashed individual initiative and entrepreneurship, whilst retaining state domination of the economy.

Both forums will start on Tuesday.

In 2009, global ODI volume reached $1.1 trillion, and China contributed about 5.1 percent of the total.

China is aiming to be the world’s largest new energy vehicle market by 2020 with 5 million cars.

Although China is still a developing country with a relatively low per capita income, it has experienced tremendous economic growth since the late 1970s.

Agriculture is by far the leading occupation, involving over 50% of the population, although extensive rough, high terrain and large arid areas – especially in the west and north – limit cultivation to only about 10% of the land surface.

China is the world’s largest producer of rice and wheat and a major producer of sweet potatoes, sorghum, millet, barley, peanuts, corn, soybeans, and potatoes.

Hogs and poultry are widely raised in China, furnishing important export staples, such as hog bristles and egg products.

Oil fields discovered in the 1960s and after made China a net exporter, and by the early 1990s, China was the world’s fifth-ranked oil producer.

China is among the world’s four top producers of antimony, magnesium, tin, tungsten, and zinc, and ranks second (after the United States) in the production of salt, sixth in gold, and eighth in lead ore.

Coal is the single most important energy source in China; coal-fired thermal electric generators provide over 70% of the country’s electric power.

Most of China’s large cities, like Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou, are also the country’s main ports.

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Photos: Xi Jinping Kicks a Gaelic Football, Pets a Dairy Cow

Photos: Xi Jinping Kicks a Gaelic Football, Pets a Dairy Cow

China’s Vice President Xi Jinping attended cultural and sporting events Sunday in the Irish capital as the heir apparent of the Communist country continued a three-day visit, which Dublin called a vote of confidence in Ireland’s economy. Among the highlights: an attempt to boot a Gaelic football, a friendly encounter with a dairy calf and a taste of Irish coffee.

China has generally implemented reforms in a gradualist or piecemeal fashion.

China continues to lose arable land because of erosion and economic development.

China is also the second largest trading nation in the world and the largest exporter and second largest importer of goods.
The PRC government’s decision to permit China to be used by multinational corporations as an export platform has made the country a major competitor to other Asian export-led economies, such as South Korea, Singapore, and Malaysia.

Available energy is insufficient to run at fully installed industrial capacity, and the transport system is inadequate to move sufficient quantities of such critical items as coal.

Its mineral resources are probably among the richest in the world but are only partially developed.

The technological level and quality standards of its industry as a whole are still fairly low, notwithstanding a marked change since 2000, spurred in part by foreign investment.

The market-oriented reforms China has implemented over the past two decades have unleashed individual initiative and entrepreneurship, whilst retaining state domination of the economy.

Globally, foreign investment decreased by almost 40 percent last year amid the financial downturn and is expected to show only marginal growth this year.

According to the ministry, China’s ODI grew by 1.1 percent from a year earlier to $56.53 billion, which includes investment of $47.8 billion in non-financial sectors worldwide, up 14.2 percent year-on-year.

China is expected to have 200 million cars on the road by 2020, increasing pressure on energy security and the environment, government officials said yesterday.

China’s challenge in the early 21st century will be to balance its highly centralized political system with an increasingly decentralized economic system.

Agriculture is by far the leading occupation, involving over 50% of the population, although extensive rough, high terrain and large arid areas – especially in the west and north – limit cultivation to only about 10% of the land surface.

In terms of cash crops, China ranks first in cotton and tobacco and is an important producer of oilseeds, silk, tea, ramie, jute, hemp, sugarcane, and sugar beets.

China ranks first in world production of red meat (including beef, veal, mutton, lamb, and pork).

Offshore exploration has become important to meeting domestic needs; massive deposits off the coasts are believed to exceed all the world’s known oil reserves.

China’s leading export minerals are tungsten, antimony, tin, magnesium, molybdenum, mercury, manganese, barite, and salt.

China’s exploitation of its high-sulfur coal resources has resulted in massive pollution.

Great inland cities include Beijing and the river ports of Nanjing, Chongqing, and Wuhan.

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Photos: Xi Jinping Kicks a Gaelic Football, Pets a Dairy Cow

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