China.Table

Opinion

China's tech regulators strike again

China's tech companies are facing stricter data regulations beginning this month. This could impair innovation in the very key technologies in which Beijing wants to become a "world leader". How tech companies will react to the new regulations remains to be seen.

By Redaktion Table

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China's investments on the African continent – not a savior

Next week, the next China-Africa Summit (November 28/29 2021) will take place. In recent years, China has become a key economic factor on the African continent. But the high hopes that Beijing would contribute to an employment boom have been disappointed.

By Redaktion Table

Misuse of research subsidies weakens innovation policy

With its 14th Five-Year Plan, the Chinese government has set itself the ambitious goal of creating a more innovation-driven economy. By 2050, the People's Republic wants to be the world leader in science and technology. To this end, Beijing is planning, among other things, extensive R D subsidies in companies. The upcoming event of the "Global China Conversations" at IfW Kiel is focusing on the efficacy of this Chinese innovation policy.

By Redaktion Table

6024

Why is China's growth rate falling so fast?

Although China’s economy remains on track to post strong growth for 2021 as a whole, its recent deceleration is striking. Reversing the slowdown will require policymakers to reform the ways in which they debate, vet, and implement new regulations and pandemic-control measures.

By Redaktion Table

May he live ten thousand years

The cult of personality around Xi Jinping is taking on ever new forms. By now, he even calls himself China's "helmsman". There is now only little left to catch up with the master of personality cults, Mao Zedong. A historical anecdote shows that cults of personality also tends to originate from the highly praised himself.

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Maotai – China's liquid gold

Scotland has its whisky, France wine, cognac and champagne. In China, the Maotai is the national drink. It is both a luxury item and a symbol of corruption. But so far, the national liquor hasn't conquered the global market yet. Henry Kissinger and Ronald Reagan know why the strong beverage has not yet been successful on the export market.

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Study on China coverage ignores political reality

The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation recently published a study entitled "China Coverage in the German Media in the Context of the COVID Crisis". In it, the authors accuse the texts from seven newspapers and magazines of having "a Western values agenda and a Eurocentric perspective". In the reporting, "clichés and stereotypes" were taken up. Political scientist and China expert, Andreas Fulda from the University of Nottingham thinks the study's conclusions are wrong.

By Redaktion Table

Chinese games of confusion with business cards

Black ink on a red background. That is how Chinese business cards once looked like, back when they were presented by emissaries of the imperial court. Name cards were already used in China thousands of years ago. However, the gesture of handing them over – with both hands – was copied. Nowadays, however, all that is needed to exchange contacts is a tap on the smartphone.

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nora sausmikat China

Coal phase-out outside China – what will change?

At the recent UN General Assembly, China's President Xi Jinping announced to the media that he would no longer pursue new coal projects abroad. Nora Sausmikat from the environmental rights organization urgewald e.V. takes stock of the World Climate Conference in Glasgow. China is still one of the biggest expansionists in coal-fired power plants worldwide. Even the switch to gas and liquefied petroleum gas are only "sham solutions" that jeopardize even the Paris Climate Agreement. Moreover, without a total phase-out at home, the withdrawal from coal abroad will hardly work.

By Ning Wang

Andreas Fuchs

Debt trap or generous foreign aid?

Is China luring other emerging markets into a "debt trap"? China's particular form of foreign aid invites misunderstanding. A thorough analysis of openly available data by researchers provides a much more nuanced picture.

By Redaktion Table