Table.Briefings

Opinion

When the political levee breaks

Modern societies were built on the promise of water security. Flood disasters and the increasingly evident failure of our institutions pose a direct threat to the acceptance of the state, warns Giulio Boccaletti of Oxford University.

By Redaktion Table

Johnny Erling

Foreigners in China: a fleeting minority?

The shine of China's free-market reforms is peeling off due to constant arbitrary interference by nation and party. And even with Beijing's policy of opening up the country, which it has promised for the past 40 years, no state can be formed upon. This has once again been proven by the low number of foreigners residing in China. The new census counted 845,697 foreigners in the whole country. This equals only 0.06 percent of the population. With its proportion of foreigners, the supposedly globalized People's Republic brings up the rear among all other major nations.

By Amelie Richter

The Pandemic’s Impact on China’s Growth Prospects

The director of the Institute of World Economy and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Yu Yongding, expresses concern about China's growth prospects for the second half of the year. He harbors doubts about the zero-covid strategy and urges the right fiscal and monetary policies to ensure that measures also reach small and medium-sized enterprises.

By Redaktion Table

The EV revolution goes global

The market for EVs is developing far more dynamically than could have been expected years ago, write economists Fuad Hasanov, Reda Cherif and Min Zhu. Countries that fail to recognize the trend now and convert their economies would bear high consequential costs in the future. There is pressure to act, especially for emerging economies.

By Redaktion Table

Johnny Erling

Beijing's new textbooks: "I am a disciple of Xi Jinping"

In September, the school year started with a series of new textbooks. According to a decree issued by the Ministry of Education, "Xi Jinping Thought on Special Chinese Socialism for the New Age" was to be included. Beijing is not just boosting the cult of personality through this. A year before the big election party congress, it is also a sign that Xi is willing and is going to continue to rule China – after all, his thoughts are now compulsory reading material in all schools.

By Amelie Richter

The AI revolution and strategic competition with China

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt now heads a new US panel to oversee the development of artificial intelligence. Schmidt is concerned: as China increasingly uses technology to usher in a new form of authoritarianism, global democracies must come together and stand up for their own values and strategic interests.

By Redaktion Table

Renewable hydrogen: Fit for 55 is impetus for viable market

The EU Commission's Fit for 55 proposals are an important impetus for the hydrogen market, writes Kurt-Christoph von Knobelsdorff, Managing Director of the National Organization Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology (NOW GmbH). A solid legal framework is important, he adds.

By Redaktion Table

The US and China are not destined for war

As more commentators warn of a coming military conflict between the United States and China, it is easy to believe that war is inevitable. But while history suggests that rising powers will often clash with incumbent ones, there are important exceptions and unique present circumstances to consider.

By Redaktion Table

Johnny Erling

Three-child policy: China's planners cut chives

China's leadership has never changed its policy this quickly. Last Friday, the People's Congress allowed China's women to give birth to three children. Fears of a population decline, rapid aging and a shortage of young workers tipped the scales in favor of the radical departure from its former one-child society. But China's censors are now hardly able to suppress outrage among the population: If China now faces a low birthrate, why was there a need for cruel coercion in the past?

By

Christoph Winterhalter ist Vorsitzender des Vorstandes bei DIN

Circular economy: those who don't go ahead, run behind

The circular economy needs norms and standards as a foundation. Christoph Winterhalter, head of the German Institute for Standardization, appeals that everyone needs to work on this at an early stage to survive in international competition.

By Redaktion Table