China intends to use its non-market-oriented foreign exchange management system as its last line of defense in the Sino-U.S. trade war.
China’s serious unemployment problem has become worse due to the massive withdrawal of foreign capital.
Remarks by a Chinese spokesperson greately obscure the damage China’s economic policies can have on the world.
If you are looking for a single word to summarize China’s economic situation in the year just gone, it is “unemployment.”
Long-standing discriminatory policy denies many migrant workers the opportunity to settle down in the cities with their families.
At the turn of the 20th century, a small elite in China controlled nearly all the country’s wealth and power. A century later, the situation looks the same.
At a recent forum in Vancouver, Chinese economist He Qinglian identified China’s six major bottlenecks that imperil growth.
Chinas annual economic work report is contradictory and unconvincing, with little cause for celebration.
According to an investigation into fake exports that took place in the first half of 2013, fake exports made up at least 30% of total exports.
Two reports that came out in early April this year have once again exposed the darkness of China’s legal system, which heedlessly takes away people’s lives and has no limits in how it debases human dignity.
A new stimulus package in China directed at local investment, meant to stimulate growth, is being eyed skeptically by economists.
China’s national credibility is suspected by outside observers in the fields of politics, economics, and ethics.
The Chinese regime raised the retirement age in China a month ago, despite the public’s strong opposition, in order to protect government interests.
Experts sounded more warnings about China’s official economic statistics this past week. Economist Larry Lang prepared a chart showing that official figures were sometimes two to three times greater than experts’ estimates.
China intends to use its non-market-oriented foreign exchange management system as its last line of defense in the Sino-U.S. trade war.
China’s serious unemployment problem has become worse due to the massive withdrawal of foreign capital.
Remarks by a Chinese spokesperson greately obscure the damage China’s economic policies can have on the world.
If you are looking for a single word to summarize China’s economic situation in the year just gone, it is “unemployment.”
Long-standing discriminatory policy denies many migrant workers the opportunity to settle down in the cities with their families.
At the turn of the 20th century, a small elite in China controlled nearly all the country’s wealth and power. A century later, the situation looks the same.
At a recent forum in Vancouver, Chinese economist He Qinglian identified China’s six major bottlenecks that imperil growth.
Chinas annual economic work report is contradictory and unconvincing, with little cause for celebration.
According to an investigation into fake exports that took place in the first half of 2013, fake exports made up at least 30% of total exports.
Two reports that came out in early April this year have once again exposed the darkness of China’s legal system, which heedlessly takes away people’s lives and has no limits in how it debases human dignity.
A new stimulus package in China directed at local investment, meant to stimulate growth, is being eyed skeptically by economists.
China’s national credibility is suspected by outside observers in the fields of politics, economics, and ethics.
The Chinese regime raised the retirement age in China a month ago, despite the public’s strong opposition, in order to protect government interests.
Experts sounded more warnings about China’s official economic statistics this past week. Economist Larry Lang prepared a chart showing that official figures were sometimes two to three times greater than experts’ estimates.