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Posts from the ‘Focus on China & Asia’ Category

Report Confirms Wang Lijun Sought Asylum

Report Confirms Wang Lijun Sought Asylum

Preliminary report circulated among Chinese government officials following the dismissal of Bo Xilai asserts that the former Chongqing party chief had planned to disrupt a corruption investigation into his own family and purge Wang Lijun, the former top lieutenant who disappeared in February amid rumors of an attempted defection.

Post-mortems continue to emerge following last week’s announcement that the Chinese government had replaced Bo, ending his push for a seat on the Politburo’s elite Standing Committee and likely the Politburo itself. Ian Johnson speculates in The New York Review of Books that Bo’s removal from the Politburo will take place at this fall’s 18th party congress, where the next generation of leaders will take the reins of the party, and he adds that Bo’s troubles may have begun years before the controversy surrounding Wang Lijun forced Bo’s polarizing candidacy to the forefront.

From The New York Times: Read more

China’s Vice President Orders More Thought Control over Students | China Digital Times

Original post at China Digital Times by Sophie Beach.

Xi Jinping is expected to succeed Hu Jintao as China's president

Vice President Xi Jinping, who is widely expected to take over the presidency from Hu Jintao later this year, has called on universities to exercise stricter ideological control over their students.

As an aside, it is worth noting reports that Xi Jinping has enrolled his own daughter at Harvard, under an assumed name.

Read full post at China Digital Times
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Police retrieve US$174 million in illegal funds | China.org.cn

Police retrieved nearly 1.1 billion yuan (about US$174 million) raised through illegal fundraising during a crackdown campaign that lasted from Nov. 10 to Dec. 15, 2011, according to figures revealed at a national meeting of public security authorities on Thursday. Police retrieved nearly 1.1 billion yuan raised through illegal fundraising during a crackdown campaign that lasted from Nov. 10 to Dec. 15, 2011. In the picture a policeman distributes publicity materials to local a local resident during the campaign in Chendu, Sichuan Province.

See Photo after the break…

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Shenzhen drivers must now yield to pedestrians or face 500RMB fine | Shanghaiist

Editor’s comment: From personal experience as expatriate living in China, in my opinion this is a huge development and a sorely needed attempt to promote a civilized society.

As of January 1st, new provisions in Shenzhen’s “Traffic Safety Management Regulations” have come into effect, which state that pedestrians have the right of way in crosswalks and all motorists who fail to yield face a 500RMB fine.

In this newly enacted legislation that requires an omniscient and omnipresent police force, Shenzhen lawmakers have apparently solved the age-old riddle “if a motorist doesn’t yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk and no police are around to see it, is society still considered civilized?”

According to the “Road Traffic Safety Law” regulations, motorists must slow when approaching a crosswalk, and stop if there are pedestrians in the crosswalk. If they fail to do either, they will be stopped and fined 500RMB (any driver trying to escape will be arrested).

Shenzhen plans to enforce these new provisions in a hardcore crack down starting on Monday, January 9th, with special patrol groups, law enforcement vehicles pulling surveillance trailers, existing intersection traffic cameras, as well as other mobile forms of on-the-spot inspection.

Read more at the Shanghaiist
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After Receiving Bailout, GM May Move Volt Production to China | The Blaze

Although it happened back in September, 2011, it appears many American taxpayers are unaware that General Motors struck a deal in Shanghai wherein the company has agreed to develop an electric vehicle (EV) platform with its longtime Chinese partner SAIC.

What else was included in this deal? GM has agreed to effectively move all future EV development to China. It could also mean that production of the vehicle itself will be moved overseas.

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Forbes China: Top ten safest countries for Chinese overseas investment | Shanghaiist.com

Forbes China has released its first overseas investment “risk list” for Chinese investors. Like all risk rankings, they gauged things like regional political stability, government corruption, legal system factors, and indicators of social stability and economic opportunities. Whether the Chinese follow these risk assessments is another thing entirely.

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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Sends An Ominous Warning On The Economy | Business Insider

 

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New Years Fireworks in Taipei, Taiwan

The Year of Dragon calendar wallpaper | Smashing Magazine

“Dragon is the legendary animal in the Chinese zodiac calendar.” Designed by Cheloveche.ru from Russia.

This and more free 2012 Wallpaper Calendars at Smashing Magazine
Click here to leave your comments.
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Chinese Women in General are Very Beautiful

Editor's note: Chinese women in general are very beautiful; however, some of the Chinese ethnic minorities, in this case the Miao Clan ethnic minority, the women are stunningly attractive. Susie and I spent several days with friends at a remote river retreat in this area.

Editor's note: Chinese women in general are very beautiful; however, some of the Chinese ethnic minorities, in this case the Miao Clan ethnic minority, the women are stunningly attractive. Susie and I spent several days with friends at a remote river retreat in this area.

Guizhou, one of the best places for cultural tours in China.

Miao minority in Guizhou Guizhou, known as Qian for short, is situated in Southwest china. Its central location at the southwestern China makes it a crucial hub for the region. The capital of this province is Guiyang as a political, economical and cultural center throughout the province.

Read full article at China Travel 2.0
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Helen Wang Discusses Eurozone Debt Crisis | BBC World News

Helen Wang, author of The Chinese Dream, discusses eurozone debt crisis on BBC World News and how the Chinese middle class could help re-balance the West’s economy. Her segment begins at 1:10 of the video.

Chinese viewers can see the video via Tudou.com…click here
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The Biggest Story of Our Time: The Rise of China’s Middle Class | Forbes

Aggregated from Forbes — By Helen Wang, Forbes Contributor

2011 is indeed an eventful year. From the protests in the Middle East to eurozone debt crisis to dysfunctional American politics, the world seems full of drama. Yet, I believe the biggest story of our time is not occupying Wall Street, or Italy’s default. Although these events are very significant, there is another story that has far-reaching implications – the rise of China’s middle class.

The Chinese middle class is already larger than the entire population of the United States. In fifteen years, the Chinese middle class will reach 800 million. It has changed, and will continue to change, the dynamics of the world we live in, and have huge impact on everything – our life, our jobs, our economy, and the world.

Read full article at Forbes
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Tax reductions save billions for Chinese individuals, businesses

Aggregated from China Daily Online & Xinhua News Agency.

BEIJING – China’s policy to ease the tax burden on wage earners and small businesses has saved them billions of yuan, the state media reported Friday.

China raised the threshold at which individuals must pay income taxes from 2,000 yuan to 3,500 yuan on September 1 in a bid to support domestic consumption and narrow the wealth gap.

The policy has saved citizens more than 60 billion yuan ($9.5 billion) since its implementation, according to Friday’s edition of the People’s Daily.

In October, 30 million people declared taxes on wages and salaries, down by 60 million from the number before the implementation of a higher threshold for paying income taxes, the newspaper said, quoting an official with the State Administration of Taxation.

The government also lifted the value-added tax (VAT) threshold for small enterprises to between 5,000 yuan and 20,000 yuan in terms of monthly sales revenues, from the previous threshold of 2,000-5,000 yuan, in November.

Meanwhile, the threshold for levying business tax on small enterprises was raised to 5,000-20,000 yuan from the previous 1,000-5,000 yuan.

Those two measures are expected to generate tax reductions of 29 billion yuan a year, the newspaper said.

More than 9 million self-employed entrepreneurs, or 63 percent of the nation’s total, saw their tax burden decrease by 40 percent on average after the VAT and business tax adjustments, it reported.

Yang Zhiyong, director of financial research office of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, suggested adjusting taxes on personal service income and authors’ remuneration next year to further relieve the tax burden, according to the newspaper.

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Guangzhou-Shenzhen High-Speed Rail Opens on Dec. 26th


From eChinacities.com
….

The Guangzhou-Shenzhen section of the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong high-speed rail will open on December 26th. The Guangzhou-Shenzhen section has five stations: Guangzhou South Railway Station, Qingsheng, Humen, Guangmingcheng and Shenzhen North Railway Station. The train speed during will initially be restricted to 300 km per hour. The earliest train departs Shenzhen at 07:00 and the latest one departs Shenzhen at 22:00. The train will reduce the travel time between the two cities to about 35 minutes. The ticket prices are 100RMB for the first class and 75RMB for the second class.

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One Alarming Indicator From China | Business Insider

Business Insider
by Tim Staermose, Sovereign Man’s Chief Investment Strategist
December 9, 2011

For a few decades now, the Communist Party in China has had an implicit social and political contract with the Chinese populous for decades, which goes something like:

“We will deliver economic growth and improvements in your material living standards. You will meekly do as you are told, refrain from dissent, work hard, save a huge percentage of your money, and ignore obvious corruption.”

While nearly everyone in China has benefited to some degree under this current “system,” the wheels are definitely starting to come off. Official GDP numbers are now slowing, real estate prices are falling, and inflation is quickening.

Read full article at Business Insider
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An Incredible Tour Of Hong Kong’s Severn Road

This is the view the aberdeen neighborhood of the southern district as well as the harbor are visible in the distance.

Financial News has named the most expensive street in the world, and for the second year in a row the recognition goes to a street not in New York City, Beverly Hills or London, but Hong Kong. One square meter of real estate on Severn Road goes for $78,200, while the top price for a square meter of property on New York’s Fifth Avenue goes for around $62,700.

Severn Road is located near the top of Victoria Peak and is home to around 60 private residences. Residents have fantastic views of Hong Kong’s harbors and famous skyline.

Read full article at The Blaze
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Satellite Pictures Of The Empty Chinese Cities Where Home Prices Are Crashing

China's most famous ghost city on the outskirts of ordos has been empty for years.

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One in Four Starbucks Card Transactions Now Done Via Mobile

Chinese woman with smartphoneStarbucks customers apparently are finding buying via mobile as addictive as the company’s coffee.

Less than a year after Starbucks launched an app that allows mobile payments, it has hosted 26 million such transactions on iOS, BlackBerry and Android, according to the chain. One in four Starbucks card transactions is now executed via mobile.

The mobile-payments initiative has built momentum recently: In the nine weeks after it was released, there were 3 million transactions. But in the past nine weeks, there have been 6 million, says Adam Brotman, SVP and general manager of Starbucks. He adds that New York, Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago and San Jose, Calif., are the top cities by volume for mobile purchases

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American firm taps China’s huge wedding-planning market | Reuters

China Wedding Planners(Reuters) – As young Chinese become wealthier, there is one area where they are increasingly looking to make a big impression on their families and friends and create lifelong memories for themselves: weddings.

And with Chinese spending some $57 billion a year on weddings and half of young people in this country saying they need help in planning their marriage ceremonies, an American company is looking to capitalize on what it sees as a huge business opportunity here: training Chinese wedding planners.

Weddings Beautiful Worldwide has just set up a joint venture in China to bring its expertise in training wedding planners to this country, where young couples can use help figuring out how to spend the equivalent of thousands of dollars and more to celebrate their nuptials.

“With the fast economic development in China, consumers are choosing more unique and personalized weddings, giving a boost to the wedding industry in China,” Raul Vasquez, president of the joint venture, known as Weddings Beautiful China, said in Beijing recently.

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Perspective During this Holiday Season

Old Chinese WomanI am a CPA and businessman in my American life and persona. I am living for a year or two deep in the interior of mainland China with my wife Yu Qi (Susie) and eight year old son Yang Yang. I am treated with respect as “laowai” or “ancient foreigner” in their country. My experience over the past six months living here is that for many reasons the Chinese love Americans. I am treated like a celebrity or rock star.

Here is a letter I shared with my parents age 84 today. Perhaps it may bring some perspective, especially during this holiday season, to those of us who are so blessed to call America home.

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Photos: Beijing and the rest of China once again attacked by smog

Beijing, China smog

Though some Chinese media is still reporting the smog blanket currently engulfing Beijing as nothing more than a serious fog, the U.S. Embassy pollution monitoring index registered the city’s air as Beyond Index at 7pm Sunday night, with the level remaining at Hazardous since then.

Average visibility in the city has been between 1 to 3 kilometers, with some areas in the south of Beijing having a visibility under 500 meters. Highways and flights at Beijing Capital Airport have been affected as a result of the smog, which has been recurring in Northern China since October.

Meanwhile, the Chinese government has refused to change their air-quality monitoring standards to account for particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometers (PM2.5), which is believed to have the greatest negative effect for human health.

See photos & read article
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Some Asians’ college strategy: Don’t check ‘Asian’

Asian Student

(AP) Lanya Olmstead was born in Florida to a mother who immigrated from Taiwan and an American father of Norwegian ancestry. Ethnically, she considers herself half Taiwanese and half Norwegian. But when applying to Harvard, Olmstead checked only one box for her race: white.

“I didn‘t want to put ’Asian’ down,” Olmstead says, “because my mom told me there’s discrimination against Asians in the application process.

For years, many Asian-Americans have been convinced that it‘s harder for them to gain admission to the nation’s top colleges.

Studies show that Asian-Americans meet these colleges’ admissions standards far out of proportion to their 6 percent representation in the U.S. population, and that they often need test scores hundreds of points higher than applicants from other ethnic groups to have an equal chance of admission. Critics say these numbers, along with the fact that some top colleges with race-blind admissions have double the Asian percentage of Ivy League schools, prove the existence of discrimination.

The way it works, the critics believe, is that Asian-Americans are evaluated not as individuals, but against the thousands of other ultra-achieving Asians who are stereotyped as boring academic robots.

Now, an unknown number of students are responding to this concern by declining to identify themselves as Asian on their applications.

Read full article
USA Today
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Bay-Jing Watch: Let’s call the whole thing off

By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer

In the shadow of Olympic venues, Brian Williams has anchored NBC’s “Nightly News” this week in a city he calls Bay-jing.

Yet Bob Costas, Meredith Vieira and many of NBC’s sports announcers seem to be working in a different, more exotic place: Bay-zhing.

So which is it?

Williams is right, if you talk to experts in the Chinese language. He’s even recorded something about the pronunciation puzzle for NBC’s Web site, although it doesn’t seem to be required viewing for everyone at the network.

“It’s been annoying me for quite awhile, honestly,” said S. Robert Ramsey, a college professor and author of “The Language of China.”

He’s not alone, and it isn’t just NBC at fault.

“For you mousse-coiffed, Mr. Gravitas TV anchor types and you sotto voce public radio types, please oh please stop saying “Bay-zheeng,” wrote Kaiser Kuo, who works for a China-based ad agency and wrote an online guide for journalists covering the Olympics. “The pronunciation of the city’s name couldn’t be easier.”

Carsey Yee and John Weinstein, experts in the language who occasionally do theater work as Two Chinese Characters, recorded a YouTube video clip making the same point (above). They say it’s “BAY” as in “Baywatch.” And “Jing” like “Jingle Bells.”

Does it really matter?

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Popularity of video calling set to explode, NPD says

Skype Multi-Person Video Call

Video calling has been extremely slow to catch on, but adoption is finally set to explode according to a recent forecast from NPD Group-owned market research firm In-Stat. According to the firm’s figures, 63 million people could be counted as active video calling users in 2010. In 2015, that number is expected to balloon to 380 million. “While the mobile arena is relatively nascent, it has fueled much of the growth in usage over the course of 2011,” In-Stat analyst Amy Cravens said in a statement. PCs will remain the most popular platform for video calling, but the technology’s expansion to smartphones, tablets and even televisions will also play a role in accelerating adoption. Connectivity is key on mobile devices though, and smartphone-based video calling experiences leave much to be desired due to shaky cellular connections. The rapid rollout of 4G LTE networks around the world should help to improve the mobile video calling experience dramatically, however. NPD In-Stat’s full press release follows below.

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Know your ER – China’s Best Hospitals List | eChinacities.com

Chinese DoctorsThe “2010 China’s Best Hospitals list”, the top 80 hospitals in China voted on and selected by 2,009 medical experts across China was officially released on November 19th. The list was compiled by the Institute Hospital Management at Fudan University in Shanghai, and will be updated annually.

The list is an objective and fair reflection of Chinese hospitals, ranking them according to their “clinical strength”, “academic prestige” and “ability to treat difficult illnesses”. According to Professor Gao Jiechun, head of the Institute Hospital Management, a series of voting and peer-review regulations for the 2,009 participants ensures that there will be no vote rigging or statistical discrepancies in the final ranking.

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China Halts U.S. College Freedom at Class Door

Hopkins Nanjing University CenterIn the 25 years Johns Hopkins University and Nanjing University have run a joint campus in China, it’s never published an academic journal. When American student Brendon Stewart tried last year, he found out why.

Intended to showcase the best work by Chinese and American students and faculty to a far-flung audience, Stewart’s journal broke the Hopkins-Nanjing Center’s rules that confine academic freedom to the classroom. Administrators prevented the journal from circulating outside campus, and a student was pressured to withdraw an article about Chinese protest movements. About 75 copies sat in a box in Stewart’s dorm room for a year.

“You think you’re going to a place that has academic freedom, and maybe in theory you do, but in reality you don’t,” said Stewart, 27, who earned a master’s degree in international studies this year from Hopkins-Nanjing and now works for an accounting firm in Beijing. “The place is run by Chinese administrators, and I don’t think the U.S. side had a lot of bargaining power to protect the interests of its students. At the end of the day, it’s a campus on Chinese soil.”

The muzzling of Stewart’s journal exposes the compromises to academic freedom that some American universities make in China. While professors and students openly discuss sensitive subjects such as the Tibetan independence movement or the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests on the Hopkins-Nanjing campus, they can’t do so in the surrounding community. Even on-campus protections only cover class discussions, not activities typical of U.S. campuses, such as showing documentary films in a student lounge.

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Windows Phones may soon become available in China

Windows Phone 7 in China

Rumor: Microsoft Picks a Retail Partner for WP7 Launch in China in 2012

Rumors in the Chinese business media suggest that Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) is poised to launch its mobile OS, Windows Phone 7 (WP7) officially in mainland China next year – and that it’ll partner with Chinese retail giant Suning for promotion and distribution.

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Female special forces show off their guns on Chengdu’s shopping street [video]


Fully armed riot police were spotted marching down Chengdu’s most popular shopping street, Chunxi Lu, at 9:30 Sunday morning. The team was composed of 30 special-forces officers. They wore combat boots, body armor, and carried QSZ-92 pistols in their belts and QZB-95 assault rifles in their hands. Chengdu residents on the shopping street were startled by the sight.

Read full article at gochengdoo.com
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The End of Chinatown | The Atlantic

Chinatown San Francisco USA

The End of Chinatown
Does China’s rise mean the end of one of America’s most storied ethnic enclaves?

By BONNIE TSUI | The Atlantic

AS THE MANAGER of a Chinatown career center on Kearny Street in San Francisco, Winnie Yu has watched working-class clients come and go. Most of them, like Shen Ming Fa, have the makings of the quintessential Chinese American immigrant success story. Shen, who is 39, moved to San Francisco with his family last fall, an English-speaking future in mind for his 9-year-old daughter. His first stop was Chinatown, where he found an instant community and help with job and immigration problems.

But lately, Yu has been seeing a shift; rather than coming, her clients have been going—in pursuit of what might be called the Chinese Dream.

“Now the American Dream is broken,” Shen tells me one evening at the career center, his fingers drumming restlessly on the table; he speaks mostly in Mandarin, and Yu helps me translate. Shen has mostly been unemployed, picking up part-time work when he can find it. Back in China, he worked as a veterinarian and at a school of traditional Chinese culture. “In China, people live more comfortably: in a big house, with a good job. Life is definitely better there.” On his fingers, he counts out several people he knows who have gone back since he came to the United States. When I ask him if he thinks about returning to China, he glances at his daughter, who is sitting nearby, then looks me in the eye. “My daughter is thriving,” he says, carefully. “But I think about it every day.”

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Marco Polo and His Travels

Marco Polo Travels Map

Excerpt from The Silkroad Foundation article.

Marco Polo (1254-1324), is probably the most famous Westerner traveled on the Silk Road. He excelled all the other travelers in his determination, his writing, and his influence. His journey through Asia lasted 24 years. He reached further than any of his predecessors, beyond Mongolia to China. He became a confidant of Kublai Khan (1214-1294). He traveled the whole of China and returned to tell the tale, which became the greatest travelogue.

The Polo Brothers In 1260 two Venetian merchants arrived at Sudak, the Crimean port. The brothers Maffeo and Niccilo Polo went on to Surai, on the Volga river, where they traded for a year. Shortly after a civil war broke out between Barka and his cousin Hulagu, which made it impossible for the Polos to return with the same route as they came. They therefore decide to make a wide detour to the east to avoid the war and found themselves stranded for 3 years at Bukhara.

The marooned Polo brothers were abruptly rescued in Bukhara by the arrival of a VIP emissary from Hulagu Khan in the West. The Mongol ambassador persuaded the brothers that Great Khan would be delighted to meet them for he had never seen any Latin and very much wanted to meet one. So they journeyed eastward. They left Bukhara, Samarkand, Kashgar, then came the murderous obstacle of the Gobi desert. Through the northern route they reached Turfan and Hami, then headed south-east to Dunhuang. Along the Hexi Corridor, they finally reached the new capital of the Great Khan, Bejing in 1266.

The Great Khan, Mangu\’s brother, Kublai, was indeed hospitable. He had set up his court at Beijing, which was not a Mongol encampment but an impressive city built by Kublai as his new capital after the Mongols took over China in 1264 and established Yuan dynasty (1264-1368). Kublai asked them all about their part of the world, the Pope and the Roman church. Niccolo and Matteo, who spoke Turkic dialects perfectly, answered truthfully and clearly. The Polo brothers were well received in the Great Khan\’s capital. One year later, the Great Khan sent them on their way with a letter in Turki addressed to Pope Clement IV asking the Pope to send him 100 learned men to teach his people about Christianity and Western science. He also asked Pope to procure oil from the lamp at the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.

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Home Again to Liuzhou

Chinese Train Soft Sleeper

Susie & I kicked back in soft sleeper (Chinese “first class”) on overnight train from Kunming to Liuzhou…actually quite nice, comfortable, quiet with nice classical music…and cheap. We were very self-satisfied & celebrating a terrific week, including training new correspondents and meeting their contacts interested in EB-5.

When we returned to our apartment in Liuzhou, I walked across the street to McDonalds to get cup of coffee. Four young Chinese school girls (I would guess maybe 10 or 11) approached me with no fear. They were speaking very good English and wanted to speak English with me.

They asked me, “What is your name?” Then, “Where are you from?” I replied, “America.” They said in perfect, no-accent English, “America is very beautiful.”

They wandered along, chattering happily on their way, looking back to laugh and wave at their American friend.
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China Telecom Plans to Offer Wireless Service in U.S. in 2012 | Bloomberg

China Telecom

Editor’s note: In our opinion, developments like this announced expansion by China Telecom into U.S. has positive implications for all parties. Certainly, these services provide additional, affordable infrastructure for new American immigrants to feel more at home and in touch with friends and family in Asia.

China Telecom Corp. plans to start selling a wireless service to U.S. consumers under its own brand early next year, seeking to sign up Chinese-Americans, students and tourists who travel often between the two countries.

China’s biggest fixed-line provider will offer users of the service handsets with two lines, one that will work in the U.S. and another in China, Donald Tan, president of China Telecom Americas, said in an interview. Tan declined to discuss pricing, though he said the cost would be “competitive.”

China Telecom, seeking to gain a toehold in the U.S. consumer market, is already in trials with several possible wholesale partners, and will soon choose one as the service’s network, Tan said. He declined to name the U.S. test partners. If the wireless service takes off, China Telecom may consider building or buying its own wireless network in the U.S., Tan said.

“If the service is growing fast, maybe we can set up our own infrastructure,” Tan said. “The money is no big problem for us.”

Read full article…China Telecom Plans to Offer Wireless Service in U.S. in 2012 – Bloomberg.
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Bing Bing, Susie & Michael in Kunming, Yunnan, China

Bing Bing, Susie and Michael are working with clients and consultants in Kunming, in the southwestern province of Yunnan next week.

Bing Bing is originally from Kunming, and has lived in Hong Kong and Canada, and presently lives in the U.S. She speaks Mandarin, Cantonese and English.

Susie is from Liuzhou, Guangxi. Susie, son Yang Yang and Michael live in Scottsdale, Arizona and China.

As described in Wikipedia, Kunming is the capital and largest city of Yunnan Province in Southwest China. It was known as Yunnan-Fou until the 1920s. A prefecture-level city, it is the political, economic, communications and cultural centre of Yunnan, and is the seat of the provincial government.

It is also home to several universities, museums, galleries and other important economic, cultural, and educational institutions. The headquarters of many of Yunnan’s large businesses are in Kunming as well.

It was important during World War II as a Chinese military center, American air base, and transport terminus for the Burma Road.

Located in the middle of the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau, Kunming is located at an altitude of 1,900 m above sea level and at a latitude just north of the Tropic of Cancer. It covers an area of 21,473 square kilometres (8,291 sq mi) and its urban area covers 2,081 km². Kunming has population of 6,432,212 including 3,055,000 in the urban area and is located at the northern edge of the large Lake Dian, surrounded by temples and lake-and-limestone hill landscapes.

Kunming consists of an old, previously walled city, a modern commercial district, residential and university areas. The city has an astronomical observatory, and its institutions of higher learning include Yunnan University, Yunnan Normal University and a medical college. On the outskirts is a famed bronze temple, dating from the Ming dynasty.

Its economic importance derives from its geographical position. Positioned near the border with Southeastern Asian countries, serving as a transportation hub in Southwest China, linking by rail to Vietnam and by road to Burma and Laos. This positioning also makes it an important trade center in this region of the nation. It also houses some manufacturing, chiefly copper, though some other chemicals, machinery, textiles, paper and cement take key.

Though having a nearly 2,400 year history, its modern prosperity dates only from 1910, when the railroad from Hanoi was built. The city has continued to develop rapidly under China’s modernization efforts. Kunming’s streets have widened while office buildings and housing projects develop at a fast pace. Kunming has been designated a special tourism center and as such sports a proliferation of high-rises and luxury hotels.

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LinkedIn’s Big Trouble In Social China | Fast Company

USHI.com's Dominic Penaloza

Especially LinkedIn itself. Its very survival could depend on it.

To be the “X of China” is a coveted position, in a country that has seen explosive Internet growth–450 million online today, more than the entire U.S. population. There’s Renren, for instance, the Facebook of China, and Weibo, the Chinese Twitter. In the wake of LinkedIn’s barn-burning IPO, though, a question comes to mind: Who will be the LinkedIn of China? The answer to that question could have a huge impact on LinkedIn’s future–like whether it lives or dies. Let’s explore why.

Online professional networking in China is a slightly different game than friending and tweeting, it turns out. The original Facebook and Twitter have been banned in China, blocked by the censors standing guard atop the Great Firewall. But LinkedIn, unique among the major social networks, has so far been allowed to operate in the Middle Kingdom. In other words, while Facebook can’t be the Facebook of China, there’s a fighting chance for LinkedIn to become the LinkedIn of China.

It has stiff competition, though. Take Ushi, for instance. Pronounced “you-shee” (which means “outstanding professional”), the site is the first major online professional network “made in China, made by Chinese, made for Chinese” as its CEO told Reuters yesterday. Ushi, which launched in invitation-only private beta in March of 2010, had grown to 60,000 users just by user invites by October. Today, it has 300,000, and CEO Dominic Penaloza, a Filipino-Chinese raised in Canada, projects hitting 10 million users in two years. (Here’s Penaloza’s, um, LinkedIn profile, in which he writes that he’s “building a social Internet service that really words.” Awkward…)

Read full article… LinkedIn’s Big Trouble In Social China | Fast Company.
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Chasing Luxury Dreams – A Tale from Chengdu | Forbes

Chengdu Shoppers Louis Vuitton
by Helen Wang

It’s one thing that the Chinese government spearheads infrastructure projects such as massive railway development; it’s another thing that it promotes luxury consumption. Yes, that is exactly what the government of Chengdu, a second-tier city in southwest China, has proudly done.

Anyone who has visited Chengdu cannot miss the ostentatious signs of Louis Vuitton and Cartier in its downtown. According to Chengdu Retail Industry Association, Chengdu is home to 80 percent of international luxury brands and ranked third behind Beijing and Shanghai in luxury sales.

Read full article…Chasing Luxury Dreams – A Tale from Chengdu – Forbes.
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Half of China’s Millionaires Want to Leave

China Airport Departures Sign

Excerpts & Analysis from White Paper by the Bank of China & Hurun Research Institute

Despite the financial turmoil in the US and Europe, almost half of China’s rich are considering moving to the developed world to protect their wealth, educate their children and retire, signaling a lack of confidence in China\’s rapid economic growth.

About 14% of wealthy Chinese – those owning assets worth at least Rmb10 million ($1.57 million) – are applying to emigrate or have already done so, while 46% are considering moving to a rich country. Their favorite destinations are the US and Canada, according to a survey conducted by Bank of China\’s private banking unit and Hurun Research Institute.

The two firms interviewed high-net-worth individuals (HNWI) in 18 cities between May and September this year and received 980 valid questionnaires. The average age of the respondents was 42, with an average net worth of more than Rmb60 million.
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Texas BBQ Ribs in Beijing, China

BBQ beef ribsDecadent. I thought I had died and gone to heaven while eating melt-in-your-mouth, gigantic BBQ beef ribs…in Beijing! If I am dreaming, please do not wake me…http://timsbarbq.com/
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Michael in Beijing this week

Michael is working with clients and principals in Beijing this week. He flies to Beijing Monday evening, participates in two meetings then dinner back to back to back Tuesday, and returns home Wednesday.
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Susie & Michael’s Wanderings — Wuzhou, Guangxi, China

Mike & Susie drove to Wuzhou, Guangxi, China for the weekend Gemstone & Jade Trade Show where we connected with CNUSA correspondent Crystal, her father, aunt and other friends. Crystal’s aunt is one of Susie’s best friends and is married to a medical doctor. We enjoyed very good Cantonese food, some CNUSA staff coaching and observing beautiful gemstones and jade. Susie is shopping for a custom jade bracelet for my mother, and for import business she is planning in the U.S.

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While Americans Indulge in Over-consumption, Chinese Move Up by Enduring Hardship | Forbes

While Americans Indulge in Over-consumption, Chinese Move Up by Enduring Hardship – Forbes.

When I read the story of a young American woman selling her ova for $7,000 in order to pay off her credit cards, I kept thinking about young women I met in China. They earned about $100 a month, yet saved 80 percent of their incomes to help pay for their siblings’ education. I felt a huge disconnection. Although many people are worried that the middle class in the West is shrinking, Americans still enjoy immense privilege compared to the vast majority of people in the world. To many Chinese rural migrants, enduring hardship is their way of life.

On a hot summer day, I was roaming randomly down Jianguomen Avenue in Beijing. I found myself drawn to a place called Liang Zi Fitness. As soon as I stepped in the front door, six young ladies dressed in the traditional Qipao (pronounced chi-pao), a tradition one-piece body-hugging Chinese dress for women, gently bowed and greeted me, “Welcome, distinguished guest.

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Ushi, China’s Answer To LinkedIn, Raises $3 Million From GLG, Others | TechCrunch

by ROBIN WAUTERS posted on October 13th, 2011

Marketplace for business expertise Gerson Lehrman Group (GLG) has partnered with and acquired a minority stake in Ushi, a China-based business social networking service provider.

GLG’s investment, which was part of a recent $3 million funding round, brings Ushi’s total of capital raised to $4.5 million. Earlier backers of Ushi also participated in the financing round, which is the Shanghai-based company’s second to date…Based in Shanghai, Ushi offers a social networking service that caters to Chinese businesspersons and entrepreneurs, with a member base that the company says includes over 40,000 CEO-level and 10,000 CTO-level execs and key individuals from over 85 percent of the country’s VC and PE firms…

Read full article…Ushi, China’s Answer To LinkedIn, Raises $3 Million From GLG, Others | TechCrunch.
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China’s Provinces & Provincial Capitals

China Administrative Map
Click here for listings of and information about China’s Provinces and Provincial Capitals.
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Map of China & Provinces

China Map of Provinces & Capitals

Do you know the provinces of China & their location? I am living in Guangxi province. Can you locate it?  Can you locate Beijing? Shanghai? Hong Kong?
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Ushi sees gold in workers | Business | chinadaily.com.cn

 By Chen Limin (China Daily)

BEIJING – Ushi.cn, China’s version of Linkedin.com, may break even next year as it further enlarges its user base, according to a top company official, at a time when social-networking sites for professionals try to cash in on the world\’s largest Internet market.

Dominic Penaloza, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Ushi, said the company will have a chance to become profitable around the third quarter of 2012 if it gets “a couple of million users” over the next 12 months, compared with the 400,000 it now has.

“There are about 40 million Internet users in China who are white-collar workers or entrepreneurs whoever gets 10 to 20 million first should be the winner of the competition,” said Penaloza, a Chinese-Filipino Canadian in Shanghai.

Like other professional social networking sites, Ushi makes money from premium subscriptions, online advertising and recruiting solutions. Penaloza said most of Ushi’s revenue comes from advertisers, including Citibank NA, Dell Inc and Microsoft Corp.

Besides Ushi, many other social-networking sites – some aimed at professionals, others intended for general users – are trying to increase their footprints in China, which has 485 million Internet users. Renren Inc, which owns China’s largest social-networking site, came up with Jingwei.com in March.

LinkedIn Corp, the second-largest social-networking site in the United States after Facebook Inc in terms of traffic, established an Asia-Pacific regional headquarters in Singapore in May and said it would consider expanding into China.

Read full article…Ushi sees gold in workers | Business | chinadaily.com.cn.
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American Thinker: Tiger Mother, Burning Bright


American Thinker: Tiger Mother, Burning Bright.
By John Barnett

Americans have always been anxious about how their kids are turning out.  But at this moment in history — when that traditional source of anxiety has been joined by growing nervousness about the rise of China — any writer who hit upon the idea of connecting the two by arguing, essentially, that Chinese parentage is just better would have been guaranteed to strike a nerve.  Just ask Amy Chua, whose recent Wall Street Journal piece, provocatively entitled “Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior” became an overnight internet smash.

Indeed, “strike a nerve” is not really an adequate metaphor to describe the impact of Chua’s piece, which generated about one million page hits, 8,800 comments on the original page (at last count), a staggering 100,000-plus comments on Facebook, and countless responses around the web and in print.  Besides the Penguin Press book that the original piece was drawn from, a movie deal is said to be in the works, and Chua’s book tour is drawing crowds.  Most recently, Chua started a website and appeared with her husband at the New York Public Library.

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Arizona’s Asian population now fastest-growing in state

Arizona’s Asian population now fastest-growing in state.

Dianna Bui finished paying at the checkout counter and headed for the exit of Lee Lee Oriental Supermarket, a sprawling 50,000-foot grocery store in Peoria.

Her cart was filled with products from Vietnam. A bottle of nuoc mam nhi, fermented fish sauce. A package of taro cake, a type of root vegetable. Some frozen blue mackerel. All foods to remind her of home.

Bui, a native of Vietnam, is among the 85,000 new Asians in Arizona since 2000, according to data from the 2010 census.

The census counted 176,695 Asians in 2010. That is nearly twice as many as the 92,236 counted by the census a decade earlier. No other minority group grew at a faster rate.

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How to get a QQ account in Englis

QQ, for those that don’t know, is China’s most popular IM software. Usage is so widespread that among the younger generation you’re near as likely to get someone’s QQ # as you are their mobile number.

For expats in China and wishing to make friends with local Chinese, having a QQ account is a must. Though Western-based IMs are also popular, with Windows Live Messenger quickly grabbing ground from Tencents QQ, using the Chinese-made product will win you lots of points with your new found friends.

Though Tencent has had an English version of the QQ software since 2005, until recently English-speaking QQ-wannabes had to bribe their Chinese friends to do the registration process for them, asking them to signup and get them a coveted QQ # that can be plugged into the software and connect you to the Chinese IM world.

No longer. Now us Anglophones can share in the QQ craze too.

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Happy Chinese New Year

How to make money in China


FORTUNE — What’s the right way to play China? Perhaps no investor knows the answer to that question better than Richard Gao, who has run the $3 billion San Francisco-based Matthews China Fund (MCHFX) since 1999.

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Languages Needed, but No Plans to Learn

Languages Needed, but No Plans to Learn
By Joe Light

Demand for U.S. workers who speak foreign languages—especially Spanish and Chinese—should continue to grow over the next decade, but very few workers plan to study them.

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