Gao Anming: Dialogue Holds the Key to China-US Relations
Both sides need to adopt an objective and rational perspective that focuses on areas of convergence rather than divergence.
Both sides need to adopt an objective and rational perspective that focuses on areas of convergence rather than divergence.
If the move from poverty reduction to vitalization is secured during the five years ahead, this will plug the biggest loopholes in China’s overall drive for development.
China’s coordinated regional development has become a forward-looking economic strategy presenting the world with access to a huge market while offering numerous incentives for Chinese companies to step onto the global platform.
To remove the technology-based bottleneck and climb the ladder of quality and industrial sophistication requires perseverance and enduring efforts.
China’s green financial development is expected to be a huge magnet for foreign investors.
After seven years’ investment of time and effort in reaching this agreement, it would be a pity if it simply came into existence and then brought about no change at all.
In this fast-developing digitalized time, we should work to prevent any country or sections of the global population from falling into new poverty brought by digital inequality.
The improvement of infrastructure, public services and living conditions in China cannot alone provide solutions and set the way forward. What is required is an ambitious modernization plan that will empower the competitiveness in Chinese regions that lag behind.
China has 1.4-billion population including 400 million middle-income consumers and 130 million market players. Thus, there is ample market capacity for both consumption and investment.
China is not only scaling up its openness, but is, in addition, trying to create a fairer and more orderly environment for competition to thrive with capital flowing in from various sources.
Unlike many countries that have a variety of messaging apps, there’s no question that in China, WeChat is the go-to.
The modernization of the FTA between China and New Zealand is undoubtedly bolstering the world’s confidence in multilateralism and economic globalization, a godsend for a world economy cast into the throes of unilateralism.