BRI Cooperation for Realizing the Right to Development
The BRI is not just a Chinese proposal for economic development, but also a platform for international cooperation and a global public good for realizing the right to development.
The BRI is not just a Chinese proposal for economic development, but also a platform for international cooperation and a global public good for realizing the right to development.
China’s working closely with the international community for the common good of humanity, building a community with a shared future for mankind, and making the world a better place for all.
Expanding innovation capacity, coupled with a vast consumer market, a complete industrial system, and deepening reform and opening-up, is shoring up China’s robust rebound.
Urging avowed appreciation of peace and people-to-people ties among folk through the stark images compiled in a World War II photo album is the personal mission of one American man.
The opportunities offered by the Chinese market is making multinationals set up joint ventures and production lines in China, boosting the transformation of China’s manufacturing industry.
Some experts observe that the term ‘de-risking’ conveys a more moderate and less confrontational nuance on the part of some EU leaders, who acknowledge the impossibility of decoupling from China.
Promoting industrialization in developing countries requires not only the efforts of developing countries themselves, but also the solidarity and cooperation of the international community as a whole.
China’s new policies and new expo ahead of the China-EU summit strengthen both economic and people-to-people links.
Without a doubt, President Xi’s San Francisco trip has stabilized China-U.S. ties and injected new impetus into Asia-Pacific cooperation. Before the meetings, a poster promised that ‘APEC is going to be EPIC.’ And it has.
The GCI stresses the importance of cultural exchanges, which has moved from the sideline to the center stage of international relations.
Competitiveness is gained through competition rather than isolation or protectionism. All that can be expected from the EU’s anti-subsidy probe is heightened risks for China-Europe trade and disruptions in international economic order, which is harmful for all parties involved.
The BRI originates in China, but its achievements and opportunities belong to the world.