Evan Osnos of the Chicago Tribune, who normally works in the same building as Time’s Beijing crew, is off on a five-week trek across Sichuan. At first I was a bit jealous of his escape from capital city desk jockeying, but Evan’s trip doesn’t look easy. You can read his blog posts and stories as well as photos and video from Tribune …
Asia
Numbers, Statistics and avoiding “Total Havoc”
Statistics are pretty fungible in most countries but China’s numbers (as I have remarked in the past) always seem particularly squishy. As well as getting your numbers right, releasing them at the right moment is also critical, it seems. Hot on the heels (or trotters) of the scary news late last week that meat prices vaulted 50 per cent …
Waiting For Shane
Anyone who doubts the longevity of British culture in Hong Kong need only have turned up at the recent launch of the 2007 Hong Kong Cricket Sixes to see that British culture isn’t merely alive and well—it’s bursting out of its navy blue suit and spraying your face with pastry crumbs.
My colleague Ishaan and I had been lured to a …
Spy Games
It’s open season for spying–or spying allegations–in top flight sports. In the U.S., New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick was fined $500,000, and his team $250,000, after a staffer was found apparently videotaping signals during the season opener Sunday against the New York Jets. In Formula One, the McLaren team was stripped of …
Gloom, boom and doom….and inflation
I see from comments that some of our readers are skeptical about the threat of inflation and point out that other countries run at 6.5 per cent quite happily. That’s true but first of all, other countries aren’t in China’s unique, indeed, never-before-seen-in-the-history-of-the-planet–stage of economic development. The strains and …
Inflation Looming
Anecdotal and some statistical evidence has been strong for a while that inflation was climbing and that food prices in particular were shooting upwards. But yesterday’s announcement that inflation hit 6.5 per cent, the highest in 11 years was still something of a shocker. Even more surprising was the nearly 50 per cent (these figures …
Beware the “Big Red Eye of the East”
Last month I mentioned a point many IT experts have made about Chinese Internet censorship, that it’s not meant to block all banned content but remind web users that they are being monitored. Researchers from UC Davis and the University of New Mexico announced yesterday they are coming out with a report on that idea (via China Digital …
Dalian Postscript: A Middle Kingdom Finger in the Eye
I had been meaning to mention the session at Dalian WEF meeting that was by all accounts the most lively by far (which is actually not that great a challenge as there is an atmosphere of corporate caution about many of the discussions that makes them somewhat anodyne affairs, at least this time). Anyway, this one involved the ubiquitous …
Surprising Dalian
And so, farewell Summer Davos. I leave with a stack of business cards a yard high and the powerful conviction that I must return to Dalian soon. And not just for the wonderful seafood. To my mind there’s nothing better in the world than a clear steamed garoupa, some scallops from the bay, maybe a few drunken shrimp still wiggling on the …
Looted Summer Palace statue for sale
This should make the next month interesting: a bronze horse head looted from Beijing’s Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan) by British and French troops in 1860 will be sold at a Sotheby’s auction in Hong Kong next month. The piece, which was once part of a grand water-clock fountain made up of the 12 zodiac animals, is expected to sell for …
Dalian and Davos
Greetings from sunny Dalian, which is hosting the so-called “Summer Davos,” an attempt by the World Economic Forum to replicate its winter meeting of movers and shakers in China. With 1700 attendees all looking to get in some serious networking, the atmosophere in the meeting halls can be somewhat frenetic, rather akin to what I imagine …
A Big `Get’ for China
Make no mistake: George W. Bush acceptance of Hu Jintao’s invitation to attend next summer’s Olympics in Beijing is a huge `get’ for China. Forget the chatter about Darfur and boycotts, of tainted toys, disputes over Iran, etc., et al. There will be no boycotts. And however Bush and the White House want to spin it (he’s going …
Re: U.S. Congress and China; Reader comment
We get plenty of interesting comments on the blog but also some silly ones, and all too often the discusion deteriorates into a tedious China good/U.S. bad or vice versa spat, with nationalists on both sides spitting vitriol at each other. A reader calling himself (herself?) Guiyang Laoshi made a reasoned alnalysis about the issuse of …