A craft beer bully in China

Top China news for March 16, 2017. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.


Strong-arm tactics in the craft beer business in China

Discounting craft beer, buying up microbreweries, spying on rival brandsโ€™ sales by installing flow meters in draft beer taps in bars and restaurants: Writing in Fortuneย magazine, Scott Cendrowski has the dirtย on the strong-arm tactics of global beer giant AB InBev as it tries to ensure dominance in the craft beer market in China. The article is accompanied by a reviewย of Chinaโ€™s biggest beer brands.


Women and China: A The China Project-sponsored forum

Weโ€™re organizing a conference on May 18 in New York with femaleย speakers who are movers and shakers in technology, business, and journalism in China. Please click hereย to book tickets.


Cleaning up a Beijing satellite city

Last year, the Beijing government announced plansย to move many of its administrative buildings to Tongzhou, a satellite city to the east of the capital. Today, Xinhuaย reportsย (in Chinese) that Tongzhou plans to demolish 7.5 million square meters of โ€œillegal buildingsโ€ and ensure that there is no new unapproved construction. The city also plans to regulate polluting factories, โ€œpromoteโ€ a new maternity hospital, and construct a new pediatrics hospital with 2,300 beds.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor in Chief


Today on The China Project

China is seeking to build a strong digital economy at home. Graham Webster explores the cyber agendasย on Chinese officialsโ€™ minds that will help achieve that goal, and how they will affect foreign tech companies. We also release a Sinica Podcastย with the highly-respected New York Timesย correspondent Chris Buckley that was recorded with a live audience in Beijing.


This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, Jia Guo, and Jiayun Feng. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

  • China, Saudi Arabia eye $65 billion in deals as king visitsย / Reuters
    On Thursday, Saudi Arabiaโ€™s King Salman signed deals with China worth as much as $65 billion involving everything from space to renewable energy markets. The deals included a memorandum of understanding for the Saudi kingdom to participate in Chinaโ€™s Chang E-4 Moon mission and a partnership agreement for manufacturing drones. King Salman told Chinese president Xi Jinping that he hoped China could play a greater role in Middle East affairs โ€œto promote global and regional peace, security and prosperity.โ€
  • AC Milan bidder said to lose China state-owned firm backingย / Bloomberg
    Haixia Capital Management, an investment firm controlled by State Development & Investment Corporation (SDIC ๅ›ฝๅฎถๅผ€ๅ‘ๆŠ•่ต„ๅ…ฌๅธ), will no longer purchase an interest in Silvio Berlusconiโ€™s AC Milan soccer club, according to people familiar with the matter. Regulators in China have intensified their scrutiny of overseas investments, particularly in sports and entertainment. Last week, Peopleโ€™s Bank of China governor Zhou Xiaochuan saidย that some purchases of overseas sports and entertainment assets didnโ€™t fit with Chinaโ€™s industrial policy because they โ€œtriggered some complaints abroad.โ€ The AC Milan deal was first announced in August last year.


POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

  • In Australia, a call for closer ties to China gains supportย / NYT (paywall)
    Australia is recalibrating its strategies in the Asia-Pacific region for the Trump era, and this is likely to result in a closer relationship with China. Stephen FitzGerald, Australiaโ€™s first ambassador to China (between 1973 and 1976), said in a speech on Thursday that the world had reached the end of an era that was defined by American and European leadership, and that Australia must shift its focus from the U.S. to China. โ€œWe are living in a Chinese world,โ€ he said. โ€œBut we donโ€™t have a relationship to match it.โ€ Since Trump was sworn in, his opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) has caused concerns about a significant impactย on Australiaโ€™s exports, while China is becomingย (paywall) an increasingly important trade partner for the country. However, areas of conflicting interests still exist, including differing positions on the South China Sea dispute.
    You can readย a book-length essayย on the Middle Kingdomโ€™s relations with the country down under titled Australia and China at Forty โ€” Stretch of the Imagination, written by Stephen FitzGerald in 2013.


SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

  • How Beijingโ€™s sky changes before and after major political meetingsย / SCMP
    When this yearโ€™s Two Sessionsย started on March 3, Beijingโ€™s skies were somewhat smoggy. But as the political meetings progressed, the sky became much clearer because polluting factories were closed and traffic on the roads was limited. Though the air quality during the meetings was still categorized on Chinaโ€™s air-quality scale as โ€œmoderateโ€ โ€” rather than โ€œgoodโ€ or โ€œvery goodโ€ โ€” it was enough to make local residents happy. But as the meetings came to an end, smog began to appear once more. In a press conference hosted by Li Keqiang ๆŽๅ…‹ๅผบ, the premier vowedย to make the countryโ€™s skies blue again โ€œby removing high-emission cars from the road and closing coal-fired furnaces.โ€
  • A new baby boom is happening in Chinaโ€™s smaller citiesย / Bloomberg
    As smaller cities in China struggle to cope with a baby boom that resulted from the new two-child policy, there is a debate over whether an immediate lifting of all birth control restrictions is needed to increase the countryโ€™s labor force. On the sidelines of the Two Sessions this year, Sun Xiaomei, a professor at China Womenโ€™s University in Beijing and National Peopleโ€™s Congress delegate, insists that it is too soon to further relax the new two-child ceiling because hospitals and schools in rural areas are already having difficulty accommodating the surging population of newly born babies. Others argue that the introduction of a two-child policy is too little and too late to address problems caused by Chinaโ€™s aging population.