Is the new Pakistani government good for China?
Announcements for Access members
Slack chat schedule:
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Manya Koetse of Whatโs on Weibo was our guest on Tuesday this week; transcript will be posted soon, but chat is viewable on the channel.
Sam Crane, an expert in ancient Chinese philosophy, will join us in a week or two; time TBA.
โLucas Niewenhuis (Jeremy travelling again today)
1. New Pakistan government makes friendly noises to China, but trouble brews
On July 26, the Pakistan Movement for Justice (PTI) and its leader, the former cricket superstar Imran Khan, achieved victory in Pakistanโs general election. It is โconsidered the country’s second consecutive democratic transition,โ the BBC reports.
What does this transition mean for China?
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Few countries are as important to Chinaโs foreign policy as Pakistan. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a network of over $60 billion in planned infrastructure that runs from Xinjiang in Chinaโs far west to the southwestern port of Gwadar in Pakistan, is a centerpiece of the Belt and Road initiative.
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Imran Khan has previously criticized CPEC, according to Inkstone, but โlater reassured Chinese officials that he had no problem with the Chinese money โ only where the Pakistani government was allocating it.โ Now he says he wants to โuse it and drive investment into Pakistan.โ
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โPakistan is likely to review someโ of the CPEC projects following the power transition, but โis likely to maintain close ties to Beijing as a foreign policy priority,โ analysts told the South China Morning Post.
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The PTI says that it wants to learn poverty alleviation from China, according to a statement on its official Twitter feed, along with โhow they curbed corruption and set the example that corruption does not pay.โ
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Pakistani media also made happy noises, mostly sticking to simple reports on boilerplate statements from Chinaโs foreign ministry about the two countriesโ โall-weather strategic partnership.โ
Though the new government does not appear to intend to disrupt relations with China, trouble is brewing, Andrew Small, an expert on China-Pakistan relations at the German Marshall Fund, writes for War on the Rocks:
โIn the run-up to the elections, CPEC has been languishing. The second phase of the scheme has stalled, civil-military skirmishing has consumed the countryโs political energies, and Pakistanโs balance of payments situation has entered another crisis. Meanwhile, Beijing is facing growing pressure to improve its fraught relationship with New Delhi, where the deepening China-Pakistan axis has become one of the biggest points of contention.โ
In the past few days, a controversy erupted over how much debt CPEC projects were putting on Pakistan.
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Pakistani officials told the Wall Street Journal that the country was headed towards a debt crisis (paywall), and the newspaper reported that โby early fall…Pakistanโs new government is likely to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund,โ the conditions for which โwould force the country to curtailโ CPEC projects.
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China said that report โdeviates from the facts,โ because, the Journal says, โit didnโt identify who say that the infrastructure program is becoming a debt trap.โ But the Journal stands by its reporting (paywall).
Another perennial issue for CPEC is political instability, as the all-important Gwadar port lies in the province of Balochistan (also spelled Baluchistan). Akbar Shahid Ahmed, a Pakistan native who works for the Huffington Post as a foreign affairs reporter, describes Balochistan as essentially the Xinjiang of Pakistan:
โIโm a skeptic [of Gwadar in CPEC], but there arenโt many of us. For the 200 million Pakistanis who, like me, were born and raised outside of Balochistan, the region is a national black hole. The province is the size of Germany and home to gas reserves and minerals weโve been told will guarantee a Pakistani economic miracle. But itโs understood less as a real place than as our countryโs version of the 19th-century American West โ and with little fanfare or accountability, Pakistan has subjected the provinceโs indigenous population, particularly the 7 million who belong to an ethnic minority called the Baloch, to decades of threats, kidnappings, torture and discrimination. The result has been four insurgencies, the most recent and vicious of them ongoing.โ
Just over half of the 12 million people who live in Balochistan are Baloch. Admed continues:
โBut a decade of writing on Pakistan has me convinced that predicting the countryโs future is like politely asking fate to spit in your face. Thereโs one certainty in the only nuclear-armed country in the majority-Muslim world: The military, wealthy and unaccountable like no other institution, calls the shots. Itโs thrilled with the Chinese project because it involves a massive infusion of outside cash without any pesky requirements about democracy. And itโs certain Balochistan should be handled with force and manipulation โ even though itโs never really tried the alternative.โ
China is well aware of the volatile situation in Balochistan, and has even tried โ in a breach of Beijingโs โnon-interferenceโ policy regarding other countriesโ internal affairs โ โquietly holding talks with Pakistani tribal separatists [in Balochistan] for more than five years,โ the Financial Times reported back in February (paywall). In January this year, it was reported that the port of Gwadar would be the site of Chinaโs second overseas military base, after Djibouti.
โLucas Niewenhuis
2. Germany blocks China deal to protect power grid
Germany is toughening up its scrutiny of Chinese deals, per Deutsche Welle:
โThe German economy and finance ministries said in a joint statement on Friday that the German government would buy a 20 percent stake in electricity network firm 50Hertz, in effect blocking Chinese investors from taking a majority stake in the strategic company.โ
The government cited โnational security groundsโ for the decision.
Three days ago, Bloomberg reports (paywall), the most senior official in Germanyโs intelligence apparatus โsaid Chinese acquisitions of high-tech companies in Germany represent a potential national-security threat.โ
DW notes that more blockages for Chinese deals are on the horizon:
โTo add to the negative visuals, earlier this week the German government said it would prevent Chinese investors from buying the machine tool manufacturer Leifeld Metal Spinning. The veto would be the first time Germany has prevented one of its firms being sold to Chinese investors.โ
โLucas Niewenhuis
3. Trade war, day 22
A quick roundup of the latest news in the U.S.-China trade war:
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A โmiscellaneous tariff billโ to lower taxes on hundreds of imported Chinese products, and products from other countries, has been unanimously passed by the U.S. Senate, Reuters reports.
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The bill is aimed at โgetting rid of tariffs set up to protect industries that no longer exist in the United Statesโ โ for example, โHamilton Beachโฆwould pay reduced tariffs on Chinese-made toaster ovens, steam irons and other household appliances it used to make domestically.โ
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The White House has not taken a position on the bill, though it appears ready to head to President Trumpโs desk soon: It earlier passed the House of Representatives, which now just needs to โresolve minor differencesโ with the Senateโs version of the bill โbefore they can send the legislation to Trump to sign into law.โ
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Preparations for the China International Import Expo, scheduled for November 5 to 10 in Shanghai, have taken on new urgency with the trade war. โChina has mobilized 60,000 companies to buy imported goodsโ to โpromote the allure of the countryโs marketโ and counter its closed-off image, according to the South China Morning Post.
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Despite plummeting investment in the U.S. โ see this The China Project report โ Chinese firms may be increasing overseas investment overall, according to investment bank Natixis, CNBC says.
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โOverseas investments [from] China rose from $170.2 billion in 2016 to $185.4 billion in 2017โ and โoutbound acquisitions and investments are expected to pick up further in 2018.โ
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A full-blown trade war would โwipe 20% offโ the S&P 500, and โprofits for S&P firms would take a 14.6 percent hit,โ CNBC reports, based on a new report from UBS.
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For now, Chinaโs economy is mostly insulated from the โdirect impactโ of tariffs on its economy, according to the International Monetary Fund.
โLucas Niewenhuis
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact us anytime at editors@thechinaproject.com.
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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Chinese parents are in an uproar after reports that Changchun Changsheng, a vaccine producer in northeastern Chinaโs Jilin Province, had produced and sold 250,000 substandard vaccines. Chinese authorities have arrested 15 people close to the matter on suspicion of โcriminal offensesโ as wary parents are reportedly flocking to Hong Kong to get their children vaccinated.
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The #MeToo movement in China has reached the nonprofit and media worlds. Several prominent Chinese men have been accused of sexual misconduct, including high-profile television host Zhu Jun ๆฑๅ, veteran journalist Zhang Wen ็ซ ๆ, and Lei Chuang ้ท้ฏ, an activist for equal rights for hepatitis B carriers.
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Amid pressure from China, major U.S. airlines, including American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, and United Airlines, have updated their websites, where Taiwan is no longer listed in a way that implies itโs a separate country. But China insists that the compliance is โincomplete,โ because they did not outright list โTaiwan, Chinaโ as an option in their website dropdown menus.
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An improvised bomb exploded near the U.S. embassy in Beijing several hours after a woman tried to self-immolate in the same area. It appears from eyewitness accounts in the media that both incidents were acts of protest, but were not connected.
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Three weeks into the U.S.-China trade war, Beijing has confirmed that contact with the Americans is frozen. Xi Jinping has declared that the trade war will have โno winner,โ and the ideological divisions between the two countries are widening.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Qualcomm deal not dead yet?
China says it is still open to talks on scrapped Qualcomm-NXP takeover / Reuters
โChinaโs State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) said in a statement on Friday that proposals put forth by the firms to resolve Chinese antitrust concerns were insufficient, but it hoped to continue communicating with Qualcomm.โ
NXPโs chief criticizes China after Qualcomm deal collapses / NYT (paywall)
โRichard Clemmer, chief executive of NXP…said Chinese authorities gave no explanation for withholding approval for the transaction. He said that there were no government requirements or regulations that the deal did not meet, adding that Qualcomm and NXP had both agreed to undisclosed concessions to address antitrust concerns raised by Chinese authorities.โ -
RMB value
Why is Chinaโs currency falling? / Bloomberg (paywall)
โSince April, the yuan has fallen by almost 8 percent against the U.S. dollar. This has led many analysts and politicians to speculate that China is intentionally trying to devalue its currency to offset the effect of President Donald Trumpโs tariffs. It almost certainly isnโt.โ -
Bilibili and other video apps
Bilibili removed from Android app stores for promoting incest / Sixth Tone
โBilibili, an anime-centered video platform especially popular with millennials, has been removed from several app stores in China after it was criticized for inappropriate content. On Thursday afternoon, Bilibiliโs app was removed from several Android app stores, including the default app stores of Chinese smartphone brands Xiaomi and OnePlus.โ
This crazy way people watch videos in China is a whole subculture on its own / Goldthread
Sweeping crackdown strikes again: Authorities punish 19 video apps for spreading vulgar content / TechNode
โA total of 19 Chinese video apps, including the popular Neihan Fulishe (ๅ ๆถต็ฆๅฉ็คพ), Bilibili (ๅๅฉๅๅฉ) and Miaopai (็งๆ), were slapped with penalties amid yet another crackdown campaign launched by the Chinese authorities.โ -
Pinduoduo and other IPOs
Chinese e-commerce firm Pinduoduo jumps 44% in trading debut / CNN
Ex-Googler becomes China’s 12th richest person / Bloomberg (paywall)
Pinduoduo and two other Chinese tech stocks to land in U.S. today / TechNode
โBy 24:00 July 27 EST, 19 Chinese companies will have been listed in the U.S. in 2018.โ
The incredible rise of Pinduoduo, Tencentโs most powerful Taobao rival / TechNode -
Potential acquisition of KFC/Pizza Hut operator
Hillhouse, KKR said to weigh deal for $14 billion Yum China / Bloomberg (paywall)
โHillhouse Capital and KKR & Co. are among firms exploring a potential acquisition of Yum China Holdings Inc., the $14 billion U.S.-listed operator of KFC and Pizza Hut brands on the mainland, people familiar with the matter said.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Geopolitical intrigue and Kissinger
What Does the Apparent Trump-EU Trade Truce Mean for China? / Bloomberg (paywall)
Some think that it is โa deliberate attempt to mend fences with allies as the U.S. girds for a protracted dispute with China.โ
Others say that โTrumpโs apparent deal with Europe shows how bargains can be struck.โ
Henry Kissinger Pushed Trump to Work With Russia to Box In China / Daily Beast
โHenry Kissinger suggested to President Donald Trump that the United States should work with Russia to contain a rising China.โ
โThe former secretary of stateโwho famously engineered the tactic of establishing diplomatic relations with China in order to isolate the Soviet Unionโpitched almost the inverse of that idea to Trump during a series of private meetings during the presidential transition, five people familiar with the matter told The Daily Beast.โ
Henry Kissinger: โWe are in a very, very grave periodโ / FT (paywall)
Edward Luce interviewed Henry Kissinger in New York on July 17, the day after the Helsinki summit. This is what he got from Kissinger on China:
โA divided Atlantic would turn Europe into โan appendage of Eurasiaโ, which would be at the mercy of a China that wants to restore its historic role as the Middle Kingdom and be โthe principal adviser to all humanityโ. It sounds as though Kissinger believes China is on track to achieve its goal.โ
The Chinese are wary of Donald Trumpโs creative destruction / FT (paywall)
Mark Leonard writes that โI have just spent a week in Beijing talking to officials and intellectuals, many of whom are awed by his skill as a strategist and tactician.โ
โFew Chinese think that Mr Trumpโs primary concern is to rebalance the bilateral trade deficit. If it were, they say, he would have aligned with the EU, Japan and Canada against China rather than scooping up Americaโs allies in his tariff dragnet. They think the US presidentโs goal is nothing less than remaking the global order.โ -
BRICS
BRICS nations pledge unity in face of US-China trade war / SCMP
Xinhua: Full text of Chinese president’s speech at BRICS Business Forum in South Africa
Analyzed in detail in todayโs Trivium. -
Xinjiang gulags and international response
US urged to sanction Chinese officials overseeing sweeping crackdown in Muslim region / Hong Kong Free Press -
Vaccine scandal
China says vaccine maker Changsheng broke manufacturing rules, faked records / Reuters via Nikkei
โChina’s cabinet investigation group has found that vaccine maker Changsheng Bio-technology broke the law in manufacturing rabies vaccines, the state news agency Xinhua reported on Friday.โ -
South Korea territory dispute
Chinese warplane enters S. Korea’s air defense identification zone / Yonhap News
โThe KADIZ near Ieo Island, south of the peninsula, overlaps with the air defense zones designated by China and Japan, a source of potential tensions among the regional powers.โ
South Korea scrambles jets to intercept Chinese warplane in its air defense territory / SCMP
โSouth Korea said on Friday it had scrambled military jets to intercept a Chinese military aircraft that entered the Southโs air defense territory. The Chinese plane spent more than four hours in the Korea Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) after flying near a submerged rock in the area controlled by Seoul but claimed by Beijing, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.โ -
Tibet
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang tells Buddhist leaders to defend ethnic unity on rare trip to Tibet / SCMP
โChinese Premier Li Keqiang has made a rare trip to Tibet, visiting the capital Lhasa on Friday after stops in the southern prefectures of Nyingchi and Lohka. During his tour, Li said infrastructure investment would be boosted to improve the economy, and called for unity between Tibetans and Han in the western Himalayan region.โ -
North Korea
65 years after the armistice, veterans see vital role for China in ridding North Korea of nuclear weapons / SCMP
โThe battle wounds on South Korean veteran Park Myung-hoโs body give away his close encounters with the Chinese Peopleโs Volunteer Army during the Korean War nearly 70 years ago. The war was paused when an armistice was signed on July 27, 1953, but the real peace that Park and his comrades-in-arms have desired for decades is still far away today.โ -
The crime of remembering Chinaโs Nobel Peace Prize winner
China puts Guangdong musician on trial who sang about Liu Xiaobo / Radio Free Asia
โSinger-songwriter Xu Lin was detained last year after he penned songs in memory of Liu, who died in police custody of late-stage liver cancer in July 2017.โ -
Aftermath of explosion at U.S. embassy
Beijing police claim man behind explosion at US embassy had โparanoid personality disorderโ / Hong Kong Free Press -
Corruption
Ex-assistant chairman of Chinaโs banking regulator gets 16 years in prison for corruption, state media says / SCMP
โYang Jiacai, former assistant chairman of the then China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), was found guilty of accepting bribes of about 23 million yuan (US$3.4 million).โ -
Nationalism
Impatient China / China Media Project
โChina has a serious problem with inflation. No, Iโm not talking about inflationary pressures on the economy, though those numbers have been up. Iโm talking about inflation of the national ego. The country, encouraged by relentless state propaganda, has grown full of itself โ and this may dangerously diminish its basic capacity for self-reflection.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Sexual harassment and assault
Hainan police officers suspended after allegedly asking Hong Kong sexual assault victim to drop case / Hong Kong Free Press
โThe officers allegedly refused to open a file for Sharon Lam Suk-ching โ a Hong Kong director who was sexually assaulted while filming in the city. They later urged her to drop the case.โ
A #MeToo reckoning in Chinaโs workplace amid wave of accusations / NYT (paywall)
See Jiayun Fengโs reporting in The China Project this week: TV host Zhu Jun accused of sexual harassment and #MeToo in China reaches the nonprofit and media worlds. -
Chinese students return from abroad
How Chinese students who return home after studying abroad succeed โ and why they donโt / SCMP
โThe number of Chinese students returning from abroad has grown by leaps and bounds. In 2017, 608,000 students went abroad and 480,900 returned. China is proud of a return rate of 79 percent; in 1987, the return rate was about 5 percent, and in 2007 only 30.6 percent.โ -
NรผVoices co-host Alice Xin Liu interviewed
Featured young China watcher โ Alice Xin Liu: translation director at NรผVoices / Young China Watchers
The NรผVoices podcast launched on The China Project last week. -
Obscure Chinese names
Itโs hard to have an unusual name in China / Economist
A story from a Chinese person apparently with the surname Ying (ๅฌด yรญng), which is so unusual that banks and other institutions wonโt even recognize it. -
Health of students
Study finds weight, vision, sleep problems among Chinaโs schoolchildren / Caixin (paywall) -
Bad musicians
Tone-deaf Kris Wu vocal track ravages Chinese social media / Radii China -
Paraglider perishes
Hong Kong paraglider missing since Sunday found dead on Lantau Island / Hong Kong Free Press
โPatrick Chung Yuk-wa, a 44-year-old paragliding enthusiast, was confirmed dead after being rushed to Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital by helicopter.โ
VIDEO OF THE DAY
Viral Videos in China, July 23โ27
What is China watching? This week: Tens of thousands of fish jumping out of the sea, an artificial and expensive waterfall, and a new discovery of burial artifacts.
We have also published the following videos this week:
ON SUPCHINA
Chinese Corner: The decline of investigative journalism, slut-shaming of sexual assault victims, and studentsโ organizations
Read Jiayun Fengโs roundup of what Chinaโs reading this week.
Taichung stripped of East Asian Youth Games, Nikeโs optimistic China football video, and Dwyane Wade
Nike has put together an amusing video portraying the future of Chinese football. “Amusing” both because itโs a fun 90 seconds that brings a smile and because itโs complete nonsense. Also in this week’s China Sports Column: The Taiwan city of Taichung has been stripped of its right to host next year’s East Asian Youth Games, and Dwyane Wade may be coming to China.
When China embraced classical music: The Philadelphia Orchestra’s historic 1973 tour
When the Philadelphia Orchestra toured China in 1973, it was entering a country in which Western classical music had been verboten just a few years earlier. The musicians endured lukewarm audiences and a demanding Madame Mao, but those who went on that trip remember it as a monumental event โ one whose lasting impact is evident in China’s embrace of Western classical music today.
Kuora: Chinaโs dramatic fall from grace and its long road back to respectability
Around the signing of the American Declaration of Independence, China was an enormous empire and world power. Its decline would be swift and catastrophic, marked by one devastating mistake after another โ for about 150 years. Seen through the lens of history, it really is a miracle that the country is where it’s at now, writes Kaiser Kuo.
TechBuzz China: Bike sharing in China, part 1: Ofoโs wild ride
The internet age has brought with it what China’s state media โ somewhat incredulously โ calls the country’s โNew Four Great Inventionsโ: high-speed trains, scan-and-pay mobile payments, bike sharing, and ecommerce. This weekโs episode is the first in a two-part story on bike sharing โ told against a backdrop of Ofo, one of the two major Chinese players, pulling out of international markets. What happened? And most importantly, what is happening now?
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Subscribe to TechBuzz China on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or click here for the RSS feed.
Sinica Podcast: Australiaโs Beijing problem
Australia has become embroiled in a debate about how serious or coordinated Beijingโs influence operations in the country have become, and what the country should do about it. Two scholars from Australia, David Brophy and Andrew Chubb, give their perspective on the controversy.
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 57
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: Chinaโs currency amid the trade war, the potential merger of China Telecom and China Unicom, Didi Chuxing’s launch in Japan, and Doug Young on Vatti giving refunds to some customers due to a World Cup-themed marketing campaign.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
PHOTO FROM MICHAEL YAMASHITA
Lakeside tai chi
A woman practices tai chi at West Lake (่ฅฟๆน xฤซhรบ) in Hangzhou.
โJia Guo