Four Italian ports to join Belt and Road?
1. Italy embraces Belt and Road as EU pushes back against Beijing
The Italian government intends to sign on to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The country signaled early this month that it plans to formally endorse Xiโs signature project (see paywalled Financial Times report), and Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said he plans to attend the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing in April. Italy may be ready to open up four ports to Chinese Belt and Road investment, says the South China Morning Post:
The northwestern city of Genoa, Italyโs biggest seaport, said it would sign cooperation agreements with China, while in the south the Sicilian port of Palermo โ which Xi is expected to visit this weekend โ is the focus of Romeโs efforts to attract Chinese shipping operators. Two ports in the northern Adriatic Sea, Trieste and Ravenna, might also be part of Italyโs memorandum of understanding with Xi as part of a plan to compete with major European ports, the sources said.
The White House furiously pushed back, saying, โWe view BRI as a โmade by China, for Chinaโ initiativeโ that will not bring benefits to Italy. China responded, โThis position taken by the US side is laughable,โ and urged Italy to make its own independent decisions.
Meanwhile, โEurope is moving unexpectedly quickly to restrict Chinese access to big public projects ranging from railways to telecoms,โ reports Politico via the South China Morning Post.
Only a week after Brussels branded Beijing as a โsystemic rival,โ EU leaders attending a summit on Thursday are expected to yield to pressure from Berlin and Paris and โendorseโ a law that will restrict the access of Chinese companies to the EUโs โฌ2.4 trillion-per-year public procurement market.
Many industrial EU countries are increasingly frustrated that their leading businesses were excluded from Chinese projects such as the countryโs 10,000 kilometre high-speed rail network and the Olympic facilities in 2008, while the EU opened domestic markets to Chinese bidders in tenders.
See also: A forgotten Italian port could become a Chinese gateway to Europe (porous paywall) in the New York Times. Trieste is the โforgottenโ port.
Further reporting
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Chinese President Xi Jinping heads for Europe amid growing unease over Italian ‘belt and road’ deal / SCMP
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Italy’s embrace of China’s ‘Belt and Road’ is a snub to Washington / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
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Italy may be ready to open up four ports to Chinese investment under ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ / SCMP
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Lucrezia Poggetti: Romeโs support for BRI would legitimize Chinaโs geopolitical ambitions / MERICS
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The Sinophile driving Italyโs hopes of a New Silk Road deal with China / SCMP
โJeremy Goldkorn
2. Are trade talks reaching their conclusion, or sputtering out?
The Wall Street Journal reports that โU.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin plan to fly to Beijing next week to meet with Chinese Vice Premierโ Liรบ Hรจ ๅ้นค. Liu is then expected โto continue talks in Washingtonโ the following week.
Depending on how you read the tea leaves, this is either the closing chapter of a negotiation process that is going โvery wellโ (Trumpโs words), or a mission to salvage talks that are actively falling apart before our eyes. Bloomberg reports on some warning signs:
Chinese officials have shifted their stance because after agreeing to changes to their intellectual-property policies, they havenโt received assurances from the Trump administration that tariffs imposed on their exports would be lifted, two of the people said on condition of anonymity.
Beijing has also stepped back from its initial promises over data protection of pharmaceuticals, didnโt offer details on plans to improve patent linkages, and refused to give ground on data-service issues, one person familiar with the U.S.โs views said.
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But Bloomberg also got a few denials from sources that anything was amiss: โA person close to Lighthizer denied that Chinese officials have backed away from previous pledges. A Chinese official briefed on the talks said that the negotiations are still ongoing and that a back-and-forth is to be expected in such circumstances.โ
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Separately, Bloomberg says that Boeing 737 Max 8 planes could be excluded from a final deal to increase purchases to reduce the trade deficit.
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And โU.S. semiconductor companies want no part of any trade deal that calls for stepped-up purchases from China, worried that would give Beijing more control over their industry,โ the WSJ adds.
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U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue is one of few officials who can be confidently optimistic: He said that a trade deal could see a โdoubling or triplingโ of Chinese purchases of American farm products versus 2017 numbers over a span of two to five years.
More links related to U.S.-China relations and trade:
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Huawei and U.S.-China relations
Is Huawei a security threat? Seven experts weigh in / The Verge
The title is a little deceptive, as two of the seven are politicians โ Republican senator Marco Rubio and Democratic senator Mark Warner. But the responses are interesting to read.
Briefing: US warns Brazil about Huawei equipment for 5G / TechNode -
Are trains โcritical infrastructureโ in the U.S.?
US mulls partial ban on Chinese trains and buses, citing cybersecurity and โMade in China 2025โ / SCMP
The Transit Infrastructure Vehicle Security Act (full text here) is a bipartisan bill that is expected to proceed in the U.S. congress. Tammy Baldwin, a Democratic senator who introduced the bill along with Republican John Cornyn, says, โChina has made clear its intent to dismantle US railcar manufacturing in its โMade in China 2025โ plan โ our economic and national security demands that we address Chinese attempts to dominate industries that build our nationโs critical infrastructure.โ
SCMP notes that โChinaโs state-owned China Railway Rolling Stock Corporation has won a number of high profile contracts in Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago.โ -
Taiwan as โtechnology buffer,โ and as political fulcrum
Foxconn looks to move server production back to Taiwan for security / Nikkei Asian Review
โIsland could become a โtechnology bufferโ in US-China trade war, [Foxconn chairman] Terry Gou says.โ Gou added โWe’ve been asked by many clients to store data in Taiwan … because the government here cannot ask us to share the data.โ
Taiwan and US planning talks counter Beijing’s thrust for unification / AP
โThe talks planned for September in Taipei will include a senior official from Washington, William Brent Christensen, the de facto US ambassador to Taipei, said on Tuesday.โ
โLucas Niewenhuis
3. The Chinese internet is debating the merits of speaking English
A patriotic troll on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo has almost single-handedly set off a massive debate about whether English skills are useless for most Chinese people.
The now-deleted Weibo post that sent the internet ablaze was published on March 17 by @่ฑๅ่ณ (in Chinese), who described himself as a 41-year-old freelance writer in his Weibo bio. The entire post reads:
โFor the vast majority of Chinese citizens, English is a trash skill that wastes numerous peopleโs money and energy. Learning the language takes up an unnecessary portion of precious childhood years. Those who ferociously defend the merits of learning English are either professionals working in the English-learning industry or self-diminishing slaves. Just have a team of translators to work for you if you need to read English documents or Wikipedia. I see no point of encouraging the whole nation to learn English. And thatโs what I call real stress relief.โ
The post quickly sparked an intense backlash. Click through to The China Project for more details.
โJiayun Feng
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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The booming beauty sector
Beauty is the new buzzword in China’s tech world / Nikkei Asian Review (paywall)
โFrom virtual makeovers to 3D nail polish printers, companies take makeup to the futureโฆ Beauty is outperforming many other retail segments in China, and tech companies are keen to cash in.โ -
Pharma price war
A price war in China’s pharma industry could bring cheaper drugs / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โFor years, the nationโs largest drugmakers happily sold low-cost generic medicines yielding gross margins of 80 percent to 90 percent without giving much thought to consumer protection or innovationโฆ[but] a price war is brewing. Already, local governments of 11 cities are taking over procurement of drugs for their hospitals. In an early December bidding round, the average tender price was 55 percent lower than the previous auction. The new bidding system will eventually be extended nationwide.โ
For background on Chinaโs complicated health care system see: What ails Chinaโs healthcare system? Roberta Lipson has a detailed diagnosis on The China Project. -
Chinese do-everything corporations
China’s Evergrande says to start making electric vehicles in June / Reuters
โEvergrande, Chinaโs second-largest property developer by sales, has been aggressively expanding into the automotive space in search of new areas of growth as the Chinese property market slows.โ
The Chinese property developer that reckons it can take on Tesla / Bloomberg Quint -
Purchases of Israeli computer chips skyrocket
Israel’s chip sales to China jump as Intel expands / Reuters
โAn official at the Israel Export Institute told Reuters that new data showed semiconductor exports to China jumped 80 percent last year to $2.6 billion. An industry source told Reuters that Intel Israel accounted for at least 80 percent of those sales.โ -
Layoffs at Tencent
Tencent is said to target 10 percent of managers for cuts, demotion / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โTencent Holdings Ltd. is planning to clear out about 10 percent of its existing managers to make room for younger executives as Chinaโs largest gaming and social media company confronts a slowdown in growth, according to people familiar with the matter.โ -
Xiaomi global expansion
China smartphone maker Xiaomi beats profit view, sees more global expansion / Reuters
โXiaomi CFOโฆsaid that sales from outside of China made up 40 percent of the companyโs revenue in the fourth quarter of 2018, adding that global expansion would be a priority for 2019.โ -
Go slow on Australian coal imports
Coal exporters forced to divert ships as China port delays intensify / Sydney Morning Herald
โQuestions are also being asked in Australia about reports that customs officials at the port of Fangcheng in southern China are conducting โradioactive testsโ of Australian coal.โ -
Supercomputing
China plans multibillion-dollar investment to knock US from top spot in fastest supercomputer ranking / SCMP
โChina is aiming for its newest Shuguang supercomputers to operate at about 50 per cent faster than the current best US machines, which assuming all goes to plan should help China wrest the title back from the US in this yearโs rankings of the worldโs fastest machines.โ
Racing against China, U.S. reveals details of $500 million supercomputer / NYT (porous paywall)
โThe Department of Energy disclosed details on Monday of one of the most expensive computers being built: a $500 million machine based on Intel and Cray technology that may become crucial in a high-stakes technology race between the United States and China.
The supercomputer, called Aurora, is a retooling of a development effort first announced in 2015 and is scheduled to be delivered to the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago in 2021.โ -
Canadian pension fund in China
CPPIB mulls opening first office in China / Bloomberg News Network
โThe Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, which manages around C$368.5 billion ($277 billion), is considering opening its first office in China as it seeks greater exposure to the worldโs second-largest economy.โ -
Cloned dogs
China’s first cloned police dog reports for duty / SCMP
โA cloned puppy, which was bred using DNA from an award-winning police sniffer dog, has started training with a forceโฆat Kunming Police Dog Base in Yunnan province.โ -
Electric buses โ diesel be gone
Forget Tesla, It’s China’s e-buses that are denting oil demand / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โBy the end of this year, a cumulative 270,000 barrels a day of diesel demand will have been displaced by electric buses, most of it in ChinaโฆThatโs more than three times the displacement by all the worldโs passenger electric vehicles (a market where Tesla has a share of about 12 percent.).โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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China pats itself on the back for Pakistan-India diplomacyโฆ
China ‘helped defuse Pakistan-India tension’ after Kashmir attack / Reuters
Chinese Vice President Wang Qishan says Beijing backs Pakistan’s efforts to manage relations with neighbours / SCMP -
โฆBut Pakistan and India have a different view
Pakistan tells China of ‘deteriorating situation’ in Indian Kashmir / Reuters
Indian traders burn Chinese goods in protest over blacklisting veto, trade / Reuters -
Tibet
Dalai Lama contemplates Chinese gambit after his death / Reuters
โThe Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, said on Monday it was possible that once he dies his incarnation could be found in India, where he has lived in exile for 60 years, and warned that any other successor named by China would not be respected.โ -
Uyghurs abroad
‘Practicing Islam is practically forbidden’: How Sweden granted refugee status to all Uighurs from Xinjiang, China / Hong Kong Free Press
By Jojje Olsson, the Swedish journalist who, last September, reported on a Uyghur family that had been denied asylum in Sweden and were about to be deported to Xinjiang.
China is trying to destroy Uighur culture. Weโre trying to save it. / Washington Post
By Bahram Sintash, a U.S.-based Uyghur activist. -
Kenyaโs debt
Kenya’s Debt Repayment to China Doubles / Kenyans
โDebt repayments to China are recorded to have more than doubled from Ksh6.3 billion paid in the July-December 2016 period, to the Ksh15.43 billion [$150 million] spent on servicing loans from China during a similar period in 2018โฆChinaโs grip on Kenya took a firm hold back in 2009 when they financed the construction of the Thika Superhighway, during President Mwai Kibakiโs tenure.โ -
Taiwanese activist in detention
After two years in detention, Taiwan activist Lee Ming-che faces ill-treatment and declining health in China / Hong Kong Free Press
โMarch 19 marks two years since police in Chinaโs Guangdong province forcibly disappeared Taiwanese democracy activist Lee Ming-che [ๆๆๅฒ Lว Mรญngzhรฉ]. Authorities eventually charged Lee with โsubversion of state powerโ for having online discussions about transitional justice and democracy in Taiwan and sharing books on human rights with friends in the mainland.โ -
Philippines seeks faster loans and investment from Beijing
Philippines goes cap in hand to China as water shortage bites / SCMP
โThe Philippines has gone cap in hand to China as it struggles with a severe water shortage that has seen taps in its capital city run dryโฆA delegation from Manila landed in China on Tuesday hoping to attract further infrastructure investment and speed up the delivery of loans Beijing has pledged for an irrigation project and a controversial dam that government ministers say will ease the water shortage.โ -
The lousy economics of panda diplomacy
Pandanomics is a grey area, but to us the value of giant pandas is black and white / The Conversation
โThis is not to say overseas zoo placements have no conservation value. But other strategic aims, such as improving Chinaโs public image and consolidating trade relationships, loom largeโฆ
โฆConsider Adelaide Zooโs costs even with the federal government covering the pandasโ A$1 million annual rental fee. From the outset, the zoo went heavily into debt to build a specialist panda enclosure (at a cost of about A$8 million [$5.67 million]).โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Paying for flattery from strangers
In China’s “Kua Kua” Chat Groups, People Pay to Be Praised / Whatโs on Weibo
โA new phenomenon has become a hot topic on Chinese social media these days. โKua kuaโ groups (ๅคธๅคธ็พค kuฤ kuฤ qรบn) are chat groups where people share some things about themselves โ even if they are negative things โ and where other people will always tell them how great they are, no matter what.โ -
Black market for human ova
Student reveals details of selling her eggs on China’s black market to repay US$9,000 debt / SCMP
โA university student in central China has revealed how she underwent two surgical procedures to sell her eggs to illegal fertility agencies so that she could repay a 60,000 yuan ($9,000) debt.โ -
Guangzhou Metro apologizes to Goth
For background, see: Guangzhou subway picks fight with Chinese Goth, because โhorrifyingโ
Long in the dark side of the public consciousness, Chinaโs goth community (if there is one) recently found itself at the center of attention after a woman in full gothic attire was barred from taking the subway in Guangzhou because of her โhorrifyingโ look.
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The latest: China’s goths protest after woman told to remove ‘distressing’ make-up on subway / Guardian
Chinese metro apologizes after goth makeup removal demand / AFP -
Hippie culture in Yunnan ย
Why Daliโs hippie migrants are a model for Chinese communities / Sixth Tone
Q&A with โa prominent member of Yunnanโs alternative migrant clan [who] says the inclusive and creative community has much to teach China.โ -
Euthanasia ย
Why China should start planning for legal euthanasia / Sixth Tone
โEuthanasia is illegal in China and in most of the world. But in a country where an estimated 255 million people โ almost 18 percent of the population โ will be at or above 60 by 2020, end-of-life care is a critical, if still largely taboo topic.โ -
Gender-bending fashion
Suits to dominate Chinese womenโs fashion in 2019, report says / Sixth Tone
โBoth male and female shoppers are making bolder, more gender-bending clothing choices, according to online marketplace Taobao.โ -
Quackery gone wrong
Woman in China nearly dies after injecting herself with fruit juice / BBC
โThe 51-year-old suffered liver, kidney, heart and lung damage and was put into intensive care for five days. There were over 20 kinds of fruit in the intravenous injection.โ
VIDEO ON SUPCHINA
Woman asked to remove heavy makeup by subway security in Guangzhou
A female college student was asked to remove her Goth-style heavy makeup by subway security guards before being allowed to board the train at Xiaogang Station on the Guangzhou Metro on March 10 so that her makeup wouldnโt scare other passengers.
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
Chinese Corner: Why Chinese women donโt use tampons
In the past few years, big firms like Procter & Gamble and domestic startups like Femme ้็ง have been working hard to advertise tampons to Chinese women. But the efforts havenโt really paid off. Today, tampons remain a hard sell in the Chinese market. Why? Also in this week’s Chinese Corner: the aftermath of the closing of the Internet Addiction Treatment Center in Linyi, an independent bookstore in Beijing bucking trends, and China’s middle-aged actresses speak out against both sexism and age discrimination.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Middle Earth: Episode #5: Video Games with Chinese Characteristics
This edition of the Middle Earth podcast takes a look at Chinaโs video-game industry โ a hugely popular business in a nation where over half the population regularly plays. In 2015, the size of the video-game market in China officially surpassed that of the U.S., making the Chinese video-game industry the biggest and most profitable in the world. Listen in as experts discuss the unique features of Chinese video-gaming culture and their implications for this constantly evolving market. Featuring: Ava Deng – translation manager; Sebastien Francois – overseas operations manager; Max Wang – narrative designer; and, as usual, your host, Aladin Farre.
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Subscribe to Middle Earth on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Tea picking in Hangzhou
A farmer picks tea in a tea garden in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, where the famous Longjing tea (or Dragon Well tea ้พไบ่ถ lรณngjวngchรก) is originally from. Photo by Michael Yamashita.