Trump fumes as yuan breaks seven
Dear Access member,
Breaking โ update to our techno-trade war section below: The U.S. Treasury has designated China as a currency manipulator.
On a happier subject in a day of gloomy news about China: We have at least one story today that shows how people can adapt and find their own space while living in an authoritarian country. While gay marriage remains a far-off rainbow dream in China, same-sex couples are naming their partners as legal guardians to give them some of the protections afforded to married couples.ย
Itโs also a nice illustration of the Chinese saying ไธๆๆฟ็ญไธๆๅฏน็ญ shร ng yวu zhรจngcรจ xiร yวu duรฌcรจ โ โThose who govern make policies while their subjects find ways of getting around them.โย ย
You can read about it on The China Project, or in summary below.ย
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chiefย
1. Yuan breaks past seven-dollar valuation, Trump fumes
Alexandra Stevenson of the New York Times reports (porous paywall):ย
Chinaโs currency weakened past the psychologically important point of 7 to the American dollar for the first time in more than a decade, a move that reflects the growing severity of the trade war with the United States and that could indicate Beijingโs growing desire to find ways to retaliate against President Trump.ย
The renminbi traded in mainland China on Monday morning at roughly 7.02 to the dollar, compared with about 6.88 late on Friday. A higher number represents a weaker currency. The last time Chinaโs currency was weaker than 7 to the dollar was in 2008, as the financial crisis mounted.ย
Why did China do it? โThe People’s Bank of China attributed the weakening of the currency beyond 7 yuan per U.S. dollar on Monday to factors including unilateral and protectionist measures, as well as the expectation of additional tariffs on Chinese goods, according to an online statement,โ according to Xinhua (or see this detailed Q&A in Chinese).ย
In another act of retaliation, China canceled purchases of soybeans and other crops that Trump had earlier cheered plans for, according to Bloomberg (porous paywall).
Todayโs news โsparked a worldwide sell-off in markets,โ reports CNN. โThe Dow closed down 767 points, and the Nasdaq Composite โ a proxy for the technology companies that will be most harmed by a trade war โ suffered its longest losing streak since November 2016.โ Further gloom from the financial sector: โChina retaliation is โ11โ on scale of 1 to 10, Wall Street warns,โ says Bloomberg (porous paywall), citing a number of nervous analysts. โMorgan Stanley thinks a global recession will come if the trade war escalates through the U.S. raising tariffs to 25 percent โon all imports from China for 4-6 months,โโ reports CNBC.
โA forever trade war looms as Trump deepens battle with Chinaโ is the headline of a Bloomberg piece (porous paywall) on the latest state of play. Looms? Weโve been pessimistic since July 6, 2018, when the first Trump tariffs were placed on Chinese goods. For many months now, we have been arguing that there that there is no end in sight.
Trump is fuming. He still does not understand how tariffs work. From his Twitter account:ย
China dropped the price of their currency to an almost a historic low. Itโs called โcurrency manipulation.โ Are you listening Federal Reserve? This is a major violation which will greatly weaken China over time!
Based on the historic currency manipulation by China, it is now even more obvious to everyone that Americans are not paying for the Tariffs โ they are being paid for compliments of China, and the U.S. is taking in tens of Billions of Dollars! China has always used currency manipulation to steal our businesses and factories, hurt our jobs, depress our workersโ wages and harm our farmersโ prices. Not anymore!
China is intent on continuing to receive the hundreds of Billions of Dollars they have been taking from the U.S. with unfair trade practices and currency manipulation. So one-sided, it should have been stopped many years ago!
Reports from other fronts of the U.S.-China techno-trade war:ย
Pharma security: โThe Trump administration sees the increasing use of Chinese-made active ingredients in drugs taken by U.S. troops and civilians as a national security risk,โ reports Bloomberg (porous paywall). China is โthe worldโs largest supplier of active pharmaceutical ingredients, or API, providing key components to drugmakers worldwide.โ See also this January 2019 story from the Military Officers Association of America: How U.S. dependence on Chinese medicines and components could pose a security threat.ย ย
โTaiwanโs Foxconn is exploring the sale of its new $8.8 billion display panel factory in China, people familiar with the matter told Reuters, as demand for the product wanes amid an intensifying U.S.-China trade war,โ reports Reuters. ย
U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper โon Sunday warned of Chinaโs โdestabilizingโ behavior in the Indo-Pacific region,โ according to The Hill. The U.S. wonโt โstand by idly while any one nation attempts to reshape the region to its favor at the expense of others, and we know our allies and partners will not either,โ Esper said.
2. Hong Kong strikes escalate into city-wide clashes
In Hong Kong, antigovernment protesters โfrom across societyโฆmounted their fiercest challenge to the authorities on Monday, disrupting more than 200 airline flights, occupying malls and blocking roadways and rail lines to snarl the commute for hundreds of thousands of workers,โ reports the New York Times (porous paywall).ย
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โMore than 2,330 aviation workers joined the strike, according to the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions, leading to the cancellation of more than 100 flights to and from one of the world’s busiest airports,โ according to CNN. โStrikers included teachers, lifeguards at beaches, security workers, construction workers — and almost 14,000 people from the engineering sector.
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The strike โescalated into city-wide skirmishes between protesters and riot police,โ reports Hong Kong Free Press. โPolice fired tear gas in at least seven different districts.โ Also from HKFP, โHong Kong police say they have fired some 1,000 rounds of tear gas, 160 rubber bullets and 150 sponge grenades since large-scale anti-extradition bill protests erupted on June 9. 420 people have been arrested.โ
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Todayโs protests are not over yet. To see what is going on right now, click here to find video livestreams from multiple locations in Hong Kong.ย
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Rhetoric from Beijing and the Hong Kong government is hardening. โBeijing has reiterated its โunflagging supportโ for embattled Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam (ๆ้ญๆๅจฅ Lรญn-Zhรจng Yuรจ’รฉ) and warned that the city was entering โa most dangerous phaseโ with rampant violence on the streets,โ reports the South China Morning Post.
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Party mouthpiece the Peopleโs Daily published a front page editorial (in Chinese) on August 5 expressing support for the Hong Kong police, while a separate commentary (in Chinese) said that said ongoing โchaosโ in Hong Kong โwill not be tolerated.โ Xinhua News Agency droned on that โany attempt to endanger China’s sovereignty and security, challenge the authority of the central government and the sanctity of the Basic Law of the HKSAR, or use Hong Kong as a channel for infiltration and sabotage against the mainland is an act that crosses the bottom line, and is absolutely impermissible.โย
3. Same-sex couples name their partners as legal guardiansย ย ย
For gay and lesbian couples in China, being denied the right to marry is not only an indication of the countryโs unwillingness to grant them the status and dignity that heterosexual couples enjoy, but it also poses real-life challenges that make the community even more vulnerable: the lack of clarity around property rights after death, and the question as to who can make medical decisions for them if they are incapacitated.ย
Sohu News reports (in Chinese) that more and more same-sex couples of all age ranges in China are naming their partners as their legal guardians, a practice that is common among frail seniors in China but not among young adults.
For details, please click through to The China Project.ย
โJiayun Feng
4. Weak tea from the Canadian governmentย
The Canadian government appears to be too timid to confidently challenge China on the arbitrary detention of two Canadians, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor. Reuters reports:
Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said on Friday she met her Chinese counterpart, Wรกng Yรฌ ็ๆฏ , to discuss tensions following Canadaโs December arrest of a Huawei Technologies Co executive on a U.S. warrant, and the subsequent detention of two Canadians by China.
โThe fact that we were able to speak and discuss these issues face-to-face, directly with one another, absolutely is a positive step,โ Freeland said in a teleconference from Bangkok, where she was attending an annual east Asia summit.
Trudeau, who spoke briefly to Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a G20 summit in Japan in June, has faced repeated attacks from Conservative leader Andrew Scheer, his main rival, over his handling of the affairโฆ
โCanadian families, Canadian workers, Canadian farmers, and Canadian job-creators are paying the price for your weak leadership,โ Scheer wrote in a letter to Trudeau last month, calling on the government to take tough countermeasures, including examining retaliatory tariffs.
5. Absurd censorshipย
Here are two stories that illustrate the pervasive and invasive nature of Party control of media in China:
Not even Mickey Mouse and Pleasant Goat can breathe without the icy hand of the censor around their throats in this year of sensitive anniversaries. The South China Morning Post reports:
In a meeting with top censors last week, Niรจ Chรฉnxรญ ่่พฐๅธญ, deputy director of the Communist Partyโs Propaganda Department and head of the National Radio and Television Administration, said they had to stay alert โevery secondโ to make sure content in cartoons and documentaries supported the leadership of President Xi Jinping, state media reported on Wednesday.
The production of maps is highly regulated in China, and woe to anyone who produces a book, tourist souvenir, or TV program that does not include every single piece of territory claimed by the Peopleโs Republic. The South China Morning Post reports on another case of the Partyโs paranoid micromanagement of information:ย
The Ministry of Natural Resources is investigating popular Chinese television drama Go Go Squid! after a map was seen in an episode last week that did not show Taiwan and Hainan Island as part of China.
It was pointed out by Chinese social media users after the episode โ which showed the map for 19 seconds โ aired on Wednesday.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Elon Musk wants to bore China
Elon Musk’s Boring Company to launch China branch this month / Xinhua
โElon Musk’s the Boring Company will launch its China branch later this month, Musk has confirmed on Twitter.โ Musk will be in China for an artificial intelligence conference (in Chinese).ย -
Chinaโs first 5G phone
ZTE releases first 5G phone in China / The Verge
ZTE has released Chinaโs first 5G smartphone, with the launch of its Axon 10 Pro 5G. But as The Verge reports:ย
Although Chinese customers can get their hands on a 5G device starting today, they wonโt have access to a 5G network to run it on until around October.ย
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Chinaโs first 5G phone owner is a 78-year-old retiree / Sixth Tone
A 78-year-old retired electrical engineer became the first person in China to own ZTEโs 5G phone, going into ecommerce giant Suningโs offline shop at midnight on Monday to pick it up.ย
In a video recorded by sales staff at Suningโs offline store, Yang can be seen planting a kiss on the phone before testing it out by downloading a few apps on the storeโs built-in 5G network in a matter of seconds.
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Shanghaiโs free-er trade zone?
China plans to drop all duties at Shanghai Free Trade Zone: sources / Reuters
China is planning a pilot project to drop all duties and ease procedures at its Shanghai Free Trade Zone, three people familiar with the matter said, as Beijing looks to position itself as a leader in promoting free trade amid its grinding trade war with Washington.ย
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Shanghaiโs Free Trade Zone is home to Teslaโs Chinese operations, which last month reached an agreement over taxes (porous paywall) with the Shanghai government.
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Autonomous vehicles
Chinaโs Didi Chuxing spins out self-driving car unit / The Financial Times (paywall)
Didi Chuxing, the Chinese ride-hailing group, has spun out its autonomous driving unit as an independent business as the lossmaking company attempts to raise funds with a โcapital winterโ unsettling technology companies across the country.
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The move comes as Didi courts foreign investors such as Toyota and BP while it faces heavy competition domestically with Alibaba and Tencent, among others.
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Patriotism driving Huawei sales
Promotions and patriotism: ‘Battle mode’ Huawei sees China smartphone sales surge / Reuters
Huaweiโs sales grew by 23 percent despite its U.S. blacklisting, as Huaweiโs advertising campaigns portraying it as an unfair victim of American politics have found sympathy among Chinese consumers. -
Artificial intelligence in education
China has started a grand experiment in AI education. It could reshape how the world learns. / MIT Technology Review
Experts agree AI will be important in 21st-century educationโbut how? While academics have puzzled over best practices, China hasnโt waited around. In the last few years, the countryโs investment in AI-enabled teaching and learning has exploded. Tech giants, startups, and education incumbents have all jumped in. Tens of millions of students now use some form of AI to learn โ whether through extracurricular tutoring programs like Squirrelโs, through digital learning platforms like 17ZuoYe, or even in their main classrooms. Itโs the worldโs biggest experiment on AI in education, and no one can predict the outcome.
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American banks in China
Morgan Stanley buys 2 percent needed for control of China securities joint venture / Reuters
โMorgan Stanley moved closer to taking a controlling stake in its Chinese securities joint venture after picking up a 2 percent share for $54 million, exchange filings show.โ
JPMorgan set for historic majority stake in China funds JV: sources / Reuters
โJPMorgan was on Friday poised to become the first foreign company to hold a majority stake in a Chinese mutual fund business, two sources said, setting a precedent that one analyst said would trigger a wave of similar transactions.โ -
Big Four banking woes
World’s biggest banks sink to record lows as China pain spreads / Bloomberg via Yahoo
Stock investors have never been so downbeat on the worldโs biggest banks. Chinaโs โbig fourโ state-owned lenders, which together control more than $14 trillion of assets, tumbled to record-low valuations on Monday amid mounting concern that Beijing will encourage them to bail out smaller peers.ย
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Will Chinese investors be able to buy shares in Hong Kongโlisted Chinese companies?
China prepares to allow investors to buy Xiaomi, Meituan shares / Bloomberg via Yahoo
Chinese authorities proposed rule changes that would for the first time allow local investors to buy shares of some popular technology companies listed in Hong Kong โ including, potentially, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
The countryโs stock exchanges on Friday published draft regulations that would bring stocks with different classes of voting rights into the trading links between the mainland and the former British colony, giving onshore traders access to some of Chinaโs hottest startups.
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย
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Swine fever
Russia reports ASF outbreak near its border with China / Reuters
โAn outbreak of African Swine Fever (ASF) has been detected at a small farm in Russia’s Primorsk region near its border with China, Russia’s agriculture safety watchdog said on Monday.โย
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Xinjiang concentration camps
Retired Uyghur finance bureaucrat, 75, โgraduatesโ from Xinjiang internment camp / Radio Free Asia
โA 75-year-old Uyghur retiree from a township financial management office in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) has โgraduatedโ after 13 months in an internment camp, local police and his wife told RFAโs Uyghur Service on Friday.โ
Activists scramble to prevent Uyghur man’s deportation to China / Guardian
โAblikim Yusuf, who had been living in Pakistan, faces detention and torture if he is sent to China, say supporters.โ -
The Communist Partyโs annual summer retreat
Meeting with Chinaโs top academics marks the start of annual Beidaihe summit / SCMP
โA senior Communist Party official met the nationโs leading academics and researchers at the seaside resort town of Beidaihe on Saturday, signalling the start of an annual closed-door agenda-setting meeting of Chinaโs political elites.โ -
The North Pole
America is losing the battle of the Arctic / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
From a Bloomberg tweet about the article:
No wonder Russia and China are so interested in the Arctic. By some estimates, the Arctic contains:ย
30% of the world’s natural gasย
Over $1 trillion in strategically important rare-earth mineralsย ย
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Another rights lawyer flees China
Chinese rights lawyer Chen Jiangang flees to US to escape ‘persecution’ in China / SCMP
A Chinese human rights lawyer and his family have arrived in the United States after fleeing threats of “persecution” in China. Lawyer Chรฉn Jiร ngฤng ้ณๅปบๅ, his wife, and two children arrived in New York on Saturday.
See also the April 1 statement by Chen after he was blocked from leaving China to take part in a fellowship program in the U.S. -
Retaliation for Grace Meng asylum
China suspends cooperation with France on police affairs, says report / Guardian
โChina has cut off all cooperation with France on police affairs, after Paris gave asylum to the Chinese wife of a former Interpol chief now in jail on corruption charges, the French newspaper Le Monde reported [in French].โ -
Crackdown on foreign teachers continues
Five foreign teachers caught without proper work visa in Foshan / That’s Mags
โIn late July, Foshan police tracked down [in Chinese] five foreign teachers who were working illegally in China. The instructors were teaching at an English training center inside a shopping mall near Qiandeng lake in Nanhai district.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Sexual abuse of children
China to develop national child sex offender database / That’s Mags
โIn the wake of a horrifying child rape allegation against Shanghai real estate tycoon Wรกng Zhรจnhuรก ็ๆฏๅ that surfaced last month, Chinaโs Supreme Peopleโs Procuratorate declared that the government will establish a national database of child sex offenders.โ -
Animated film
โNezhaโ on track to be Chinaโs third-highest earner / Varietyย
Chinese animation Nรฉzhฤ ๅชๅ has proven itself China โs surprise hit of the summer, and is on track outstrip โAvengers: Endgameโ to become China โs third highest-ever grossing filmโฆย
As of early Monday evening, the dark horse 3-D title from an unknown new director who goes by the name of Jiวozi ้ฅบๅญ, or โDumpling,โ has already grossed $348 million (RMB2.45 billion), cracking the top 10 of the mainlandโs highest-grossing films of all time.
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Competitive parenting
Chinese parents feel the strain as schools break for summer / SCMP
โCompetitive parents are cramming their childrenโs free time with study tours and extra classes.โ
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
Mandopop Month: WayVโs โTake Offโ sets the bar for Chinese idol groups
On the surface, WayV, which debuted in January with a digital EP called The Vision, is another attempt by Korean entertainment conglomerate SM Entertainment to make a footprint in the Chinese market. But WayV operates under a China-exclusive label, Label V, and just might be setting the bar for Chinese boy groups.
Kuora: Chinese opinions on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Kaiser Kuo writes that on balance, Chinese don’t have qualms about the use of the atomic bomb by the U.S. to compel a Japanese surrender, and believe it was necessary.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Early Access: Wealth and Power: Intellectuals in China
This week, while Kaiser is vacationing on the Carolina coast, we are running a March 2014 interview with Orville Schell and David Moser. The discussion in this episode centers on the book co-authored by Schell and John Delury, Wealth and Power: Chinaโs Long March to the Twenty-First Century, and the role of select members of Chinese intelligentsia in the formation of modern China.
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Sinica Early Access is an ad-free, full-length preview of this weekโs Sinica Podcast, exclusively for The China Project Access members. Listen by plugging this RSS feed directly into your podcast app.ย
PHOTO OF THE DAY
BEไบฌjing No. 11: Cleaners
This photo from Liangmaqiao in September 2016 is part of BEไบฌjing, a 30-part photo essay project by Gregorio Soravito.