Trade war by Twitter, and growing legal weed in Yunnan
1. Did China try to โrenegotiateโ deal, spurring Trumpโs tweets?
Eight minutes after midnight in Beijing this morning, shocking news came from Donald Trumpโs Twitter feed:
Global markets were thrown for a loop. Just days ago, the yes men surrounding Trump such as his treasury secretary and chief of staff indicated that trade talks were in โthe final lapsโ and reaching the last โcouple of weeks.โ The China Project noted that Trump appeared desperate for a deal, as his negotiating team softened one hardline demand after several others.
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Today, the S&P 500 โfell by as much as 1.6 percent before clawing back some of its losses by middayโฆChinaโs CSI 300 index of major Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed stocks tumbled 5.8 percent, marking its worst day since February 2016,โ according to the FT (paywall).
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Beijing was also caught off guard, judging by state media silence for over twelve hours according to SCMP, but lead negotiator Liรบ Hรจ ๅ้นค could still be coming to Washington this week, the SCMP separately reports.
What prompted the tweets? The Washington Post reported comments from officials a few minutes ago:
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U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said: โOver the course of the last week or so, we have seen an erosion in commitments by China. I would say retreating from specific commitments that had already been made. That, in our view, is unacceptable.โ
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Lighthizer said that the changes were โsubstantialโ and that he โwould use the word reneging on prior commitments.โ Bloomberg earlier reported that โChina had previously agreed to change its laws in the text of the deal,โ but that last weekโs negotiations saw the Chinese step back from that agreement.
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The U.S. still โexpects Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and a Chinese team for further talks in Washington Thursday evening and Friday,โ according to Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
More on trade talks and tensions:
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Xi thinks โfifty-fiftyโ chance talks fail
Chinaโs Xi faces a โbig gambleโ after Trump rebuke / FT (paywall)
โDuring a closed-door meeting with Austrian chancellor Sebastian Kurz last week, Xi Jinping was asked what he thought the chances were for a successful conclusion of this weekโs China-US trade talks in Washington. โFifty-fifty,โ the Chinese president replied, according to three people briefed on the discussion.โ -
Trumpโs hard line enjoys bipartisan support in Washington
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Twitter: “Hang tough on China, President @realDonaldTrump. Donโt back down. Strength is the only way to win with China.” -
Delayed IPO for DouYu
Chinese startup DouYu delays U.S. IPO launch on trade jitters / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
The video game live-streaming platform, which โinitially planned to start its IPO roadshow Monday U.S. time, is considering postponing the launch by at least a week, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. DouYu, backed by Tencent Holdings Ltd., had been aiming to seek about $500 million, one of the people said.โ
โLucas Niewenhuis
2. Farming weed in China
The New York Times reports (porous paywall):
[Yunnan and Heilongjiang] are quietly leading a boom in cultivating cannabis to produce cannabidiol, or CBD, the nonintoxicating compound that has become a consumer health and beauty craze in the United States and beyond.
They are doing so even though cannabidiol has not been authorized for consumption in China, a country with some of the strictest drug-enforcement policies in the world.
After signing the United Nations Convention on Psychotropic Substances in 1985, China banned all cultivation of marijuana and hemp. But in 2010, farmers and companies in Yunnan were allowed to resume production of hemp for clothing. In 2017, Heilongjiang also legalized cannabis cultivation.
As China has not approved CBD for use in foods or medicines, companies producing it in China are looking to export to the U.S. and elsewhere.
See also:
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Yunnan ready to cash in on cannabis boom / Asia Times
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Green gold: how China quietly grew into a cannabis superpower / SCMP
3. Xinjiang internment camps now in mainstream American news
In the fall of last year, โthe United States was on the verge of imposing sanctions on top Chinese individuals and companiesโ for their involvement in Xinjiang internment camps. It did not happen because โsome administration officials said doing so would jeopardize trade talks with Beijing,โ reports the New York Times (porous paywall).
However, the issue is attracting much more attention from the mainstream press in the U.S. and elsewhere, and not just in the China sections. Just today, the influential-in-Washington newsletter Axios led with โ1 big thing: World shrugs as China locks up 1 million Muslims,โ while the New York Timesโs popular The Daily podcast published The Chinese surveillance state, part 1. Other coverage in the international press:
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Will Chinaโs Uighur detentions spur U.S. sanctions? Pompeo wonโt say / NYT (porous paywall)
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The glaring absence in Trumpโs showdown with China / Washington Post
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China putting minority Muslims in ‘concentration camps,’ U.S. says / Reuters
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US accuses China of using ‘concentration camps’ against Muslim minority / Reuters via Guardian
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China bans Muslims from fasting Ramadan in Xinjiang / Al Jazeera
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Thousands rally in Indonesia to protest Chinaโs crackdown on Uyghur Muslims / Radio Free Asia
Related:
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Security lapse exposed a Chinese smart city surveillance system / TechCrunch
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Airbnb listings in China are littered with racist discrimination / Wired UK
4. The Canadian China rethink
In an opinion piece for the Globe and Mail, David Mulroney โ Canadaโs ambassador to China from 2009 to 2012 โ writes:
Canadaโs primary foreign-policy challenge with China has been clear for months now. We have to secure the freedom of detained Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, and save the lives of fellow Canadians Robert Schellenberg and Fan Wei, who face death sentences from a murky Chinese legal system that takes instruction from the Chinese state. Our message to allies is clear, too: we all have a stake in pushing back against a China that uses hostage diplomacy, economic blackmail and even the threat of execution to achieve its objectives.
But thereโs another equally challenging China task on the horizon. We need to start thinking about what weโve learned from this terrible episode, and how it should shape our future relationship with Chinaโฆ
โฆWe should start by skipping events dedicated to Chinaโs boundless appetite for international self-promotion or the delusion that China is a democracy in the making
Mulroney essentially recommends getting tough on China in ways that Canada is able, and seeking alternative markets for products such as canola to ensure that when Beijing is displeased, the Canadian economy does not tank.
Note: Mulroney recently joined a Sinica Podcast together with former Mexican ambassador to China Jorge Guajardo.
Meanwhile, in the antipodes, Australiaโs political and business elite remain as divided as ever over China. The countryโs former prime minister Paul Keating publicly attacked the heads of his countryโs intelligence agencies as โnutters,โ reports the Sydney Morning Herald.
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Keating praised China as “a great state,” and predicted that if the Labor Party won the next election, the โgovernment would โmake a huge shiftโ in Australiaโs China strategy by accepting Beijingโs right to express its growing power.โ
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Keating urged his Labor Partyโs candidate for next prime minister to โclean outโ the security agency ASIO: โThey’ve lost their strategic bearings, these organizations.โ ย
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Keating attacked by name John Garnaut, a former Sydney Morning Herald and Age China correspondent who became an adviser to former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull and co-wrote an influential, classified report on Chinese influence in Australia.
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Keating is on the advisory board of the China Development Bank, as several commentators have pointed out.
โJeremy Goldkorn
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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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Coffee and cheese tea
Starbucks’ China rival Luckin seeks to raise up to $586.5 million in IPO / Reuters
โLuckin Coffee Inc, the Chinese challenger to Starbucks Corp, is looking to raise up to $586.5 million, its filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange on Monday showed.โ
Also: Is Luckin Coffee a real business? / China Tech Investor Podcast
A schmear campaign aims at all the tea in China / WSJ (paywall)
Dairy giant Fonterra is egging on consumers to take their traditional beverage with cream cheeseโฆ Known as nวi gร i chรก ๅฅถ็่ถ (โmilk-lidded teaโ) in Chinese, the drink is made using a base of tea topped with a cap of cream and cream cheese that is whipped together until it forms a light, fluffy texture. Tea houses encourage drinkers to sip it at a 45-degree angle for the ideal mouthful. And itโs become a bona fide phenomenon.
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Tech winter
Sequoia China to cut up to 20 percent of investment staff as tech growth slows – sources / Reuters
โSequoia Capital China, widely viewed as a bellwether for Chinese tech investment, is set to lay off as much as 20 percent of investment staff as a slowdown in the countryโs tech sector saps appetite for risk, said two people with knowledge of the matter.โ
Video game license approvals plummet in April / TechNode
โChinaโs game regulator, the State Administration of Press and Publication (SAPP), has drastically reduced the number of game approvals in April, approving licenses to only 40 titles compared with the 170 granted in March.โ -
Pharma
India’s biggest drugmaker wades into Chinaโs war on health care costs / Bloomberg via Caixin
Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. is scouting for a partner in China to help it win a larger piece of the worldโs second-largest drug market, where the government is on a mission to drive down the cost of health care. With a recovery underway in its U.S. business, Sun Pharmaโs billionaire founder Dilip Shanghvi is homing in on China and believes market watchers are underestimating the potential there for Indiaโs largest drugmaker.
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Importing fresh produce
Alibaba’s grand strategy to feed China’s middle class / TechNode
Increasing food imports and an escalating โfresh produce warโ โ which has already seen some early casualties โ make access to high quality overseas suppliers a key competitive advantage. Although all online grocery players are in one way or another dabbling in direct sourcing, supplier partnerships or even vertically-integrated food production, none have a supply chain strategy that is as comprehensive or as ambitious as that of Alibaba.
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A hit in China for Marvel
Avengers: Endgame takes a cool US$178 million at Chinese box office over Labor Day holiday / SCMP
Chinese moviegoers spent 1.5 billion yuan ($222.7 million) on tickets over the four-day break for International Workers Day. Avengers: Endgame accounted for more than 1.2 billion yuan ($180 million) of the total. -
Wine and intellectual property
Penfolds ‘copycat’ ordered to pay $800k for trademark infringement in China / Australian ABC
Courts in Shanghai and Melbourne have ordered an Australian company to pay another Australian company, which owns well-known wine brand Penfolds, AU$826,000 ($578,000) for infringing its trademark in China.
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:
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Bird-watching in Beijing
Birds of Beijing: Chinaโs capital is port on โavian super highwayโ / SCMP
The amazing birdlife of Beijing and a profile of Terry Townshend, the man behind the website Birding Beijing. You can hear a Sinica Podcast with Terry here.
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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China-U.S. rivalry in the South China Sea and the Arctic
Beijing โwarns offโ US warships in South China Sea as tensions rise / SCMP
โChina expressed its โstrong oppositionโ on Monday after two U.S. warships sailed near disputed islands in the South China Sea. It is the third time this year that Washington has challenged Beijingโs maritime claims in the region.โ
โEntitled to exactly nothingโ: U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warns China and Russia against aggression in Arctic / SCMP
โThe Trump administration warned China and Russia on Monday that the US will not stand for aggressive moves in the Arctic region, which is rapidly opening up to development and commerce as temperatures warm and sea ice melts.โ -
No Huawei for Dutch 5G
Dutch telecom KPN won’t use Huawei for ‘core’ 5G network / Reuters
โDutch telecom firm Royal KPN NV said on Friday it would select a Western supplier to build its core 5G mobile network, making it one of the first European operators to make clear it would not pick Chinaโs Huawei for such work.โ -
Chinaโs military through the eyes of the American Defense Department
Military and security developments involving the Peopleโs Republic of China 2019 ย / U.S. Dept. of Defense
The report is wide in scope, and goes beyond an assessment of military readiness to include Made in China 2025 (see The China Project explainer) and influence operations. One notable conclusion of the report: Belt and Road โwill probably drive military overseas basing through a perceived need to provide securityโ for Belt and Road projects. -
Taiwan presidential elections
Recognize Taiwanโs title and then weโll talk, Foxconn billionaire Terry Gou tells Beijing / SCMP
Foxconnโs billionaire chairman and aspiring Taiwanese presidential candidate Terry Gou [้ญๅฐ้ Guล Tรกimรญng] has called on Beijing to recognize the โRepublic of China,โ Taiwanโs official title. Gou also said he had no plan to meet Chinese President Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ, countering critics who claim he would sell out the self-ruled island because of his multibillion U.S. dollar manufacturing empire on the mainland.
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Electric bikes start deadly fire in Guilin
Five Chinese university students killed in dormitory fire sparked by electric scooters / SCMP
Five people were killed in a โblaze started when electric scooters parked near the stairs on the ground floor caught fire. A door on the ground floor that was installed to prevent the theft of the scooters hindered students as they tried to escape.โ -
Human trafficking and murder
China executes six for killing workers in mining compensation scam / SCMP
โSix men were executed in northern China last month for killing mine workers and then claiming millions of yuan in compensation from the pit owners.โ
Pakistan busts prostitution ring that sent young women to China / Reuters
Pakistani authorities said they arrested eight Chinese nationals and four Pakistanis on suspicion of operating a prostitution ring using fake marriages to take young Pakistani women to China. An official โsaid several gangs were believed to be operating, mainly targeting members of Pakistanโs Christian minority.โ -
The uses and abuses of May Fourth ย
Anniversaries new & old in 2019 โ Remembering 5.4, accounting for 4.28 / China Heritage
Xi Jinping tries to crash the May Fourth Movementโs centenary / New Yorker (porous paywall)
See also on The China Project: 1919 to 2019: A century of youth protest and ideological conflict around May 4, by Eric Fish.
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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The slow death of Cantonese
Why Cantonese lost to Mandarin on its own turf / SCMP
Two main reasons cited: government campaigns to standardize the use of Mandarin in primary and high schools, and the dwindling appeal of Hong Kong as compared with the rise of Guangzhou and Shenzhen. -
The social credit song
โBe as good as your wordโ: The Chinese social credit song is here / Whatโs on Weibo
โFirst published April 30 2019 โBe as Good as Your Wordโ is a pop song featuring young Chinese celebritiesโฆpart of a bigger initiative propagating Chinaโs social credit system among the younger generation.โ -
Mental health in manufacturing
Factory psychology: My time counseling Chinaโs migrant workers / Sixth Tone
โAs one of a handful of factory-affiliated mental health professionals in a city of 5 million industrial workers, I know firsthand just how hard it is for migrants to find help.โ -
Awful wedding customs
Chinese county vows to put an end to violent and vulgar ritual of wedding day hazing / SCMP
โA county government in eastern China has vowed to crack down on traditional wedding hazing rituals that are notorious for their violence and vulgarity. Practices such as tying grooms to trees or telephone poles and pouring beer and sauce on them would be banned.โ
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
โTrump on Show,โ reviewed: Cantonese Opera meets Donald Trump (and Mao, Kim Jong-un, Ivanka, etc.)
Li Kui-mingโs Trump on Show is, like its title character, over the top, sensationalist, and unpredictable. But is it enough to make Cantonese opera great again?
Kuora: Zhuge Liang and the myth of the hermit genius
Zhuge Liang, in the mythologized and fictionalized Romance of the Three Kingdoms of Luo Guanzhong, wasn’t just smart: He was also the embodiment of Confucian virtues. His decision to back Liu Bei was based not on personal ambition and an assessment of which warlord offered the best career prospects. Of course, novelized versions of history like Three Kingdoms tend to exaggerate the extent of the isolation of men like Zhuge Liang.
China Sports Column: Cannavaro out as Chinese national team coach, and Guangdong sweeps way to ninth CBA title
Former World Player of the Year and Ballon dโOr winner Fabio Cannavaro has decided not to manage the Chinese national football team, and reports are that Cannavaro’s mentor, Marcello Lippi, might return to his old role. Meanwhile, the Guangdong Southern Tigers, led by Yi Jianlian, won the CBA finals for the team’s ninth championship. The team didn’t lose a game in this year’s playoffs.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Early Access: Howard French on how China’s past shapes its present ambitions
On this week’s show, recorded live in New York on April 3, Kaiser and Jeremy have a wide-ranging chat with former New York Times China correspondent Howard French, now a professor at Columbia University’s School of Journalism. We talk about his book Everything Under the Heavens and China’s ambitions and anxieties in the world today.
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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.