Editor’s note for Monday, June 21, 2021

A note from the editor of today's The China Project Access newsletter.

editor's note for Access newsletter

Do you need to know more about Chinese companies โ€” their chief executives, links to the state, valuations, and other details? Try ChinaEdge, our new database of company profiles.

My thoughts today:

If I go, will there be trouble? Thatโ€™s the question many scholars, journalists, business people, and other foreign frequent visitors to China are asking themselves, judging from a new survey by ChinaFile of some of its contributors.

In answer to the question, โ€œHow likely are you to travel to China once COVID restrictions are lifted?โ€

  • 27% said โ€œdefinitely.โ€
  • 22% said โ€œdefinitely not.โ€

Click through to ChinaFile for details.

The Hong Kong government continues moving rapidly to shut down the Apple Daily, the pro-democracy tabloid newspaper whose founder Jimmy Lai (้ปŽๆ™บ่‹ฑ Lรญ Zhรฌyฤซng) is already behind bars on national security charges. The newspaperโ€™s offices were raided by 500 police officers last week, resulting in the charging of the editor-in-chief and the CEO with โ€œforeign collusionโ€ for publishing articles.

Today, Reuters reports that the authorities have frozen all of Apple Dailyโ€™s bank accounts, which will force the newspaper out of business in a matter of days.

Our word of the day is cryptocurrency speculation (่™šๆ‹Ÿ่ดงๅธไบคๆ˜“็‚’ไฝœ xลซnว huรฒbรฌ jiฤoyรฌ chวŽozuรฒ).

Upcoming events:

  • June 23: Chinese cross-border investing in developing markets with Haitou Global CEO Jerry Wang.
  • June 30: A book discussion with Cheng Li on his new book, Middle Class Shanghai, and how the U.S. needs to readjust its thinking when it comes to China.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief