News roundup: Is China militarizing the South China Sea or just building ‘necessary defensive facilities’?
Top China news for December 15, 2016. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up at supchina.com/subscribe.
TODAY’S TOP STORIES
South China Sea tensions ratchet up after the release of photos of weapons systems
Yesterday we linked to a Reuters story on a speech given by Admiral Harry Harris, head of the U.S. Pacific Command, who said that the United States is โready to confrontโ China if its actions in the South China Sea result in denial of access to a โshared domain.โ At around the same time Admiral Harris was making his speech, the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI) published a series of photos and a report that says โChina appears to have built significant point-defense capabilities, in the form of large anti-aircraft guns and probable close-in weapons systemsโ at seven artificial islands it has built up in the South China Sea.
In comments reported by Reuters, AMTI director Greg Poling said, โThis is militarization. The Chinese can argue that it’s only for defensive purposes, but if you are building giant anti-aircraft gun and close-in weapons systems emplacements, it means that you are prepping for a future conflict.โ Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuangโs response to the AMTI report ย was that โdeployment of necessary defensive facilities on some islands in the South China Sea is legitimate and normal,โ according to the China Daily. The Chinese Ministry of Defense issued a similar statement on its social media account (in Chinese) but added a more aggressive tone with a concluding sentence: โIf someone is making threatening moves at your doorstep, would you not get a slingshot ready?โ
Sinica Podcast: John Pomfret on the history of the American-Chinese relationship
With the rising tensions in the South China Sea and the uncertainty of president-elect Donald Trumpโs intentions with regard to China, John Pomfretโs newly published book The Beautiful Country and the Middle Kingdom could not be more timely. This weekโs Sinica Podcast is the first of a two-part interview with the author on the complex ties that bind the U.S. and China and some of the fascinating characters who have played a role in that story.
How WeChat helped a 28-year-old make millions through cartoons
Tech in Asia reports on a young artist who started a company called โUncle Tongdaoโ to post his cartoons about astrology on the popular social media and messaging app WeChat. He recently sold a majority share of the company for US$31 million. The article notes that WeChatโs โwide range of functionality โ mobile payments, advertising, ecommerce, and more โ means that content, like Uncle Tongdaoโs astrological cartoons, can easily funnel into various revenue channels, such as merchandise, emojis, offline events, and even brick-and-mortar shops.โ
Chinese bank card association begins using QR codes to process payments
Tech Node reports that Chinaโs state-backed bank card association China UnionPay says โit will start using QR codes to process payments.โ QR codes, the square blocks of pixels that function like barcodes that can be scanned by smartphones, are very popular in China, mainly because the WeChat app made them very easy to use. The WeChat payment system and the similar service offered by Alibabaโs Alipay have utilized QR codes for more than two years. UnionPayโs adoption of the technology is yet another sign that the payment systems in China will diverge from established global models, leaving little opportunity in the domestic market for Visa, Mastercard, and even Internet-based U.S. companies like PayPal and Square.
More China stories โ with the most essential at the top of each section โ are curated below.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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- Chinaโs economic policy under pressure after Fed flags new era / Financial Times
โThis week the U.S. central bank not only raised rates again but also hinted at three more increases next year, adding to pressure on Chinese officials already struggling to contain capital flight,โ the Financial Times reported. For more on how the yuanโs depreciation may affect other emerging currencies, including South Koreaโs won and Indiaโs rupee, see this Bloomberg article titled โAfter Fed, eyes turn to China for emerging-market currency fate.โ - Opinion: Managing the inevitable decline of the renminbi / Financial Times
โThe priority must be to address the underlying problems that deter inflows,โ writes the author. โIndebted and uncompetitive state-owned enterprises, a fragile banking sector, volatile property markets and a policy of economic nationalism.โ - U.S. security panel clears Chinese takeover of Chicago Stock Exchange / Reuters
โThe move by CFIUS, which scrutinizes deals for potential national security concerns, comes despite many U.S. lawmakers having voiced concerns about the level of influence the Chinese state might gain over one of the oldest U.S. exchanges.โ - China halts trading in key bond futures as panicky investors sell securities / WSJ
Chinaโs authorities on Thursday took the unprecedented step of halting trade in 10-year and 5-year Treasury bond futures, a response to investors panicking โamid slowing growth, capital outflows and heightened government concern about asset bubbles.โ The temporary measure was lifted โonly after Chinaโs central bank injected around $22 billion into the short-term money market.โ - James Packer retreats from China with sell-off of Crownโs overseas casinos / The Guardian
โCrown Resorts, which is controlled by Packer, announced on Thursday that it has dumped plans to spin off his international assets and has halved his stake in the ventureโs troublesome Chinese business,โ Martin Farrer reports. In October, 18 Crown employees were detained in China, where gambling is illegal. - Chinaโs Meitu, an aspirational beauty app, goes public / NYT
The company โhopes its app will have appeal elsewhere,โ Amie Tsang and Emily Feng write. โThis week it completed a $629 million initial public offering in Hong Kong, long a gateway for Chinese companies seeking foreign money, and is exploring taking its selfie apps to other parts of the world.โ - China extends tax break for small cars / WSJ
โThe Ministry of Finance said Thursday it would levy a 7.5 percent purchase tax on vehicles with engines up to 1.6 liters from January 1, an increase from the current rate of 5 percent but below the normal 10 percent.โ
- Chinaโs economic policy under pressure after Fed flags new era / Financial Times
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POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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- Opinion: Is China the new global champion of openness? / TIME
โWhat Xi means when he talks about openness and globalization isnโt the liberal understanding of those terms that has underpinned the U.S.-led economic order,โ writes Julian B. Gewirtz. ย โChinaโs economic system remains a โsocialist market economy.โ Xi is offering up a version of openness and globalization that is maximally beneficial to China, as part of creating an alternative economic order in which China can dominate.โ - Opinion: Chinaโs digital dictatorship / The Economist
Recent experiments with a โsocial creditโ system are likely to โmark the beginning of something bigger and more sinister,โ the author writes, adding that โinstead of rating citizens, the government should be allowing them to assess the way it rulesโ with more democratic reforms. - Opinion: Can Trump get tough with China? / NYT
Academics Edward Friedman and Charles L. Glaser, author C. Cindy Fan and Daniel Blumenthal of the American Enterprise Institute offer their perspectives in this โRoom for Debateโ feature that is part of the series โIssues for Trump and America.โ - Taiwan is both exhilarated and unnerved by Trumpโs China remarks / NYT
The people of Taiwan are โcoming to grips with the reality that their most vocal champion on the world stage now is a businessman known for his love of cutting deals and his erratic approach to policy making.โ - Chinaโs emerging Arctic policy / The Diplomat
โChina now clearly identifies itself as a โnear-Arctic Stateโ and a major stakeholder in the Arctic,โ writes Nengye Liu. โChina believes that the changing environment and resources of the Arctic have a direct impact on Chinaโs climate, environment, agriculture, shipping, and trade as well as its social and economic development.โ - New Chinese law puts foreign nonprofits in limbo / WSJ
โOn Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy in Beijing sent out a notice warning that U.S. citizens employed by or associated with nonprofits โmay face special scrutiny and/or penalties for noncomplianceโ when the law goes into effect on January 1.โ - Lawyer: Police confirm they detained Chinese rights activist / NYT
Jiang Tianyong, who was last heard from on November 21, ย was detained for allegedly using someone elseโs ID to purchase train tickets, his lawyer said. - Miss World contestant who challenged China is allowed to speak once more / NYT
Anastasia Lin, a Chinese-born Canadian who has been a vocal critic of human rights in China, is now allowed by pageant organizers to speak to the media, โending a three-week standoff in Washington that had drawn unflattering attention to a storied beauty pageant that has become increasingly dependent on Chinese corporate sponsors.โ
- Opinion: Is China the new global champion of openness? / TIME
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SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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- Smokers chased in Beijing as China considers national law / NYT
โAs China considers a nationwide ban on smoking in public places, the fight is well under way in Beijing, which banned smoking in restaurants and other indoor areas 18 months ago. Zealous volunteers and anti-smoking advocates have made some headway against millions of occasionally intransigent smokers and the state-run cigarette monopoly, a large and powerful force in Chinaโs government and economy.โ - A Tencent co-founder takes on education full time / WSJ
Charles Yidan Chen, who established the private Wuhan College with the goal of turning it into Chinaโs answer to Stanford University, announced that โhis college-education foundation finished its first round of fundraising for its endowment, the first for a private university in China,โ and is establishing a $7.8 million annual prize for two recipients who make outstanding contributions to the field of education research and development. - China rescues 36 โinfantsโ from child traffickers / The Telegraph
In โthe latest swoop on a crime that is thought to involve tens of thousands of victims,โ more than 157 people were detained in raids that encompassed several Chinese provinces, from Fujian to Yunnan. - Can Chinaโs quantum radar become even more powerful? Scientists may have found the key / SCMP
A recently published paper detailed an emerging quantum measurement technique that could detect previously undetectable signals. However, one quantum physicist stated, โThere is still ongoing debate whether the weak measurement is showing us real physical observation or just mathematical illusion.โ - Opinion: Stop crediting the West for โinspiringโ classical Chinese art / Quartz
โFor centuries, archaeologists and art historians have been eager to see the imprint of the Greeks in works of art and architecture throughout the world,โ write Brown University professors Johanna Hanink and Felipe Rojas Silva. โBut this view rests on a Eurocentric logic that has long assumed other civilizations were fundamentally incapable of creating highly technical, impressive, and aesthetically pleasing works of art.โ - Chinese imperial seal sold for record $22 million at auction / BBC News
An 18th-century imperial seal of the Qianlong Emperor was sold to a Chinese collector for more than 20 times its estimated price after a heated bidding war. - Pork-and-chive dumplings that offer a taste of home / NYT
Helen You, the Tianjin-born founder of New York Cityโs Tianjin Dumpling House and Dumpling Galaxy, shares a classic recipe from her forthcoming cookbook.
- Smokers chased in Beijing as China considers national law / NYT
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