Strong in furniture, very weak in outdoor gear – China news from May 10, 2017

Business & Technology

A roundup of todayโ€™s top China news. Get this free daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.


Chinese brands are very strong in furniture, very weak in outdoor gear

May 10 is apparently the first โ€œChina Brand Dayโ€ (ไธญๅ›ฝๅ“็‰Œๆ—ฅ zhลngguรณ pวnpรกi rรฌ). Ai Feng ่‰พไธฐ, chairman of the Brand Alliance Expert Committee, saysย (in Chinese) that China is a manufacturing giant but a brand pygmy with only a few contenders in the list of the worldโ€™s top 100 brands, and that the purpose of China Brand Day is to change that. Xinhuaย headlined its Chinese website with a storyย (in Chinese) that mentions Chinese Brand Day as an introduction to a summary of recent Xi Jinping speeches about innovation, technology, and the โ€œrevitalization of the real economy.โ€

Sinaย has published an articleย (in Chinese) that looks at the origins of brands purchased on platforms owned by ecommerce giant Alibaba during the November 11 โ€œSingles Dayโ€ shopping promotion. When it comes to the โ€œhigh end marketโ€ (้ซ˜็ซฏๅธ‚ๅœบ), Chinese brands supply 97 percent of demand for furniture, 75 percent for clothing, and 61 percent for household appliances, but only 36 percent for maternity and baby products, 15 percent for luggage, handbags, and shoes, and a mere 6 percent for outdoor sportswear and equipment.

The Belt and Road development model?

With 28 heads of state set to attend a โ€œOne Belt, One Roadโ€ (OBOR) summit in Beijing on May 14, Justin Yifu Linย ๆž—ๆฏ…ๅคซ, former chief economist at the World Bank and director of the Center for New Structural Economics at Peking University, and his colleague Wang Yan ็Ž‹็‡• ask: โ€œWhat is Chinaโ€™s rationale for pursuing this grandiose vision โ€“ one that so many countries, especially in the developing world, have embraced?โ€

They have written a bookย in answer, and summarize their arguments in an articleย on China-U.S. Focus. Whether you agree with them or not, or object that they have merely found a sophisticated way of saying โ€œwin-win,โ€ their ideas will probably become part of the rhetorical toolkit of those in favor of OBOR and the Chinese approach to development. In essence, Lin and Wang โ€œmake the case for going โ€˜beyond aid,โ€™ toward a broader approach โ€” like that taken by China โ€“ that includes trade and investmentโ€ฆBy combining aid with trade and investment, donor and recipient countries alike can benefit.โ€

Oil and propaganda on the New Silk Road

In other OBOR news:

  • The Peopleโ€™s Dailyย devoted its top storyย (in Chinese) on May 10 to an article titled โ€œPetroChina: An oil road through the Silk Road really wins the hearts of the people.โ€ Itโ€™s a paean to a state-owned oil company that is lubricating the trade and connectivity of OBOR, from Myanmar to Turkmenistan. This is the first time since the fall of former security czar and oilman Zhou Yongkangย that a Chinese oil company has received such love from the Peopleโ€™s Daily.
  • The China Dailyย reportsย that โ€œnearly 50 journalists from 22 countries, including China, Turkey and Singaporeโ€ have arrived in Urumqi, the capital of western Xinjiang Province, for a media event themed โ€œApproaching the Core Zoneย (Xinjiang) of the โ€˜Silk Road Economic Belt.โ€™โ€
  • On May 9, we noted the Bedtime Stories about OBORย propaganda video, aimed at foreigners and published by the China Daily. On May 10, Xinhuaย published a Chinese language OBOR propaganda videoย that features traditional graphic motifs, quotations from classical Chinese poetryย as captions, and the โ€œFishermanโ€™s Songโ€ (ๆธ”่ˆŸๅ”ฑๆ™š yรบzhลu chร ngwวŽn) played on the traditional guzheng instrument. The video suggests that global harmony will be achieved through OBOR.
  • Huchunย is a Chinese city whose โ€œposition at the apex of Russia, North Korea and China is a blessing and a curse,โ€ as โ€œwhile Russia is gradually opening up to more trade, North Korea has stalled.” Reutersย reportsย on how the cityโ€™s successful lobbying to be included in OBOR plans has yet to bear fruit.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, Jia Guo, and Jiayun Feng. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.


The China Projectโ€™s conference in New York on May 18 will feature 20 women leaders in Chinese technology, business, and culture. Buy your tickets here.


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

Alipay to reach 4 million merchants in the U.S.

Earlier this week, The China Projectย notedย that both Alipay and WeChat, popular mobile apps that make payments extraordinarily easy in China, had partnered with Silicon Valley startup Citcon to bring their payment platforms to the U.S. Yet on May 8, Alipay made a far more important partnership with Atlanta-based payments processor First Data. This partnership will bring Alipay to 4 million merchants in the U.S., only half a million shy of Apple Pay, Quartzย reports. With the numbers of Chinese visiting the U.S. every year skyrocketing, from 2.6 million in 2015 to an expected 6 million in 2021, Alipayโ€™s rival app WeChat has some catching up to do.

So does the U.S., in terms of mobile payments adoption, where it lags behind China. However, a Bloombergย columnist points outย that the proportion of customers using mobile platforms to settle transactions is rising faster in the U.S. than in China, and both countries are expected to reach 23 percent adoption in 2018. Alipayโ€™s newest partnership may help speed along U.S. adoption.



POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

The Chinese tycoon in New Zealand who forfeited $30 million for money laundering

โ€œThey went to the basement and Yan offered Lentino to take his pick โ€” a Porsche, a Bentley or the Rolls-Royce.โ€ That is how William Yan (้—ซๆฐธๆ˜Ž Yan Yongming), aka Bill Liu, a flashy multimillionaire residing in New Zealand despite Beijingโ€™s long-standing accusation that he is an โ€œeconomic fugitive,โ€ liked to seal his business deals. But not all business has been that pleasant for Yan recently: In August last year, he agreed to pay US$30 million (NZ$43 million)ย to settle a money-laundering case in New Zealand and is now serving a five-month home detention sentence.

The New Zealand Herald reportsย on Yanโ€™s decade-long story in New Zealand, ending with his conviction on money laundering and sentencing to home detention on May 10: Yan had previously been accused of falsifying his identity, a point that became especially salient after 2008, when the government controversially granted him New Zealand citizenship. In trials in 2012 for identity falsification and 2014 for money laundering, Yan was revealed to have obscured both his identity and the ownership of his assets through a web of third-party registrations and documents filled out on his behalf, making it difficult to tie any crimes back to Yan. When investigators did find more solid evidence of fraud in 2014, it sparked a drawn-out negotiation between New Zealand police, Yan, and the Chinese government.

The August 2016 settlement came with an agreement by Yan to return to China to face trial for fraud charges โ€” Yan went in November 2016, came back in January 2017 with no publicized outcome, and stood trial this week, leading to his final sentencing. On May 10, Xinhuaย finally reportedย (in Chinese) an outcome of the trial: The majority of Yanโ€™s $30 million, the equivalent of 130 million yuan ($18.8 million), will be remitted directly from his frozen assets in New Zealand to China.



SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

Allegations of graft at bike-sharing darling Ofo

On May 3, a former employee of Ofo, one of Chinaโ€™s biggest bike-sharing startups, wrote up an exposรฉ of alleged internal corruptionย (in Chinese) on the social networking app Momo ้™Œ้™Œ. According to the whistleblower, there are two major areas of unscrupulous behavior:

  • Regional managers falsely report the number of staff in their areas: By adding five or six nonexistent bike repairmen in their reports, managers can earn an extra 20,000 to 30,000 yuan ($2,900โ€“$4,345) every month.
  • Kickbacks from bike-manufacturing companies: Some staff in procurement have purchased old tires that were produced 10 years ago from suppliers who are their friends.

In February, Ofo closed a $450 million funding round, whichย elevated its total valuation to more than a billion dollars. Two months later, Ofo announced that Ant Financial, an Alibaba affiliate, had become an investor and would work with the bike-sharing startup on credit card payments and international expansion strategy. Another big investor in Ofo is Didi Chuxing, Chinaโ€™s dominant ride-hailing service, which addedย Ofo to its main app in April.

On the social media platform Weibo, many commenters hold negative views about Ofoโ€™s future, especially when comparing the startup with its major rival Mobike. One commenter complainedย (in Chinese), โ€œEight out of 10 Ofo bikes are broken. Iโ€™m turning to Mobike now.โ€ Others accused Ofo of being too busy with attracting investment, rather than โ€œimproving internal management and listening to usersโ€™ feedback.โ€


  • Debate rages over Chinaโ€™s captive tigersย / Caixin
    A CPPCC member and โ€œartist who built his career painting and sculpting tigersโ€ has โ€œargued that tiger parks obstruct tiger conservation efforts and damage Chinaโ€™s international image.โ€ He hopes to use his influence to improve the treatment of captive big cats.
  • Translation: I Am Fan Yusu (ๆˆ‘ๆ˜ฏ่Œƒ้›จ็ด )ย / Whatโ€™s on Weibo
    โ€œIn late April of 2017, Fan Yusu became an overnight literary sensation in China when her essay โ€˜I Am Fan Yusuโ€™ was published on online platform Noonstory.com and soon went viral.โ€
  • American universities are welcoming Chinaโ€™s Trojan Horseย / Foreign Policy
    An argument against Confucius Institutes on U.S. campuses.
  • China’s prosperity eludes a generation of aging workersย / WSJ (paywall)
    โ€œLaborers who helped build modern China face toiling into twilight years; โ€˜No one will feed me if I donโ€™t work.โ€™โ€
  • China is building a Disney World for wineย / Bloomberg
    At Chateau Changyu Reina, โ€œhoney-colored brick towers enclose wide cobbled courtyards, and vast, wood-beamed halls look as if they are prepared to host an imminent medieval banquet.โ€ The construction is โ€œbut one part of an ambitious 600 million yuan ($86.9 million) complex completed four years ago just outside the city of Xiโ€™an.โ€
  • Baby Louie, the dinosaur orphan, finds its species at lastย / NYT (paywall)
    Baby Louie is a โ€œ90-million-year-old fossilized dinosaur embryoโ€ that โ€œwas found among a clutch of eggs in Henan Province,โ€ yet the remains of the parents of Baby Louie and the eggs were never found. โ€œBut now, after nearly 25 years, Dr. Zelenitsky and her colleagues have linked the orphaned dinosaurs with their prehistoric lineageโ€ฆa group of large, birdlike dinosaurs known as giant oviraptorosaurs.โ€