When they asked about if
China need a reform to survive the next decade, the result was this:
Not exact matches
I have written many times before that what will largely determine the path
China follows is the political struggle the Xi administration will have in imposing the
needed reforms on an elite that will strongly resist these
reforms — mainly of course because these
reforms must necessarily come at their expense.
I will argue that most economists have an incoherent understanding of
China's rebalancing
needs, and for this reason many if not most of the
reform proposals of the past few years, about which economists widely agree and even celebrate, are in many if not most cases largely irrelevant.
Economists say
China's new central banker signals the country's focus on economic
reforms and the
need to get its debt under control.
In his report, he writes, «
reforms are
needed to ensure
China's long - term financial stability and reestablish rapid but more sustainable growth.
Reforms are
needed but America has won most of its complaints, including against
China.
While this ambitious global pursuit by
China is being closely monitored, the first thing we
need to see is some real progress in market
reforms that conform to World Trade Organization (WTO) ethics.
Deng Xiaoping,
China's reformist leader from 1978 to 1992, proclaimed that
China had been victorious in the revolution and in class struggle, and now
needed to
reform and modernize, in order to achieve its ultimate objective — becoming a rich and strong nation able to withstand foreign pressure.
The
Reform Party sees no
need for tensions between
China and the United States to escalate.
Why do they think
China doesn't
need a democratic
reform?
Meanwhile, in an unrelated letter, Guoyou Qi of East
China University of Science and Technology in Shanghai; Xuemei Xie of Shanghai University; and Kevin Zhu of the University of California, San Diego, highlighted the
need for
China to
reform its S&T evaluation system.
The party when embraced market
reforms, you know, these media outlets realized that they
needed to deliver something that people wanted to watch and so real journalism was part of that and so when this man was able to stand up to the government and the word got out in the international media, it quickly made its way onto the Internet, so people in
China could see it and then it spread very quickly on text messages on cell phones and on instant messaging, and e-mail.
To address this problem,
China needs to
reform its assessment mechanism, including giving young investigators enough time and financial support, extending assessment time from 1 year to 4 or 5 years, and assessing quantity and quality of the papers together.
«
China has been well served by its strategy of gradual, careful
reforms and does not
need nor should it venture suddenly to implement Big Bang
reforms.»
Although the paper's authors view
China's efforts as a signal of dedication toward furthering fisheries conservation, they hope their perspective paper helps highlight the
need for true institutional
reform in order to see the Chinese government's goals realized.
They found that while
China has attempted to reverse the trend of declining fish stocks in the past, serious institutional
reforms are
needed to achieve a true shift in marine fisheries management.
Meanwhile in
China, the ruling Communist Party has mostly abandoned its pledge for badly
needed economic
reforms as it seeks to maintain GDP growth of at least 6.5 %, creating fears about a debt time bomb waiting to explode.
Next year will be a very important year for
China because possible strains in the banking system and the intensity with which the reformers present their case will give us a better sense both of how much debt capacity the country retains and of how well positioned Xi Jinping and his allies are to implement the
needed reforms.
Shareholder action can be an effective tool to make small
reforms at a company — such as pressuring Apple to institute better labour practices at the factories it works with in
China — but it won't achieve the fundamental changes to the business model of the fossil fuel industry
needed: keeping their coal, oil and gas reserves in the ground.