Category Archives: China

China Focus: China makes gains, faces hurdles in extending financial services

BOAO, Hainan, March 24 (Xinhua) — By removing systematic blocks and adopting new technology, China will be able to expand access to financial services to all people, according to experts at the Boao Forum conference.

Recent changes by China’s rural and private financial institutions will help relieve obstacles to inclusive finance, which have held back the nation’s anti-poverty efforts, according to experts at the 2016 Annual Conference of the Boao Forum for Asia, held in China’s island province of Hainan.

INCLUSIVE FINANCE IN THE SPOTLIGHT

With a bad loan rate of 88.3 percent, Hainan Rural Credit Union, a rural credit cooperative in Hainan, was on the verge of collapse in 2007. Over the past nine years, the cooperative has focused on rural microcredit, lending a total of 23 billion yuan (about 3.5 billion U.S. dollars) to Hainan’s 600,000 rural households. The non-performing loan rate has dropped to less than 2 percent.

Thanks to financial education and agricultural training provided to borrowers, Wu Weixiong, board chairman of Hainan Rural Credit Union, isn’t worried about the 23 billion yuan in loans his cooperative has made to the island’s rural population.

“Our staff are experts in both finance and agriculture, which enables them to help farmers acquire necessary knowledge and techniques to make a living and pay back the loan,” he told attendees at the “Inclusive Finance” Boao sub-forum.

Private financial institutions are also making financial services much more accessible to people who are underserved by traditional banks. Ant Financial, a financial arm established last June by the E-commerce giant Alibaba, has lent a total of 45 billion yuan to farmers, online merchants, restaurant owners and mom-and-pop stores, extending loans to 800,000 borrowers who have trouble accessing financial services.

Despite the efforts, a large proportion of the population still lacks access to financing, according to the experts.

NOT ALL HAVE ACCESS

“The core of the problem is that inclusive financing is badly needed by rural people,” said Dong Wenbiao, board chairman of China Minsheng Investment Corp. Ltd., the nation’s largest private equity firm.

The nation still has 55.75 million impoverished people in rural areas, official statistics showed.

Dong blamed “serious systematic deficiency” for the problem, saying that China’s existing financial establishments, including the banking and insurance systems, don’t support expanding access to finance. Large banks are inclined to lend to big companies with lower risk.

The lack of an individual credit system, high operational costs and risks, and the absence of an information-sharing mechanism have all worsened the situation, according to Li Yang, vice director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Inclusive finance will play a key role in China’s goal of building a “well-off society” by 2020. The nation’s financial industry should make itself available to all people, said Wu Xiaoling, vice chairwoman of the Financial and Economic Committee of the National People’s Congress and former vice governor of the central bank.

More than 50 countries have set formal targets and goals for inclusive finance in recent years, indicating growing global recognition that access to financial services plays a critical role in reducing extreme poverty, boosting shared prosperity, and supporting sustainable development.

SYSTEMATIC REFORMS

To clear hurdles, the State Council in January released the 2016-2020 Plan on the Development of Inclusive Finance, China’s first national strategic plan on financial inclusion. It targeted building inclusive financial service and security systems that provide reasonably-priced, convenient and secure services to small companies, farmers, low-income urban households, the poor, the disabled and the elderly. It vowed to boost inclusive finance’s development to a level comparable to the global average by 2020.

The government also reiterated in a report in March the development of inclusive finance to increase services for micro, small, and medium-sized businesses as well as for rural areas.

“To tackle the issue, systematic reforms are required,” said Dong, suggesting that farmers should be endowed with land rights that can be viewed as assets when obtaining loans.

Ellen Richey, vice chairwoman of Risk and Public Policy at Visa Inc., said that China already has an advantage in fostering inclusive finance, as 79 percent of its residents have financial accounts, much higher than most countries. But account holders generally only use them for basic banking services or use them infrequently.

“The challenge to inclusive finance in China is not necessarily to get someone an account, but to give them an efficient way to use it,” she said, adding that electronic payment and mobile phones will enable China to bypass expensive investment in infrastructure, such as terminals and telecommunications.

Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jenny Shipley called on lenders to form trust relationships based on human potential, rather than just looking at assets. Shipley said that micro-finance requires collaboration between multiple players, including governments, financial institutions and NGOs.  Enditem

Commentary: Lancang-Mekong cooperation offers new opportunities

   BEIJING, March 23 (Xinhua) — The first leaders’ meeting of the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation mechanism (LMC) in Sanya, China, is expected to provide political guidance and a roadmap for subregional cooperation between China and the five Southeast Asian nations of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

The LMC mechanism was initiated in 2014 in accordance with the strong will of the six countries along the river for development and prosperity.

The LMC is a self-initiative of the six countries and is tailored to their specific needs.

Compared with other cooperation mechanisms, the LMC is more practical, more effective and more in line with people’s aspirations.

With the step-by-step implementation of the LMC mechanism, one-day rail travel along the Lancang-Mekong region will become reality as lines of the Pan-Asia Railway network are under construction.

The mechanism will not only facilitate the movement of people and goods between those countries, but also speed up the region’s development as a whole.

Since the LMC mechanism was proposed by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in November 2014, three meetings of senior officials, three meetings of the working teams, as well as a foreign ministers’ meeting have been held to launch the dialogue and cooperation. Agreement has been reached on 78 early-harvest projects covering water resource management, poverty alleviation, public health, infrastructure, personnel exchanges, science and technology.

The LMC mechanism has three pillars — political and security issues, economic affairs and sustainable development, and social affairs and people-to-people exchanges.

With consensus and strong will of the six countries, the LMC mechanism is showing tremendous potential.

Apart from the six countries, the LMC mechanism is also conducive to the strengthening of cooperation between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and lend a helping hand to the regional bloc’s integration.

“The Lancang-Mekong Cooperation mechanism comes as a natural result of our existing cooperation, and will take full advantage of our geographic proximity, traditional friendship and complementary economies,” Li told the Sanya meeting on Wednesday.

Li said China firmly supports ASEAN’s integration and the LMC will supplement China-ASEAN relations.  Enditem

 

Spotlight: China’s economic transition set to boost Asian integration despite slower trade growth

   BOAO, March 22 (Xinhua) — Regional economic integration in Asia is expected to deepen further as China moves up the international value chain despite weakening trade growth, experts who follow China’s ongoing economic transition said on Tuesday.

“China’s growing importance in the value chain will inevitably influence its economic and trade structures with these major economies (in Asia),” said Chen Lan, director of Deloitte Research at Deloitte China, in a report for the ongoing Boao Foroum for Asia in Hainan, China.

The report said that China’s future industrial upgrade through innovation will enhance its position in the global value chain as rising production costs and labor costs in the country may weaken its position as the “world’s factory.”

“Despite slowed economic growth during the 13th Five-Year Plan, China still remains one of the most important global consumer markets,” Chen wrote.

China is now in the middle of a painstaking transition from growth driven by investment and exports to growth led by consumption and the services sector. The official economic forecast for this year is between 6.5 percent and 7 percent, much slower than the wildly high growth rates of over 10 percent per annum a few years ago. Last year the economy grew by 6.9 percent.

China aims to double its per capita gross domestic product (GDP) by 2020 compared to 2010, a target that will catapult the world’ s most populous country to the status of a relatively well-off society.

Speaking at a press conference in Boao on Tuesday, Justin Yifu Lin, former chief economist of the World Bank, said that he expects China’ s economic growth to average around 6.5 percent over the next five years. Coupled with the expected appreciation of the yuan, this would mean China’ s per capita GDP is likely to cross the mark of 12,000 U.S. dollars at around 2020.

Lin said the Chinese economy remains vigorous as China targets more sustainable and inclusive growth. According to a new index unveiled by his team to measure the inclusive structural transformation of different economies, China has a score that is among the highest worldwide. The index is based on the New Structural Economics advocated by Lin, who believes that structural changes are the foundation of sustained and inclusive growth along the path to development.

Experts at the forum highlighted the slowdown in world trade growth as a challenge for Asia. A report commissioned for the forum by a team led by Lin Guijun, a scholar from China’s University of International Business and Economics, said that growth in Asia’s merchandise trade has slowed in the aftermath of the global financial crisis since 2008 as world trade growth also slowed. Ditto for global GDP growth, a situation that has not been seen in decades, though trade growth in Asia remains far more robust than that of the rest of the world.

China is now the world’s leading trader and occupies a key position in the international value chain as a manufacturing hub. It is a top trading partner for major economies including Japan, South Korea and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and has inked free trade agreements with the latter two.

Lin Guijun said that Asian economies have now placed more importance on the region’ s services as global services grow quickly and investment flows increase.

More than 80 percent of the service-related free trade agreements signed by Asian countries focus on internal liberalizations, he said.

China has promised to further open up its economy while pursuing more sustainable and inclusive growth. It is relying on the services sector to get the medium-high growth it needs to achieve the important milestones in its economic development by 2020.

Chen said economic integration in Asia is set to deepen further as China keeps steadfast to the principle of opening-up, with initiatives like the Belt and Road Initiative helping to open up China’s hinterlands through trade links covering land and sea.

This will help drive infrastructure demand from ASEAN members and in turn boost their economic development. While there are risks to the economy like the spreading of financial market volatilities, China’ s promotion in the global value chain has provided new growth opportunities for industries in regional countries like Indonesia, especially in the textile industry.

Chen said the degree of economic integration among China, Japan, South Korea and members of ASEAN has increased since China’ s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, with stronger correlation unfolding between industries, within industries, and between manufacturing and delivery.

She also said mutual investment between China and ASEAN is now growing fast and so too is the demand for yuan clearing. Chinese banks like the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China have established clearing banks in countries in the region.  Enditem

Interview: Russian Far East official expects more Chinese investment

VLADIVOSTOK, Russia, March 23 (Xinhua) — The Primorsky region in the Russian Far East will see more Chinese investment, said Vladimir Miklushevsky, the region’s governor.

More than half of the foreign trade turnover of Primorsky is connected with Northeast China, Miklushevsky told Xinhua.

“We are now working with 200 Chinese companies investing in agriculture, manufacturing as well as trade. And we’re very excited to increase this investment flow.”

He noted that projects in the priority areas of farm products, logistics, industrial and food production have already started in the region.

The governor said investors can enjoy a number of tax benefits in those sectors and in the meantime, foreign investment will bring benefits to local residents.

Miklushevsky also said cultural, scientific and educational ties is the basis for economic trade relations between the two nations.

Despite global financial woes and Russia’s economic difficulties, new opportunities are emerging for the region’s ties with China, he said.

“A huge influx of Chinese tourists visited Primorsky. In 2015, the number of Chinese tourists doubled compared with the previous years, and our tourist income increased 30 percent,” said Miklushevsky.

The governor said authorities are preparing for this year’s East Russia Economic Forum scheduled for Sept. 6-7.

“The first forum had a great success, and the Chinese delegation was the largest and the most active one. They showed great interest toward Russia,” he added.  Enditem

 

China announces detailed rules on VAT reform

   BEIJING, March 25 (Xinhua) — China’s financial and taxation authorities announced Thursday a set of detailed rules on VAT reform.

Starting from May 1, VAT of 5 percent will be levied on homes if they are resold less than two years after purchases, according to a joint statement from the Ministry of Finance and the State Administration of Taxation.

Those sold after the two-year window are exempt from the levy.

Currently, homes that are sold less than five years after they were purchased are subject to a 5 percent business tax.

As of April 8, a tariff, VAT and consumption tax will be applied to  imported items sold by cross-border e-commerce companies, to support the healthy development of the industry, the statement said.

The current tax rate on most imported products sold by e-commerce firms is 10 percent.

A business tax-to-VAT pilot began in 2012 and has been gradually expanded. It had reduced the tax burden of enterprises, most of which are small companies, by 641.2 billion yuan by the end of 2015. Enditem

Spotlight: Belt-Road Initiative aligns Chinese dream with global aspiration for development

BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) — Running a fruit import and export company for 15 years, Egyptian businessman Ali Maggard has recently turned his eye to China as a new source for commerce, as the world’s second largest economy is taking an increasingly large share of the global trade.

Previously, the fruit dealer would give his priority to European countries such as Greece and Italy.

The businessman told Xinhua that he felt very happy to see relations between China and his country to be further enhanced, because it means “more preferential terms for our industry on customs clearance and import and export duties among others.”

Maggard’s company is among many in the Arab world and other parts of the globe to explore business opportunities in China under the Belt and Road Initiative that contains the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road proposed back in 2013.

The Belt and Road Initiative is “a string of keys” that can be used by various countries for development, offering win-win solutions for bilateral cooperation, said Wu Bingbing, director of Department of Arabic Language and Culture of Peking University.

Statistics released by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce showed Chinese enterprises directly invested a total of 14.82 billion U.S. dollars into 49 countries within the cooperation framework of the Belt and Road Initiative last year, rising by 18.2 percent compared with the previous year.

Against the backdrop of the currently sluggish global economy with a slow recovery, the construction of the Silk Road Economic Belt has gained wide popularity among countries along the trade route, especially in Central Asia.

One particular project is the Horgos-East Gate Special Economic Zone in Kazakhstan, which has become a symbol of the lineup of China’s Belt and Road Initiative and Kazakhstan’s “Bright Path” economic plan.

Despite the Central Asian country’s temporarily shrinking imports and exports due to falling oil prices and currency devaluation, trade volume of the special economic zone surged by nine times in the first half of 2015, compared with the same period of the previous year. Also, the volume of China’s container freight transferred in Kazakhstan has nearly doubled, thanks to the operation of the special economic zone.

So far, Horgos has also become an essential transit point that connects China and Europe through the Eurasia International Railway.

The Belt and Road Initiative is also reshaping the geographic and economic development of both China and Europe by incorporating a wide range of development schemes of the European countries, for example, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker’s investment plan that would allocate at least 315 billion euros (about 359 billion U.S. dollars) of additional investments in strategic projects at the European Union level.

“Your dream is our dream,” said former Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.

Both being ancient oceanic civilizations, China and Greece have set the year of 2015 as the “China-Greece Maritime Cooperation Year” during a meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Samaras in July 2014.

The visiting Chinese president said China would like to further enhance its comprehensive strategic partnership with Greece and make the country  “an important bridgehead and transit point” for China-Europe cooperation through the Belt and Road Initiative.

One typical project under the initiative was construction of Greece’s biggest sea port of Piraeus, the tender of which was won by China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) in January this year.

Trapped in the longstanding debt crisis of the country, the Piraeus port had fallen into a mess with ships and containers piling up. COSCO won a container operation project for Piraeus port in 2008 to manage Pier II and Pier III of Piraeus Container Terminal for 35 years. In 2015, the port’s capacity rose to 3 million containers, a dramatic increase from 685,000 in 2010.

The Chinese enterprise has also created over 1,000 jobs for local people over the last two years. Among the incessant strikes around the country, workers at the port have never held a strike.

In five years of operation, COSCO aims to make the Piraeus port the south gate of the China-Europe land-sea express to speed up transportation between China and Europe.

From the economic perspective, the Belt and Road Initiative has been a large-scale “economic and geographic revolution,” while from the perspective of international relations, the initiative has set off “a new cooperation mode featuring mutual benefits and win-win results,”  according to Hu Angang, director of the School of Public Policy and Management of Tsinghua University.

The comments were echoed by Russian businessman Alexander Losev.

In an article published by local newspaper Russia Herald on Jan. 19, Losev wrote that the Belt and Road Initiative showed China’s reflection on global governance.

Yet the construction of the Belt and Road is absolutely not China’s solo, touted by some, but a chorus that involves as many as countries along the trade routes.

China has actually been trying to search for a way out of the current downturn of the global economy with the Belt and Road Initiative, said Yang Guang, head of the Institute of West Asian and African Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“The initiative would help promote regional economic integration and inter-connectivity by lifting barriers to trade and investment as well as facilitating the flow of capital and human resources, which will inject impetus into global economic development,” he said.  Enditem

 

 

Xinhua Insight: Lawmakers approve China’s five-year plan against economic headwinds

BEIJING, March 16 (Xinhua) — Chinese lawmakers on Wednesday approved the country’s economic and social development blueprint for the 2016-2020 period, which sets targeted average annual economic growth at above 6.5 percent in the next five years.

A total of 2,778 lawmakers, or 97.27 percent, voted in favor of the five-year plan at the closing meeting of the annual session of the National People’s Congress (NPC).

China has set 2020 as the target year to realize the first “centenary goal” of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects, pledging efforts to double GDP and per capita personal income from the 2010 level before the Communist Party of China’s 100th anniversary of founding in 2021.

To this end, the five-year plan aims to keep medium-high growth in the next five years. By 2020, the size of China’s economy is expected to exceed 90 trillion yuan (13.8 trillion U.S. dollars), compared with 67.7 trillion yuan in 2015, according to the plan.

Addressing fellow lawmakers at the closing meeting, top legislator Zhang Dejiang called the 13th Five-Year Plan a document of “guiding importance” in the final stretch toward building a moderately prosperous society in all respects.

His words came amid rising economic headwinds in China, with uncertainties clouding global economic recovery.

China’s economy expanded 6.9 percent year on year in 2015, the slowest in a quarter of a century, weighed down by a property market downturn, falling trade and weak factory activity.

The government now hopes to shift the economy from the previous mainstay of exports and investment toward services and consumer spending.

According to the five-year plan, the reform and opening up drive will continue between 2016 and 2020.

China will push ahead urbanization and agricultural modernization, coordinate development in urban and rural areas, and work to improve the people’s well-being across the board so that all people can share the fruits of development.

An innovation-driven development strategy shall be implemented, while industries must be propelled toward medium-high end, the document read.

By 2020, advances should be made in core technologies such as information communication, new energy, new materials, aviation, biological medicine and intelligent manufacturing, it said.

The environment is another key priority in the 2016-2020 plan.

As binding targets, water consumption per 10,000 yuan of GDP will fall 23 percent by 2020, while energy consumption per unit of GDP will be cut by 15 percent. Carbon dioxide emissions will also be cut by 18 percent.

Major progress should be made on the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, and the service trade’s share in total foreign trade would be increased.

“The five-year plan has offered a clear roadmap for the fulfillment of our centenary goal,” said Liu Xiya, an NPC deputy.

In his government work report, Premier Li Keqiang said China had successfully fulfilled all the main tasks and targets set out in its 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015), setting a positive tone for the implementation of the new one.

Chinese can derive great confidence and a strengthened sense of unity from the country’s achievements, drawing on them to forge ahead on this new leg of the journey toward the Two Centenary Goals, he said.

His optimism was shared by Liu. “The next five years will mark the home stretch to 2020 target, and there is every reason to believe that we can deliver on those targets since our economic fundamentals are still sound,” she said.

The drafting of the new plan started early. A plenary session of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee last year was dedicated to review proposals for the five-year development blueprint and set its overarching principles.

A draft version of the plan was submitted to lawmakers for review at this year’s annual legislative session, during which dozens of changes were made.

Kan Ke, an official with the secretariat of this year’s NPC session, said the formulation of the final document was a very China-style political process: The proposition of the ruling Communist Party becomes the will of the state in a due course of legislative procedures.

He added that the drafting process was in line with the evolution of modern state governance, and is conducive to the implementation and enforcement of the Party’s decisions.

His words were echoed by Zheng Yongnian, professor and director of the East Asian Institute of the National University of Singapore.

Zheng hailed the consistency of China’s political and economic design in comparison with the West, where “a political party may make plenty of pledges before elections, but fail to deliver after coming to power.”

Kan agreed. “Coherence is the basis for our economic and social development. This is where our institutional superiority comes from,” he said.  Enditem

 

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

 

China urges EU to accept its market economy status

   BEIJING, March 10 (Xinhua) — China on Thursday urged the European Union (EU) to obey the rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and stop its unfair treatment of China.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei made the remarks following comments by EU Trade Minister Cecilia Malmstrom on Wednesday. She said the EU must maintain solid trade defenses even if it decides to grant China market economy status.

China joined the WTO in 2001. The WTO accession protocol means China will automatically transit to a market economy for Europe by Dec. 11, 2016, the 15th anniversary of its accession to the organization. However, Europe insists this must be debated.

“We’ve heard different opinions on China’s market economy status from the EU recently,” Hong said, noting that China had fulfilled its obligations since becoming a member of WTO.

So far, over 80 countries, including Russia, New Zealand, Singapore and Australia, have recognized China’s status as a market economy.

China is now the EU’s second largest trading partner and one of the biggest markets for the 28-member bloc.

The EU is an important member of the WTO, a vital supporting force to the multilateral trade and international legal systems, Hong said, adding that China hopes the EU will fulfill its commitments to China’s entry into WTO.  Enditem

 

 

China to promote clean coal for better air: minister

BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) — China’s environmental protection minister Chen Jining said Friday that the country is promoting the clean use of coal to curb air pollution.

“China’s air quality is mainly caused by our energy structure, coal consumption specifically,” Chen said at a press conference on the sidelines of the annual parliamentary session.

Chen said China attaches great importance to adjusting the energy structure, one of the tasks in the draft 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020).

China is promoting the clean use of coal and boosting low-emissions facilities for coal-fired power plants that rival those of gas-fired plants.

It will be a revolutionary effort that will overturn the conventional wisdom that coal is not clean, and positively impact efforts to curb smog, the minister said.

Chen added that China is also cutting emissions from household bulk coal. Emissions from one tonne of bulk coal are equivalent to those from five to ten tonnes of coal burned in power plants. As living standards rise, bulk coal consumption is increasing.

“Emissions from bulk coal contributed a lot to the heavy smog last winter,” Chen said, adding that the government will make more efforts to curb them.

“We will experience a long period of adjusting the energy consumption structure, during which we will promote clean energy, strengthen adjustments to energy consumption and promote clean use of coal,” Chen said.  Enditem

图片新闻:中国女足胜韩国队

北欧绿色邮报网报道(编辑陈雪霏)--中国女足胜韩国队。3月7日,中国女足队员与主教练布鲁诺(中)在比赛获胜后走向球迷。
当日,在日本大阪举行的2016年里约奥运会女足亚洲区预选赛决赛阶段第四轮比赛中,中国队以1比0战胜韩国队。

252542980_8

252542981_8

252542982_8

252542992_8

252543701_8

252543709_8

252543710_8

252544236_8

252544237_8

252544244_8新华社记者马平摄

American travel market eyes Chinese tourists

 BEIJING, March 18(Greenpost) — If there was just one thing the world’s two largest economies could agree on both wanting, tourism would be it.

China and the United States announced this week in Beijing that 2016 will be the year of mutual tourism promotion, one of the outcomes of President Xi Jinping’s visit to the United States last year.
The focus on tourism between the two countries come as overseas travel booms in China, in fact more Chinese vacation abroad than any other nation. More than 120 million Chinese traveled abroad last year, up 12 percent year on year, and they spent 104.5 U.S. billion dollars, up 16.7 percent over the same period.

“The scale and the speed with which the market [has] grow[n] is quite remarkable,” said Fred Dixon, CEO of NYC & Co., the agency responsible for promoting New York City, the top U.S. destination city for Chinese travelers.
Despite New York being the top destination less than 3 percent of Chinese outbound tourists go to the United States. The Republic of Korea, Japan and Thailand are much more popular choices, partly because of their proximity.
Despite this, Chinese visitors to the United States has been growing at a double digit rate over the past few years.
In 2015, 2.67 million Chinese visited the United States, compared with less than 400,000 in 2007. Goldman Sachs estimates that the number of Chinese visitors will almost double to 5 million by 2025.
This growth prospect has excited tourism players across the States. Many have sent delegations to China and the news about the tourism exchange will no doubt see them double down their promotional efforts.

Dixon said his organization’s budget for promoting New York inChina has risen in recent years, and is outpacing growth of marketing expenditure for other destinations.

Travel agencies and tourism promoters say a more powerful boost to Chinese tourists inflow to the U.S. is visa relaxation. In November 2014, the two countries extended visa validity for tourists from one to 10 years.
This policy has pushed up the share of Chinese travelling to the United States purely for leisure. Data compiled by various popular destination cities in the United States show that for Chinese visitors, leisure travelers have begun to outnumber business travelers in many places.

“The 10 year visa extension is really a game changer,”  Dixon said, adding that the relaxation has paved the way for more Chinese to visit the United States for pure leisure and on their own, instead of on business trips or organized group tours.
Chinese online travel service provider Ctrip also reported a surge in U.S. visa application through its platform between January to August last year following the visa relaxation.
With more tourists heading to American shores on their own, tourism promoters say they are reviewing their messages here in China. While travel agencies are still valuable partners, they have begun to engage with prospective travellers directly.

“In the very beginning our work was very much about working closely with the trade [travel agencies] on the group side, but now we are seeing a move toward independent travel,”  Dixon said.

That shift led promoters to prioritize their online presence, as websites, social media and apps have become prime channels for information and planning.
More than 259 million Chinese booked their travel online last year, of which 80 percent did so on their mobile devices, according to ChinaInternet Network Information Center.
The demographics are changing too. China’s outbound travel boom is fueled mostly by a new generation of travelers. 67 percent of China’s overseas tourists in 2014 were born after 1980s, data compiled by Goldman Sachs show.
All these changes impact travel decisions. Promoters say group travelers want to see iconic sites and things they have seen on TV and in the movies. But reaching out to the new generation of savvy Chinese outbound travelers takes more than that.
The appeal for them, Dixon said, lies beneath the surface, in lesser known communities, parks and museums that add more personal character to their travel experience.

“This is an exciting time,” he said. “You don’t often see a market emerge the way China has. And we probably won’t see anything like this again.” Enditem

Source: Xinhua

China’s environment for foreign investors improves, not worsens: spokesman

   BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) — China’s business environment for foreigners has improved, not worsened, Wang Guoqing, spokesman for the annual session of the Chinese political advisory body, said Wednesday.

The Chinese government is firmly determined to build an internationalized environment featuring the rule of law and facilitation for foreign investment, Wang said at a press conference in Beijing.
“I believe China will continue to be the world’s popular destination of investment and profit can be made here,” said Wang, spokesman for the Fourth Session of the 12th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.  Enditem

China extends fishing ban on Yangtze River

   WUHAN, March 1 (Greenpost) — The Chinese Ministry of Agriculture has activated an annual fishing ban along the Yangtze River, starting March 1.

The ban, which lasts until June 30, covers the spawning season for most of the river’s aquatic life. It will include the entire river as well as key tributaries and lakes.
The ban also applies to the Huaihe River, which runs almost parallel between the Yangtze River and the Yellow River.
The ban has been extended by one month, from three months to four, in a bid to better protect fish resources, said Li Yanliang, director of the ministry’s Fishery Inspection and Management Office.
“The extension marks a new phase for environmental protection along the river as the central government starts intensive efforts to protect the Yangtze,” Li said.
The first ban on the lower reaches of the river was in 2002. In 2003, it was approved by the State Council and extended to the whole river basin.
The Yangtze is regarded as a cradle of China’s freshwater fish species and a valuable reserve of aquatic biodiversity. However, excessive fishing has put some species on the brink of extinction.

Last week, China vowed to improve the water quality of the Yangtze as part of wider measures to balance economic activity and environmental protection.
In the years leading up to 2020, China will work to ensure that more than 75 percent of the water in the Yangtze economic belt, covering 11 provinces and municipalities, meets at least the Grade III standard, according to the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the top economic planning agency.
China classifies water quality into six levels, ranging from level I, which is suitable for drinking after minimal treatment, to level VI, which is severely contaminated.
The NDRC said China aims to bring more than 97 percent of water from sources along the Yangtze belt up to Grade III before 2020.  Enditem

Source  Xinhua

Chinese Pianist Wang Yujia will perform in Stockholm in August

By Xuefei Chen Axlesson

STOCKHOLM, March 14(Greenpost)– World famous pianist Lang lang has just played in Stockholm with a great success.  Then Chinese Pianist Wang Yujia is scheduled to play in Berwaldhallen in Stockholm in August during the Baltic Sea Festival.

DSC_8018

 

Michael Tyden, General Manager of the Baltic Sea Festival said the Baltic Sea started in 2003 at the launching ceremony on Monday.

“It was ten years after the war and we decide to have a festival and since then we did it every year.” said Tyden.

DSC_7988Tyden said the Baltic countries include nine countries and 90-100 million people, even though it is not as many as Chinese, any how it is a lot of people.

DSC_7986Being asked about inviting Chinese pianist Wang Yujia to perform at the opening concert, Tyden said China has so many fantastic pianists. Lang Lang has played in Stockholm many times. He just played in the Concert Hall on Sunday with all the tickets sold out.

DSC_8002Tyden said Wang Yujia is an amazing pianist. She has been in Sweden several times too.

Tyden said the themes also involve environmental issues and welfare issues because the Baltic Sea was very polluted and needed more attention.

DSC_8006Tyden said the festival will begin with a newly written opera about the hospital activity.

The host of the festival will be Berwaldhallen Concert Hall and Radio Sweden.

DSC_8010The participating performers include Swedish Radio’s symphony orchestra and orchestra from Finland,  Lativia, Poland and Sweden.

 

 

 

If you have any questions and suggestions, write to us, at chenxuefei7@hotmail.com, or chenxuefei@greenpost,se

Lang Lang performs in Stockholm for the third time

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

STOCKHOLM, March14 (Greenpost)–World famous pianist Lang Lang gave a wonderful performance on Sunday in Stockholm.

IMG_2395This was the third time he came to Stockholm to perform.  It was also the first time that he gave signature to his fans.

IMG_2412

Lang Lang’s performance saw a very full konserthall.

IMG_2418

Lang Lang, a Manchurian, was born on June 14, 1982.  His father was a professional Erhu player. Later he quit his job and concentrated on raising Lang Lang to become the world famous pianist.  Both became the role model for many parents and children in China.

Lang Lang played twice in Nobel concert, once in 2007 in Stockholm and once in 2009 in Oslo when Obama won Nobel Prize for Peace.

Lang Lang has also become the pride for Chinese people. Wherever he goes,  he is a super star and loved by many, both old and young.

(Photo by Wan Juan)