Monday, October 31, 2011

China spies trouble Sino-Russian relationship - Reuben F. Johson

Reuben F. Johnson
A trip by president Vladimir Putin to Beijing in the second week of October was shadowed by the discovery of a Chinese spy network in Russia, writes defense specialist Reuben F. Johnson in The Washington Times. Arms trade from Russia to China was already dwindling.

Reuben F. Johnson:
Russia’s concerns with China begin with a fall-off in arms exports. Beginning in the 1990s, Russia enjoyed a brisk trade with China in sales of arms and defense technology, at the time a lifeline of badly needed revenue. 
Sukhoi Su-27SK and Su-30MKK fighter jets, surface combatant warships and the effective Almaz-Antei S-300 air- and missile-defense systems sold to Beijing were major moneymakers for Moscow. 
In recent years, however, Beijing’s purchases dwindled to a few specialized technologies — mainly fighter-jet engines, helicopters and air-defense systems. “These are the only remaining systems that the Chinese have not yet been able to illegally copy,” said a Moscow-based analyst who consults with Russian and EU national defense industry policymakers. 
Now Mr. Putin wants to make it clear that defense technology fromRussia must be purchased by China and not stolen, the analyst said. 
As if to send home the message, just prior to Mr. Putin’s visit, theRussian government arrested a Moscow-based Chinese national, Tun ShenyunMr. Tun was identified as a Ministry of State Security (MSS) spy operating under cover as a translator assisting visiting Chinese delegations.
More in the Washington Times.

Reuben F. Johnson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.
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Europe's wishful thinking gets a China treatment

People's Republic of China President, Hu Jinta...
Hu Jintao: no charity
No doubt Chinese companies, and China's government, are trying to go global. But they will take along a Chinese style of negotiating, that is still coming as a surprise to many of the Europeans. For those familiar with China, what I will describe here is no surprise, but obvious the rest of the world still has to get used to the Chinese style of negotiating. Especially Europe is vulnerable, as it loves to fall in its own trap of wishful thinking. But when it fails, it's only Europe to blame.

Three incidents that took place last week made me write this little story. First, there was an enthusiastic mail from an Irish group on doing business in China, who noted that telecom giant Huawei announced investments for their country. Then there was the end game of the Saab adventure. And of course China came in the picture as the savior of Europe with their supposedly unlimited foreign currency reserves from their trade deficit.

First short the three stories.

Huawei already caught my attention earlier this year when the Dutch government announced after a China mission that Huawei would expand its Europe headquarters in Amsterdam from 150 to 300 people. A nice success for an otherwise struggling government in a struggling Europe. Then, later I saw also announcements that Huawei would expand in Ireland, Belgium and Romania. I might have missed some other Huawei promises. At Google+ we started to make the first jokes about European governments and their wishful thinking. Whoever might be losing, it is in this case not Huawei. Is Huawei cheating? I do not think so. Its different European governments who try to score points on the short term for their constituency back home, while there is actually little ground for it.

Then there was the closing act of Saab. For months the technically bankrupt car manufacturer was waiting for millions from China, from its new partners, in exchange for a part of the shares. But those partners were supposedly waiting for the last governmental hurdles to participate in Saab. Despite unsubstantiated positive sounds about that needed permission from the central government, no money came to the rescue of the Swedish-Dutch company. Only when it was too late for Saab, the Chinese partners agreed to purchase the full 100 percent of Saab. Again, it was not the Chinese partner of Saab who is losing this waiting game. (Nobody asked whether the Chinese companies have permission to spend the remaining 100 million for 100 percent of Saab' shares, do there might be yet another chapter.)

Again, a lot of wishful thinking at the last European summit. First, Europeans expect China to have a lot of cash at hand from its trade deficit, and second, they expect that the country would be eager to spend this on European bonds to guarantee China's export industry keeps on humming in the future.

Now, president Hu Jintao is not setting like Uncle Scrooge on a pile of cash. China has apart from foreign reserves, also a huge domestic debt of about the same size as its foreign exchange, so some prudence would be in place in spending those funds. In the past China has put up a lot of its spare money in US bonds and it might not be too happy about its current value. It does not necessarily mean it is now going to throw its foreign currency into another bottomless hole.

Contrary to many Western countries, China owes its debts to its own citizens, companies and local governments. That means, it won't collapse right away when Western banks do: it has only limited financial exposure to the Western economy. The current government is on its way out, but the upcoming government still has to govern for another eight years and might be a bit more careful.

Then, look at Europe. One memorable night, last week, the European leaders force banks to accept 'voluntarily' a cut of 50 percent on their liabilities to Greece. And during the same meeting they give a bit more pocket money to the European rescue fund EFSF so it can guarantee 20 percent of the value of the bonds of countries that are on the verge of default. Now is that a nice deal when you buy guarantee bonds: you get a guarantee you will get 20 percent of your money back. I still remember the days when bonds were safe investments with a low interest, with a guarantee you would get 100 percent back. No wonder China's financial authorities did not react really enthusiastic.

In all three cases we see damaging cases of wishful thinking. Dealing with Chinese companies and governments is certainly possible, but keeping an eye on reality and getting some decent psychologists in your negotiating team might be a good idea. Europeans are their own worst enemies when dealing with the Chinese.


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Saturday, October 29, 2011

US aerospace firms might help China's military - Wendell Minnick

Wendell Minnick
US joint ventures in China might be helping China's military in improving its aerospace capabilities, according to an early draft of a report by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, seen by Defense News China expert Wendell Minnick. The official report is due in November.

Wendell Minnick:
The report noted last January's announcement by General Electric and the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) that they would launch a joint venture for integrated avionics. It also noted several Boeing-AVIC moves, including April's announcement that the two would double the capacity of the Boeing Tianjin joint venture, which produces composite materials. 
"One of the joint venture's customers is Xi'an Aviation Industry Corporation, which manufactures components for civil aircraft and produces aircraft, such as the JH-7A fighter-bomber and the H-6 bomber, for the Chinese military," the report said. 
The report said China, which is looking at ways to prevent the U.S. military from using satellites, has a robust, largely military space program of its own: roughly about 70 satellites in orbit, all but 13 controlled by the military. By 2020, China will have its own 35-satellite global positioning system. 
Four times in 2007 and 2008, unidentified hackers, possibly Chinese, gained control of two U.S. government earth observation satellites through a Norwegian ground station.
More in Defense News.

Wendell Minnick is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form.

More links on Wendell Minnick and Taiwan
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Friday, October 28, 2011

Taiwan F-16 ban might cost US economy US$1 trillion - Wendell Minnick

Wendell Minnick
The decision by the US administration to ban the sale of F-16's to Taiwan might cost the US economy US$1 trillion, according to a US analysis, writes defense expert Wendell Minnick in Defense News. Taiwan lobbyists find here new ammunition against the ban.

Wendell Minnick:
Stephen Fuller, director of the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University, and Economic Modeling Specialists Inc. (EMSI) conducted the analysis

"Our analysis reveals bleak outcomes for both the defense industry and the economy as a whole if the budget sequestration trigger is pulled and $1 trillion is cut from defense," Fuller said. 
"Dr. Fuller and EMSI's study shows the dramatic and devastating impact these cuts would have not only on our industry but on the economy at large," AIA President and CEO Marion Blakey said. "We cannot add .6 percent to the current 9.1 percent rate of unemployment. It would devastate the economy and the defense industrial base and undermine the national security of our country," she said. The report does not mention Taiwan or F-16 fighter production, but it does conclude from an overall analysis that 1 million U.S. jobs would be at risk and the gross domestic product could be lowered by 25 percent for 2013 if the U.S. defense budget sustained the current cuts being proposed.
More in Defense News

Wendell Minnick is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

More relevant links for Wendell Minnick and the ban on F-16 for Taiwan.
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Is Wal-Mart a chicken to be killed? - Shaun Rein

Killing a chicken to scare the monkey, is a famous saying in China. Giving Wal-Mart trouble might be a way for Chinese authorities to send a signal to foreign companies in China, tells business analyst Shaun Rein in Business Week.

Local protectionism is on the rise. Attacking US retailer Wal-Marts for mislabeling its food products and arresting its staff, might be a signal things are changing for foreign companies in China, says Shaun Rein:
The new protectionism stems from a broader change in Chinese attitudes: Where once localities vied for the prestige and money a big foreign investor brought, today multinationals are taken for granted. In a 2011 survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in the People’s Republic of China, almost a quarter of American companies cited “increased Chinese protectionism” as their greatest risk. “It is going to get harder to get permits, and these foreign companies won’t be as welcomed coming into important neighborhoods,” says Shaun Rein, managing director of China Market Research Group. “That’s because their capital isn’t as needed as it once was.”... 
Wal-Mart didn’t help itself by selling mislabeled pork. Crises over melamine-tainted milk, exploding watermelons, and hormone-injected meats have pushed food quality concerns into the national spotlight—and into the crosshairs of politicians eager to show they’re serious about safety. “By cracking down on a high-profile foreign retailer, their message is being sent throughout the country to consumers and supply chains,” says China Market Research’s Rein. “They realize they can get the same traction by detaining a few dozen Wal-Mart people as with a national crackdown.”
More in Business Week

Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.


More links on Shaun Rein
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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Receiving hate-mail after my Yueyue story - Zhang Lijia

ZhanglijiaAuthor Zhang Lijia's analysis of the death of toddler Yueyue, ignored by 18 passersby, in the Guardian has been praised as one of the better ones on the gruesome story. But not everybody appreciated the story and she has been flooded with hate-mail, she writes on her weblog.

From her weblog:
Among the emails I received from my web site, among the glowing praises and thanks, to my surprise, I found quite a few very nasty emails, attacking me personally, calling me the ‘running dog of the west’ and wishing me to die and so on. Very unpleasant!.. 
If I had had more time and space, I should stress that not all 1.4 billion Chinese are cold-hearted. In the wake of Sichuan earth quake, many touching stories emerged where people helped kindly strangers. And moral decline exists not just in China but the whole world. The riot in UK this August was just an example. 
But why can’t I criticize China? A nation, as in a person, needs to take a hard look at herself from time to time. I am patriotic – not a narrow nationalistic, I pointed out the problems in the hopes that the society can improve and China can grow. 
I wonder who are my attackers. China’s fast-growing economy and rising position in the world have made some young Chinese assertive and sometimes nationalistic. And I guess there will always are xenophobic who divides the world into 内and 外. Since I talked about some uncomfortable truth, they’d want to kick me out of the race. But I’ll surely stay and voice my concerns and opinions whenever I want to.
More on Zhang Lijia's weblog

Zhang Lijia is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form.
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Audi loses traction as consumer preferences change - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
Audi has lost 25% market share over two years time, as consumers prefer sexier cars like Mercedes and BMW, tells business analyst Shaun Rein in Bloomberg. Audi's asset as a government car has now become  a liability.

Bloomberg:
Audi’s share of China’s luxury-car sales has tumbled by 25 percent in less than two years as state agencies and executives tighten budgets and younger buyers seek alternatives to sedans traditionally used by the government. The German automaker supplied an estimated 70 percent of cars used by the government and state-held enterprises during the 1980s. 
“Audi is seen as being a bit old-fashioned because of its association as being a government car,” said Shaun Rein, Shanghai-based managing director of China Market Research Group. “Wealthy consumers today want something sexier, more indulgent, which is why BMW and Mercedes have done well.”... 
“Ten years ago, everyone wanted to be in government as that was seen as the ticket to wealth,” said Rein of China Market Research. “Today, the new wealthy consumer doesn’t want to be associated with officialdom.”
More in Bloomberg. 

Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form.
More links to Shaun Rein here.
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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Needed: a China-first strategy - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
During a meeting with the board of one of the largest FMCG companies, business analyst Shaun Rein pleaded for a 'China-first' strategy, as the country is key for the companies development. Some of his arguments he summarized in CNBC. Take Apple as an example.

Shaun Rein:
Companies need to stop thinking of China as an afterthought and make it an integral part of their corporate planning and product development just as they do with America and Europe. If they don’t, they risk losing out to aggressive, well-capitalized and increasingly innovative Chinese brands. 
Such a change in mindset can have a big impact on business. Case in point: Apple. The company turned around its operations in China this year after a lack luster launch of the iPhone two years ago. It introduced the iPhone 4 soon after its release in the U.S., rather than waiting for years as they did previously. 
With several hundred million Smartphone users who change their phones on average every nine to twelve months, rather than every two to three years like in America, Apple has a big opportunity in China. 
During my meeting with the FMCG company, I also suggested the board stop calling China an emerging market. I argued that it doesn’t make sense to call a country that drives growth and will soon equal America in terms of sales “emerging”. That moniker gives it second-class status when it comes to strategic planning.  Companies need to evolve to handle a new business paradigm in which former emerging markets become aggressive growth markets that could soon match major western ones. All divisions need to understand the disruptive nature of this shift and prepare for it.
More in CNBC

Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form.

More on Shaun Rein and China's economy

Shaun Rein spoke also today on China's inflation and rising labor costs, the pitfalls and opportunities for companies
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Monday, October 24, 2011

The new global consumer: Chinese - Tricia Wang

Tricia Wang
Researcher Tricia Wang sends us through her websitea telling advertisement from Guangzhou depicting the new global consumer: a Chinese couple, served by a while male. "The entire global economy right now depends on the Chinese elite and middle-class to spend."
Oh how this Toyota Highlander advertisment is reflective of the new global order.  I saw this picture in Guangzhou's domestic terminal. A Chinese couple is getting out of their Japanese brand car into what appears to be a private yacht. A white male greets them, taking their travel items and appears to be eager  in their service. 
This advertisement reflects a new Chinese imaginary - one that is global, expansive, unlimited, and exploratory. It also tells us who has the power to live out this imaginary. 10 years ago or even 5 years ago, I don't think this advertisement would've existed. But now companies have turned to the Chinese consumer, encouraging them to participate in this lifestyle. The entire global economy right now depends on the Chinese elite and middle-class to spend. But how long can this go on for until we see the next crisis? For how long can each system create "value"?

More on Tricia Wang's website

Tricia Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form. 

Tricia Wang, exploring China's underbelly.
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More land sales needed to repay debts - Victor Shih

Victor Shih
China's local government have been financing their wealth mostly by selling off land. As debts to fuel economic growth rise, more land sales might be on the agenda, tells financial and political analyst Victor Shih in Bloomberg, increasing the gap between rich and poor.

Bloomberg:
Cities may have to accelerate land sales as they struggle to repay the debt, said Victor Shih, a professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, who studies China’s local- government finances. There’s also an incentive for officials to keep payments to farmers as low as possible, he said. 
“Without suppressing land compensation, local governments can’t make the margins to pay back the banks,” Shih said. “In essence, they are the engines of inequality in China. Land development is the redistribution of income from average households to rich households.”
More in Bloomberg

Victor Shih is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch, or fill in our speakers' request form.

Victor Shih and China's debts.
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Helen Wang to visit London, Paris, Europe

Helen Wang
Helen Wang, the author of the leading book, The Chinese Dream: The Rise of the World's Largest Middle Class and What It Means to You, will be visiting London early December on the invitation of Lord Wei. She will also visit Paris and other parts of Europe and is available for speeches.

On Monday 5 December she will be talking in the Asia House in London on the invitation of Lord Wei of Shoreditch. From the invitation:
In The Chinese Dream, a groundbreaking book about the rising middle class in China, business consultant and China expert Helen Wang challenges us to recognize that some of our fears about China are grossly misplaced. As a result of China’s new capitalist paradigm, a burgeoning middle class – calculated to reach 800 million within the next fifteen years – is jumping aboard the consumerism train and riding it for all it’s worth – a reality that may provide the answer to America’s economic woes. And with China’s increasing urbanization and top-down governmental approach, it now faces increasing energy, environmental, and health problems – problems that the U.S. can help solve. Through timely interviews, personal stories, and a historical perspective, China-born Wang takes us into the world of the Chinese entrepreneurial middle class to show how a growing global mindset and the realization of unity in diversity may ultimately provide the way to creating a saner, safer world for all.
Lord Wei of Shoreditch is a social entrepreneur, interested in social reform, and a citizen with a keen interest in developing civil society solutions to social problems. Nat was a former advisor with the government on the Big Society, works with the Community Foundation Network to develop local responses to the Big Society, and serves in the House of Lords as the youngest and only active Chinese peer. 'Lord Wei currently sits as the Chair to the All Party Parliamentary Group on East Asian Business and also as the Treasurer to the All Party Parliamentary Group on Chinese in Britain.

Helen Wang is available for other speeches in Europe.

Helen Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. Or you can fill in our speakers' request form. More information on 

Helen Wang at Storify.


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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Why the Chinese, and the Americans, do not feel they are winning - Janet Carmosky

Janet Carmosky
Unstoppable economic growth, more wealth and growing political leverage has not made the Chinese citizens really happier and they find themselves in a dead-end, like the Americans. Self-declared sino-centric Janet Carmosky explains why we need more than only a GDP number  in the Scenario Magazine.

Janet Carmosky:
Distortions in China’s current job economy leave literally tens of millions of unemployed migrant workers and recent university graduates turning down work because the compensation offered is not a real living wage; The Center for Work-Life Balance reported that average white collar work weeks in China run over 80 hours; and the experienced elite job-hop relentlessly, driving managerial compensation and job turnover into the stratosphere. 
The sense of possibility in America – land of possibility – has also collapsed, thanks to the dearth of restraint in the past 30 years. Too much consumption, too many wars, too much credit extended. By technical terms, the US economy is in recovery. In real life terms, the descent into desperation may be just beginning. Unemployment remains close to 9%. A number of the states are broke. Political backlash is frightening. One state, the generally affluent and well-educated Michigan, has granted the governor the rights to dissolve government, to raid and privatize any part of the state by executive decree. In more than a dozen states, the rightist Tea Party is waging war with public and private sector unions. The obesity and morbidity of the population are shockingly high. Home foreclosures will remain high for at least another few years. All this while CEO pay is climbing again; Wall Street – arguably responsible for a large part of the global financial crash – is paying bonuses again. And, I’d bet whatever is left of my retirement funds that the Gini coefficient, hovering around 4.0 a few years ago, by now must be pretty close to 4.5. 
How did a single party, top-down socialist, atheist, Asian system and a bottom-up Western democracy based on ideals of humanist – let’s be blunt, Christian – ethics arrive at the same dead-end, at the same time? 
One potential answer: in the absence of a meaningful, measurable goal by which to steer, even the world’s oldest, most resilient and practical civilization; and the youngest, most ingeniously structured and idealistic nation; both nations of high educational achievement, female literacy, life expectancy, nations we expect more of…they have reverted to Newton’s First Law of Physics. 
China is the juggernaut – it develops real estate where none is needed to make everything look like it is growing. China focuses on continual marketing of itself as a destination for foreign investment, as if what it needs is more money. Things in motion tend to stay in motion. If GDP is our index for reporting success, and it’s possible to game the system by spending on infrastructure, then Beijing simply builds faster, bigger, more. 
The USA is in paralysis, flailing. Things at rest tend to stay at rest. State and National legislatures are engaged in warfare. The country is deeply divided, obsessed with job creation in an environment where corporations and the wealthiest citizens have come to expect that they will pay spectacularly little, if any, tax; and where banks no longer extend credit to any business that actually needs it. Clearly the USA has resources to tap, which will ultimately enable a breakthrough and a return to value creation. If we can only agree on how to get un-stuck; on a direction.
More in the Scenario Magazine.

Janet Carmosky is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. Or do fill in our speakers'request form. 
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A nation of 1.4bn cold hearts - Zhang Lijia

Zhang Lijia
The world, including China, reacted with shock at the pictures of toddler Yueyue, overrun by cars and ignored by passersby,  hit the internet. Social commentator Zhang Lijia shares the feeling, but tries also to explain in The Guardian, why it happened.

Why did so many on the Chinese internet understand why so many people ignored the wounded little girl? Zhang Lijia:
But, astonishingly, a large percentage of posters said they understood why the onlookers did not lend a helping hand. Some admitted they would do the same – for fear of getting into trouble and fear of facing another "Nanjing judge".  
Let me explain the story of the muddle-headed Nanjing judge. In 2006, in the capital of Jiangsu province, a young man named Peng Yu helped an old woman who had fallen on the street and took her to a hospital and waited to see if the old woman was all right. Later, however, the woman and her family accused Peng of causing her fall. A judge decided in favour of the woman, based on the assumption that "Peng must be at fault. Otherwise why would he want to help?", saying that Peng acted against "common sense". The outcry from the public in support of Peng forced the court to adjust its verdict and resulted in Peng paying 10% of the costs instead of the total. Since that incident Peng has become a national cautionary tale: the Good Samaritan being framed by the beneficiary of their compassion... 
Fei Xiaotong, China's first sociologist, described Chinese people's moral and ethical characteristics in his book, From the Soil, in the middle of the last century. He pointed out that selfishness is the most serious shortcoming of the Chinese. "When we think of selfishness, we think of the proverb 'Each person should sweep the snow from his own doorsteps and should not fret about the frost on his neighbour's roof,'" wrote Fei. He offered the example of how the Chinese of that period threw rubbish out of their windows without the slightest public concern. Things are much the same today. 
Under Mao, citizens were forced to behave themselves in both public and private spheres. Every March, people were obliged to go into the street to do good deeds: cleaning buses, fixing bicycles and offering haircuts. Now relaxed social control and commercialisation over the past three decades have led people to behave more selfishly again.

Much more in The Guardian


Zhang Lijia is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. Or you can fill in our speakers' request form.
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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Smartphones for the masses - Tricia Wang

Tricia Wang
Nokia's CEO Stephen Elop suggest that smartphones are only in reach of 10 percent of the population. Wrong, says researcher Tricia Wang, who is observing how the remaining 90 percent in China is getting ready to purchase a smartphone.

From her weblog.
Tricia Wang explains what the Taiwanese firm Mediatek is doing in the market for smartphones:
I have several thoughts about Elop's comment:
  • There are already companies that are ready to offer the 90% a very affordable smartphone.
  • It is misleading to think that this 90% won't spend more on cellphones than they did on feature phones.
  • Ahtough this 90% can't afford a smartphone now, it doesn't mean that they don't want one in the near future.
It would've been more accurate for Elop to say, "previously, 90 percent of the world could not afford a smartphone or a high-end device, but we are going to see affordable smarpthones enter the market and users who will spend more on mobiles...This creates an opportunity." 
But I suspect that the reason why Nokia's CEO made his statement is because the market has yet to see the flooding of affordable smartphones. This is because Mediatek, the platform on shanzai phones, up until recently has only been able to offer 2G chips, not 3G chips.  But Mediatek is beginning to produce Android smartphones with their 3G MTK6516 cellphone chips, the first affordable shanzai smartphone. And now that Mediatek has sorted out legal issues with Qualcomm in a across-patent liscensing deal, they are moving upmarket and ensuring that their 2G customers transition to their 3G handsets. 
So this means guerilla warfare on the smartphone market: Chinese cellphone makers will soon be producing smartphonesthat are much less expensive than the current array of smartphones ( i.e. iphones, HTCs, samsungs, and ericssons).
Can Nokia and Microsoft together work out a strategy to fight this new development? Tricia Wang:
In my research with non-elite users around the world, Nokia has always been at the heart of every conversation about cellphones. But I've noticed the decreasing ownership and desire of Nokia phones in the last 3-4 years, and it is even more apparent over the last year. The 3G market among non-elite users is already being created by current advertisement for high-end smartphones from iphone to HTC to Motorola. Cellphone vendors are selling 3G phones even in second hand cellphone markets. So even if non-elite users can't afford these phones, their desires for one are being nutured.High-end smartphones are paving the way for shanzai smartphones.
More on Tricia Wang's weblog.

Tricia Wang is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. You can also use our speakers' request form.
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Singapore sets up naval design firm in China - Wendell Minnick

Singapore Technologies (ST) Engineering's marine arm, ST Marine, has incorporated a wholly owned subsidiary, ST Marine (Wuhan) Engineering Design Consultancy, in Hubei Province, China, writes defense analyst Wendell Minnick in Defense News.

Wendell Minnick:
The new subsidiary will strengthen ST Marine's engineering team in Singapore and "leverage the latter's well-established naval design capability and engineering expertise," the release stated. 
ST Marine's in-house Engineering Design Center has designed a variety of commercial and defense vessels, including the Diving Support Vessel, Seismic Survey Vessel and Anchor Handling Tug Supply Vessel.
More in Defense News.

Wendell Minnick is a speaker at the China Speakers bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch. You can also send in a request using our speakers' request form.
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Friday, October 21, 2011

China needs to import food - Arthur Kroeber

Arthur Kroeber
Diminishing water resources might force China to import large amounts of grain in the future, tells economic analyst Arthur Kroeber in Business Week. Although it might first groom domestic players like Cofco, before facing competitors like Cargill on a global market place.

Business Week:
China may have to increase imports because its dependence on the use of ground water for grain production “isn’t going to be sustainable indefinitely,” said Arthur Kroeber, managing director of Beijing-based GaveKal Dragonomics Research, a financial advisory firm... 
China may be putting off “inevitable” large grain imports for 10 to 20 years to enable the opportunity to “develop companies like Cofco as domestic alternatives to Cargill and give them some sense of security of supply,” Kroeber said. 
While the government has limited expansion of corn-based industry to ensure priority for livestock, “it’s difficult to control demand for starch” or other corn-derived products because there’s a strong demand for them, he said. So “either we produce here, or buy from outside,” he said... 
Most countries will find it a rather “sensitive matter” to either sell or give long-term leases for food production areas to other foreign entities, Kroeber said. Still, cash-rich Cofco can offer “very attractive terms,” he said.
More about China's food strategy in Business Week.


Arthur Kroeber is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conferencen? Do get in touch. You can also fill in our 'speakers' request' form. 
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Internet users want games and porn - Tricia Wang

tricia1Tricia WangSociologist Tricia Wang analyzes on her website the wonderful world of shanzai, or the mobile knockoffs that are so popular in China. More than features, she tells, Chinese internet users want games and porn on their Nokia N9 knockoff.

Tricia Wang:


But it wasn't the impressive overload of OS interfaces, dual-sim card, 3.8″ WQVGA 240×400 resistive touch screen or the  1.3MP rear and front facing camera that caught my attention.

It was an advertisement on Taobao that revealed much more about what Chinese users want: games and porn (two areas I research). Below the description of the knock off, the first and most prominently placed feature of the Noka N9 was Talking Tom - a game that could that operate across platform. The writing in red claims that:

In all of history, this is the most versatile Talking Tom ever!!
史上功能最全的会说话的TOM猫!!
Then below three rows of Talking Tom screenshots, is another ad for a game that allows you to watch females strip when you blow on the microphone:
Most deliciosly evil game of pretty girls stripping!!
邪恶的美女走光游戏!!!
Then below the stripping games are more pictures of other games included in the phone from Angry Birds to Fruit Ninja.
If users just want games and stripping apps, then do they really need any of the other features that are offered in any of the original OS's  on phones that cost 3-15 times as much as knock offs? Not really, at least according to this Taobao advertisement which shows that it is possible to reduce user needs down to a few most necessary apps. The success of Shanzai mobiles tells us that the purity of an OS actually matters little to these users. They just want a phone thatlooks like a smartphone with games and basic features. The interesting point here is "looks like."  The Noka N9 is a semi-smartphone (半职能手机) that looks like a smartphone but doesn't have the full features of a pure smartphone. In previous interviews that I have conducted with shanzai phone users, they expressed that they valued durability (i.e. droppability. not longevitiy) and affordability in a phone. But in more recent interviews, they now the new value for non-elite users is to have a phone that can do the things that they see smartphone users doing - like interacting with more complex, interactive, & graphically rich stuff - like Talking Tom & Girls Stripping.


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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Rising costs forces Chinese factories to streamline - Bill Dodson

As costs for resources, including wages, are on the way up in China, its manufacturers have to streamline their manufacturing processes, where in the past they would waste resources. Business analyst Bill Dodson quotes a friend describing the changes in his weblog.

Bill Dodson:
The Chinese owners of the factories in China are beginning to reign in waste in their production processes. “Before, if they screwed up an order they’d just call in another hundred bodies for pennies, have them work overnight to remedy the situation, then let them go,” he told me. “Now,” he explained, “pay rates have gotten more expensive, material inputs are more expensive, and there’s not as much business to go around. So Chinese owners are beginning to look at how to improve their processes, get the orders right the first time the most efficiently they can. That’s another reason why some of them are looking into or investing in robots to do some parts of the job. Fewer errors.” 
The former plant manager put the change into context for me. “It was the same in Britain in the sixties. We wasted a lot of material, made a lot of mistakes. Then, in the seventies, everything began getting more expensive to manufacture. We cleaned up our lines, our processes. Things like Total Quality and Lean Manufacturing came along. It’s a natural process. China’s not special in that way,” he added.
More in Bill Dodson's weblog

Bill Dodson is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Wal-Mart not bullied by China authorities - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
Unlike Wall Street Journal's columnist Bussey Shaun Rein does not think Wal-Mart - or any other foreign retailer in China - is bullied by the authorities. It's Wal-Mart who betrayed its customers. Foreign retailers gain more and more market share, he tells in CNBC.

Shaun Rein:
Contrary to Bussey’s position that the government is treating foreign retailers unfairly, the largest hypermarket chains, Wal-Mart, RT Mart, Carrefour,Tesco, Auchan, Lotus, are all foreign owned because consumers trust foreign retailers more not to cut corners. Combined, they control the majority share of the modern retail market. Where are the barriers to foreign retail investment? 
Most consumers, before the incident, told my firm they “trusted” Wal-Mart to sell good quality products. The government supports foreign retailers because they positively impact the food supply chain. So when even a trusted Wal-Mart sells bad products, it destroys public trust more and the government needs to make an example of them. 
As one 30-something woman shopper in Shanghai told me, “If Wal-Mart did this, I shudder to think what domestic chains will do. The government needs to stop the problem now by arresting people, not just issue little fines.”
More in CNBC  

Shaun Rein is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch.
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