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On December 23, MBA China released the ranking “TOP100 Best MBA Programs” and “TOP10 Best Finance MBA Programs” among all Chinese business schools in 2020. The ranking is based on key indicators such as faculty, curricula (including commercial thoughts, curriculum innovation, multidisciplinary integration, discipline foresight, intellectual capital, comprehensive effectiveness, and alumni resources), student evaluation, enrollment, brand influence, etc. They are currently the most authoritative and acceptable MBA school ranking lists in China.
Among the TOP100 Best MBA programs, the School of Economics and Management at Tsinghua University ranked the first. Antai School of Economics and Management at Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Guanghua School of Management at Peking University ranked the second and third respectively. The School of Management of Zhejiang University and the School of Management of Fudan University were strongly selected as the 4th
China Daily Global / 2021-01 / 26 / Page003
China becomes the largest FDI recipient in 2020 By LIU ZHIHUA in Beijing and HENG WEILI in New York | China Daily Global | Updated: 2021-01-26 00:00 Effective pandemic control, bright economic outlook were listed as reasons for its growth China had overtaken the United States by becoming the world s largest recipient of foreign direct investment last year, according to a UN report. Analysts and business executives said that this proved once again China s continuously improving business environment and the great resilience of the country s economy despite the impact of the pandemic. They said China s effective control of COVID-19, followed by the quick economic recovery, as well as its bright economic outlook and improvement in the business environment, were the main reasons for the FDI growth last year.
BEIJING (AP) The U.S.-Chinese trade war isn’t going away under President Joe Biden.
Biden won’t confront Beijing right away, economists say, because he wants to focus on the coronavirus and the economy. But he looks set to renew pressure over trade and technology grievances that prompted President Donald Trump to hike tariffs on Chinese imports in 2017.
Negotiators might tone down Trump’s focus on narrowing China’s multibillion-dollar trade surplus with the United States and push harder to open its state-dominated economy, which matters more in the long run, economists say. But no abrupt tariff cuts or other big changes are expected.
Joe Biden won’t confront Beijing right away, economists say, because he wants to focus on the coronavirus and the economy. However, Biden looks set to renew pressure over trade and technology grievances that prompted President Donald Trump to hike tariffs on Chinese imports in 2017.