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China: Dealing With Hidden Flaws


CHINA: Dealing With Hidden Flaws
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April 15, 2021: The continuing trade war with the United States has had growing impact on both countries. Over the last year there were many months where China dropped into second place as the largest trading partner of the U.S., replaced by Mexico. China and the U.S. have been reducing or halting exports of key items to each other. This is disrupting production in both countries. The American response has been to resume production of items it allowed China to create market dominance or a monopoly in. China is less able to do this and the trade war is exposing how China is more vulnerable than the United States. Some aspects of this vulnerability are sensitive issues China refuses to recognize. For example, China is a communist police state and the current communist government regards that as an advantage, not an impediment to survival. With its market economy run by a dictatorship China has become the classic definition of a fasc ....

Jammu And Kashmir , United States , United Kingdom , South China Sea , Brunei General , Sumatera Utara , South Korea , Republic Of , Spratly Islands , North Korea , Kyongsang Namdo , North Koreans , North Korean , Julian Felipe Reef , Whitsun Reef , Indian Ocean , Amphibious Ready Group , East Asian , World War , Taiwan Straits , Afghan Taliban , Central Asian , Silk Road , Landing Helicopter Dock , Ladakh State , Panglong Lake ,

Enforcing claims: The Hindu Editorial on U.S. challenging India's maritime rights


April 12, 2021 00:15 IST
Updated:
April 12, 2021 00:15 IST
Updated:
April 12, 2021 00:16 IST
India will have to deal with the open challenge the U.S. has posed to its maritime claims
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India will have to deal with the open challenge the U.S. has posed to its maritime claims
For several years now, the relationship of the U.S. and India has been marked by their sensitivity to each other’s concerns as they deepened cooperation on strategic issues, and aligned positions on multilateral issues. As a result, the April 7 press release by the U.S. Navy that announced that its 7th fleet’s Destroyer, the ....

United States , New Delhi , John Paul Jones , Us Navy , United Nations Convention , Paul Jones , Exclusive Economic Zone , Climate Envoy , Lakshadweep Islands , Nations Convention , Standard Operating Procedure , Enforcing Claims , Uss John Paul Jones , United Nations Convention On The Law Of Sea , Freedom Of Navigation Operations , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , புதியது டெல்ஹி , ஜான் பால் ஜோன்ஸ் , எங்களுக்கு கடற்படை , ஒன்றுபட்டது நாடுகள் மாநாடு , பால் ஜோன்ஸ் , பிரத்தியேக பொருளாதார ஸோந் , காலநிலை தூதர் , லட்சத்தீவு தீவுகள் , நாடுகள் மாநாடு , தரநிலை இயங்குகிறது ப்ரொஸீஜர் ,

In the South China Sea, it's 'meet the new boss, same as the old boss'


In the South China Sea, it’s ‘meet the new boss, same as the old boss’
David Larter
Photo credit: MC2 Zachary Wheeler/U.S. Navy
WASHINGTON The new Biden administration has been reversing many of the Trump administration’s policies in areas such as immigration and energy, but when it comes to confronting China’s actions in the South China Sea, at the highest levels of power the song remains the same.
In its opening weeks, the Biden administration has signaled it will continue many of the Trump administration’s hardline policies toward China. And it has not backed off heavy naval presence in the Indo-Pacific region, after a U.S. ship conducted “freedom of navigation operation” (FONOP) earlier this month. Then Feb. 9 the Navy announced that two carriers were operating together in the hotly disputed South China Sea. ....

United States , Hong Kong , White House , District Of Columbia , Paracel Islands , Republic Of , South China Sea , Brunei General , Taiwan Strait , Taiwan General , Hainan Island , Theodore Roosevelt , Wang Wenbin , Johns Mccain , John Finn , Joe Gould , Bonnie Glaser , Antony Blinken , Mike Pompeo , Bryan Clark , Eric Sayers , Kathleen Hicks , Davidb Larter , Lloyd Austin , Seth Cropsey , Lindsey Graham ,

China: We Have Concerns



February 11, 2021:
China looks forward to becoming the largest economy in the world during the next few years, and a military superpower a decade after that. Longer term the outlook is less promising.
Time is not on China’s side. There are numerous examples of this. One of the more obvious is the shrinking Chinese work force and population in general. The overall population growth rate peaked in 2016 at 0.59 percent and has been declining ever since. There is a worse problem with the shrinking labor force because of working age population declining. All this began in 2014 and will continue for decades. The biggest problem, though, is the growing shortage of workers. As the population ages, all those one-child families means there will be more elderly than the economy, and the shrinking workforce, can effectively support. Currently there are ten working age Chinese for every retiree. By 2050, there will only be two for ....

South Korea , Jammu And Kashmir , United States , United Kingdom , Wakhan Corridor , South China Sea , Brunei General , Sri Lanka , Paracel Islands , Wakhjir Pass , South Sudan , New Zealand , Rakhine State , Republic Of , South Africa , Spratly Islands , Jinmen Xian , Saudi Arabia , North Korea , Kyongsang Namdo , Woody Island , South Korean , Sea Fonops , Kim Yo Jong , International Monetary Fund , China Development Bank ,