Can Western financial giants fix China's pension system?
From March to May 2002, tens of thousands of Chinese workers in three, northeastern “rust belt” cities protested layoffs, corruption and the non-payment of their pensions. It was China’s longest spell of public unrest since the 1989 Democracy Movement — and it attracted several Beijing-bashing millenarians to the pages of western newspapers.
China’s “one-child policy has resulted in a rapidly aging nation,” wrote American lawyer Gordon G. Chang in the International Herald
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A weekly curated reading list on China from David Barboza, Pulitzer Prize-winning former Shanghai correspondent for The New York Times.
A daily roundup of China finance, business and economics headlines.
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Can a central bank digital currency work? China was the first major economy to launch one and, despite several setbacks, is starting to see the digital yuan take off.
The journalist-turned-lawmaker talks about her book on four women coming of age in modern China, the end of optimism for the younger generations, and being the first Chinese-born British MP.
September 17th: Strategies for Identifying Military End Users