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SEADOG, WHAT SHOULD I SAY ABOUT YOU..RECKLESS CHILDISH???

SEADOG , DO YOU KNOW THAT FOR A COUNTRY TO PROGRESS YOU HAVE TO TAKE CARE OF THE INTERESTS OF THE EXISTING INTERESTS GROUPS EVEN IF THEY ARE CURRENTLY DOING BAD THINGS TO THE PEOPLE, SINCE STABILTY IS ENSURED BY THE ECONOMIC PROGRESS OF A COUNTRY, WHICH IS A PREMISE FOR IMPROVING THE PEOPLE BASIC RIGHTS NO MATTER IN WHAT TERMS GRADUALLY.....I KNOW THIS STATEMENT HAS SOME PROBLEM BUT THE REASONS BEHIND STILL ARE TENABLE....SMART PEOPLE GET THE WHOLE PICTURE ALREADY....

YOU CANNOT EXPECT A COUNTRY TO CHANGE OVERNIGHT AS YOU VERY LIKELY DONT KNOW THE TRUE NATURE OF HUMANITY, AND OF COURSE OF THE POLITICIANS AND OF THE EXISTING INTERESTS GROUPS BEHIND THE SCENE TO PROVIDE SUPPORTS TO THE PARTY THAT BENEFITS THEM THE MOST........
 
YEAH, I DISCOVERED THAT SEADOG PUT A MANTLE OF FLAG ON HIS IDENTITY , SO I WILL JUST IGNORE HIM...

SUCH A PATHETIC WOXM TRIES TO SHAKE THE WHOLE INEVITABLE TREND......
 
Foreign investors return to China as economy warms up - People's Daily Online 07:59, December 08, 2009

China's economic recovery is alluring back overseas investors who had withdrawn from the country under the tide of the global financial crisis.

In Qingdao, an eastern China port city, the number of overseas investors coming to make investment in the Chengyang District has been on the rise since June, said deputy head of the district government Li Guixi.

Li said, the district approved 146 foreign-funded projects in the first ten months, and involved contracted foreign investment totalled 280 million U.S. dollars, up 2.2 percent year on year.

Li said Swarovski, the world's leading producer of precision-cut crystal, invested more than 100 million U.S. dollars in Chengyang to build its first factory outside Europe in July.

However, just one year ago, foreign investors were busy evacuating from the district, leaving thousands of workers jobless and their wages unpaid.

Speaking of his ex-employer's evacuation, Cao Kejun, 59, still broods over his unpaid wage.

"Had I found that boss from the Republic of Korea (ROK), I would like my 600 yuan (about 87.8 U.S. dollars) back," he spoke with a strong Shandong accent.

His ex-employer, a ROK investor of a suitcase and bag factory in Qianwangtuan Community, Chengyang District, northern Qingdao, took an overnight evacuation back to his home country ahead of the financial crisis, abandoning DeBest, his factory, with 500 jobless workers.

Two more ROK investors in the community left without a notice about 11 months ago, leaving 420 more people jobless, said Qi Xide, who was in charge of management of enterprises in the community.

Due to the global crisis, the inflow of foreign direct investment (FDI) to China began to slow down in the fourth quarter last year, and as of July this year, the FDI China received had decreased year on year for 10 consecutive months, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

In November last year, the Chinese government adopted a massive economic stimulus package, including raising export tax rebate and other measures, to halt the drastic FDI decline and combat the crisis, which turned out to be effective in boosting economy.

The country's gross domestic product (GDP) grew 8.9 percent year on year in the third quarter, accelerating from 7.9 percent in the second quarter and 6.1 percent in the first. In the third quarter last year, it increased 9 percent year on year.

With favorable policies and the economy picking up, investors that once had doubts in China's economy and business environment had come to discuss investment with the local governments, said Li Guixi.

Nationally, the latest data had shown that China saw a third consecutive monthly increase in FDI in October by attracting 7.1 billion U.S. dollars, up 5.7 percent from the same period last year.

Young-Su Park, the China president of a ROK company, expressed great confidence in further growth of China's economy, which he said means greater demand for infrastructure investments.

His company, Leading Solution, which mainly produces air-conditioners and farm machineries, had just invested 48 million U.S. dollars for a new farm machinery factory in Chengyang, capital of northeastern Liaoning Province.

"Investors have reasons to leave, and now they find reasons to come back," said Park.

In Qianwangtuan of Qingdao, the old building of DeBest is now taken by a new ROK-funded factory.

"With three new foreign-funded factories going into operation this year, workers are starting to work overtime again," said Qi, the administrator.

Cao, just like his ex-colleagues, has found a new job. He is now working as a cleaner in the Qianwangtuan community and earns 600 yuan a month.

Source: Xinhua
 
China's auto sales, output exceed 1 mln in Nov. - People's Daily Online
08:05, December 09, 2009

China's auto production and sales almost doubled the previous year figures to reach 1.39 million and 1.34 million units in November, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said Tuesday.

Overall auto production topped 12.27 million units in the first11 months, up 41.59 percent from the same period last year; auto sales stood at 12.23 million in the January-November period, up 42.39 percent year on year.

The association forecast sales and output for 2009 would both surpass 13 million units.

The country's largest auto maker, the Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation, sold about 2.43 million auto units in the first 11 months, up 54.51 percent year on year.

The association attributed the increases to a series of government stimulus measures to boost domestic consumption.

China in January halved the purchase tax on passenger cars to five percent for models with engine displacements of less than 1.6liters, a move to shore up domestic auto consumption.

Source: Xinhua
 
China to launch high-speed railway from central to south China - People's Daily Online
December 09, 2009

Drivers lead the train trough the tunnel on the Wuhan-Guangzhou Railway, Dec. 9, 2009. The High-Speed Passenger-dedicated Wuhan-Guangzhou Railway, which extends to 1068.6 km in full length and scheduled to be operational by the end of 2009, has made its trial operation on wednesday. (Xinhua/Lu Hanxin)


【1】 【2】 【3】
 
China to further boost domestic consumption in 2010: State Council - People's Daily Online 20:58, December 09, 2009

China's State Council said Wednesday that the government will continue to tap into the domestic market for a stable and relatively rapid economic growth next year.

Policies to boost consumption will be further strengthened and most of the current policies will be continued, according to an executive meeting of the State Council, chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao.

China will continue to expand domestic consumption next year and especially to highlight consumption's role in boosting economic growth, as China's economy will still face many challenges next year, according to the meeting.

Policies to subsidize rural households to buy electric appliances will be continued next year and policies to subsidize rural households to buy automobiles will be prolonged to the end of next year.

After home appliance replacement ended trial operation in May next year, the policies will be fully carried out and further promoted. Measures to subsidize agricultural equipment will be continued.

Policies to reduce purchase tax on passenger cars will be continued but adjusted to 7.5 percent for models with engine displacements of less than 1.6 liters.

The central government has implemented a series of policies in improving people's living standards and promoting consumption since the fourth quarter in 2008 to fight the global financial crisis.

The policies have effectively tapped consumption potentials and boosted China's economic recovery, according to the meeting.

The meeting also issued a guideline on trial operation of social insurance fund budget to put social insurance fund under government budget management.

Source:Xinhua
 
Chinese Outrage,, The Wall Street Journal 2006

News that Chinese police shot and killed local villagers protesting land seizures last week conjures up remembrances of past instances of brutality on the mainland. While the scale of each outrage differs, the root problems haven't changed in recent years: the lack of official transparency, the absence of true property rights and high-handed dispute settlement methods. What a shame that today's Chinese leaders, initially thought to be progressive, are doing so little to change the way the ruling party deals with China's citizens.

The latest brutishness is said to have occurred in the village of Dongzhou, a coastal spot located in the southern China province of Guangdong. International news agencies claim up to 20 people were shot dead after protesting the construction of a power plant that would require landfill in waters traditionally used for fishing. China's official Xinhua News agency -- breaking days of silence -- put the fatality count at three on Saturday, blaming a "chaotic mob" for provoking the police. The villagers contest this account. News reports claimed that some were offered hush money by the local authorities. Xinhua didn't address this assertion.

The haze of incomplete information continues at the time of this writing, not least because police heavies have now sealed off Dongzhou to visitors. Imagine the chaos that must be roiling the place.

Cover-ups are the knee-jerk reactions of all repressive regimes, but it is particularly acute in China, where the authorities even try to monitor and censor Internet blogs. The trouble is, as the mainland's economy grows, its citizens' access to outside information grows, too, regardless of how hard the state tries to crack down. So does their ability to organize. Mobile phones are already transforming the ability of ordinary Chinese to contact each other and the outside world. Earlier this year, a mobile phone video showing paramilitary thugs beating Chinese villagers to a pulp was leaked, broadcast on the BBC and posted on the Washington Post's Web site.

These sorts of incidents aren't supposed to happen in coastal areas like Dongzhou. According to widely-held myth, China's "agricultural" classes in the interior provinces are upset with the wealth accrual of the coastal city-dwellers, and therein lies the problem. That explanation doesn't hold up. Dongzhou is located in a relatively prosperous region, on the outskirts of the city of Shanwei and close to China's shining star, the city of Hong Kong. Beijing has been pouring money into Shanwei, building an industrial zone and planning various power plants. The villagers' dispute, it seems, is more about perceived property rights infringements than worrying about whether a neighbor is better off.

In an ideal communist society, land is shared by all and property rights theoretically don't exist. In practice, however, these lines blur, which is part of the reason why, ultimately, communism fails. If a farmer's family has tilled a plot of land for several generations, does he assert a type of ownership over it? And if he can't transfer this land for profit, what incentive has he to maintain it, besides subsistence? As the Chinese government has seized agricultural land for industrial purposes, discontent has grown.

Unfortunately, any good intentions by the Chinese state are often undermined by corruption on the local level. Furthermore, many Chinese are unable to settle their complaints through effective legal channels. And so they revert to the only thing they can think of: protests.

Official arrogance is spurring a burgeoning rights consciousness in China, one which will likely only grow over time. The protest in Dongzhou is only a small manifestation of it. Over 70,000 people have participated in protests this year, according to official numbers. "Barefoot lawyers" are heading out into the countryside to educate citizens on what they can, and cannot, claim as crimes. Rural folks are increasingly taking advantage of their ancient right to "petition," or head to Beijing and ask the state to redress local grievances. We've been told that petitioners are now so desperate for help that they're starting to gather regularly in front of the U.S. Embassy.

The Communists in Beijing aren't blind to this state of affairs. In fact, sources tell us that the top leadership is genuinely afraid that their country -- a diverse collection of ethnicities, religions, and languages -- is cracking around the edges. In the new five-year plan announced last month, Beijing rolled out a new euphemism, "harmonious and sustainable development," meant to emphasize the distribution of the gains from economic growth more widely and to promote "stability."

The problem is that this kind of approach -- as the Soviet Union discovered -- doesn't work. When an economy is growing fast, it's impossible to control every facet of it. And the point isn't to ensure that everyone is compensated equally; rather, it's to ensure that citizens have access to the same starting point, such as decent education, a fair legal system to protect them, and transparent political representation. Where citizens go from there is their problem.

Political instability is Beijing's worst nightmare. But dealing with protests as in Dongzhou with dictated economic plans, brute force and cover-ups is fated to backfire. The ruling party isn't finding solutions but merely displaying the nastiness of authoritarianism.
 
Chinese Outrage,, The Wall Street Journal 2006

News that Chinese police shot and killed local villagers protesting land seizures last week conjures up remembrances of past instances of brutality on the mainland. While the scale of each outrage differs, the root problems haven't changed in recent years: the lack of official transparency, the absence of true property rights and high-handed dispute settlement methods. What a shame that today's Chinese leaders, initially thought to be progressive, are doing so little to change the way the ruling party deals with China's citizens.

The latest brutishness is said to have occurred in the village of Dongzhou, a coastal spot located in the southern China province of Guangdong. International news agencies claim up to 20 people were shot dead after protesting the construction of a power plant that would require landfill in waters traditionally used for fishing. China's official Xinhua News agency -- breaking days of silence -- put the fatality count at three on Saturday, blaming a "chaotic mob" for provoking the police. The villagers contest this account. News reports claimed that some were offered hush money by the local authorities. Xinhua didn't address this assertion.

The haze of incomplete information continues at the time of this writing, not least because police heavies have now sealed off Dongzhou to visitors. Imagine the chaos that must be roiling the place.

Cover-ups are the knee-jerk reactions of all repressive regimes, but it is particularly acute in China, where the authorities even try to monitor and censor Internet blogs. The trouble is, as the mainland's economy grows, its citizens' access to outside information grows, too, regardless of how hard the state tries to crack down. So does their ability to organize. Mobile phones are already transforming the ability of ordinary Chinese to contact each other and the outside world. Earlier this year, a mobile phone video showing paramilitary thugs beating Chinese villagers to a pulp was leaked, broadcast on the BBC and posted on the Washington Post's Web site.

These sorts of incidents aren't supposed to happen in coastal areas like Dongzhou. According to widely-held myth, China's "agricultural" classes in the interior provinces are upset with the wealth accrual of the coastal city-dwellers, and therein lies the problem. That explanation doesn't hold up. Dongzhou is located in a relatively prosperous region, on the outskirts of the city of Shanwei and close to China's shining star, the city of Hong Kong. Beijing has been pouring money into Shanwei, building an industrial zone and planning various power plants. The villagers' dispute, it seems, is more about perceived property rights infringements than worrying about whether a neighbor is better off.

In an ideal communist society, land is shared by all and property rights theoretically don't exist. In practice, however, these lines blur, which is part of the reason why, ultimately, communism fails. If a farmer's family has tilled a plot of land for several generations, does he assert a type of ownership over it? And if he can't transfer this land for profit, what incentive has he to maintain it, besides subsistence? As the Chinese government has seized agricultural land for industrial purposes, discontent has grown.

Unfortunately, any good intentions by the Chinese state are often undermined by corruption on the local level. Furthermore, many Chinese are unable to settle their complaints through effective legal channels. And so they revert to the only thing they can think of: protests.

Official arrogance is spurring a burgeoning rights consciousness in China, one which will likely only grow over time. The protest in Dongzhou is only a small manifestation of it. Over 70,000 people have participated in protests this year, according to official numbers. "Barefoot lawyers" are heading out into the countryside to educate citizens on what they can, and cannot, claim as crimes. Rural folks are increasingly taking advantage of their ancient right to "petition," or head to Beijing and ask the state to redress local grievances. We've been told that petitioners are now so desperate for help that they're starting to gather regularly in front of the U.S. Embassy.

The Communists in Beijing aren't blind to this state of affairs. In fact, sources tell us that the top leadership is genuinely afraid that their country -- a diverse collection of ethnicities, religions, and languages -- is cracking around the edges. In the new five-year plan announced last month, Beijing rolled out a new euphemism, "harmonious and sustainable development," meant to emphasize the distribution of the gains from economic growth more widely and to promote "stability."

The problem is that this kind of approach -- as the Soviet Union discovered -- doesn't work. When an economy is growing fast, it's impossible to control every facet of it. And the point isn't to ensure that everyone is compensated equally; rather, it's to ensure that citizens have access to the same starting point, such as decent education, a fair legal system to protect them, and transparent political representation. Where citizens go from there is their problem.

Political instability is Beijing's worst nightmare. But dealing with protests as in Dongzhou with dictated economic plans, brute force and cover-ups is fated to backfire. The ruling party isn't finding solutions but merely displaying the nastiness of authoritarianism.

Damn you stupid troll, posting an article wasn't even found in wall-

street journal, posting thing about human right stuff dated back 1999 on

an economy thread, posting article without LINK.

You are being reported, don't you think you can get away with your

evil intention to ruin the thread.

Now get the hell out of here, you low life loser !!

:smitten::pakistan::china:
 
CNOOC announces new deepwater gas finding in South China Sea - People's Daily Online December 10, 2009

China National Oil Company Limited (CNOOC Ltd.) announced Wednesday that its partner, Husky Oil China Limited, a subsidiary of Canada-based Husky Energy Inc., has made a new deepwater gas discovery in the South China Sea.

The Liuhua34-2 finding becomes the second deepwater gas discovery following the Liwan3-1 discovery, made by CNOOC Ltd. And its partner in the Pearl River Mouth Basin in the eastern South China Sea.

The Liwan3-1 discovery was made on deepwater Block 29/26 in the South China Sea in 2006. The Liuhua34-2 discovery is also in the Block 29/26.

The discovery well Liuhua34-2-1 is located about 23 kilometers northeast of Liwan3-1 gas field. The total vertical depth of the well is 3,449 meters, and the water depth is the area is about 1,145 meters.

Test results of the well show that it produced 55 million cubic feet of natural gas per day, which indicates the well's future deliverability could exceed 140 million cubic feet per day.

Zhu Weilin, executive vice president of the CNOOC Ltd. and general manager of exploration department said that the new deepwater discovery Liuhua34-2 further demonstrates the huge potential in the deepwater area in the South China Sea.

The two adjacent discoveries could be developed in a more efficient way through sharing development facilities, said Zhu.

In order to determine the full potential of the Liuhua34-2 field, an appraisal well is planned to be drilled in early 2010 by Husky.

Husky started exploring in offshore China in 2002. Husky signed a Petroleum Contract for Block 29/26 in 2004, which is 2,230 square kilometers in area.

The Liwan3-1 natural gas field was discovered in June, 2006. Husky expects the plan of development for the Liwan3-1 Field to be submitted to the regulatory authorities in early 2010. First gas production is targeted to be in the 2013 time frame, according to the statement posted on the website of Husky Energy.

According to the production sharing contract, CNOOC Limited has the right to participate in up to 51 percent working interest in any commercial discoveries on Block 29/26.

CNOOC Ltd. is the listed subsidiary of China National Offshore Oil Corporation, China's largest offshore oil company.

Husky Energy is an integrated energy and energy-related company headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

The concept of deepwater varies against time as probing technology develops. For the time being, deepwater refers to the area in the sea where the depths from the sea surface to the seabed are above 300 meters.

Source: Xinhua
 
China launches 'Yaogan VII' remote-sensing satellite
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-12-09 22:16

25d8ec2176c6584c5d3720f7c64b649e.jpg


A Long March 2D rocket carrying the remote-sensing satellite "Yaogan VII" lifts off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern GansuProvince, December 9, 2009.[CFP]

9cd039e73a6763654e486c2eef91af1e.jpg


A Long March 2D rocket carrying the remote-sensing satellite "Yaogan VII" lifts off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern GansuProvince, December 9, 2009.[CFP]

JIUQUAN, Gansu: China launched Wednesday a remote-sensing satellite, "Yaogan VII," from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern Gansu Province.

The satellite was successfully launched into the space on a Long March 2D carrier rocket at 4:42 p.m., the center reported.

It will be mainly used for scientific experiment, land resources survey, crop yield estimates and disaster prevention and reduction, according to the center.

The satellite was developed by the China Academy of Space Technology under the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp. The rocket was designed by the Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology, also under the corporation.

The flight was the 120th of the Long March series of carrier rockets.

China launches 'Yaogan VII' remote-sensing satellite
 
No matter how well China economy does, its going to have major problems if China does not have poltical stability...
here is link you are so excited about,,,,
China's Latest Outrage - WSJ.com

Damn troll, you make it up 2006, instead its dated back 2005, its

show your evil intention, why post article dated back 1999, 2005 ?

whats human right, political problem had to do on a economy thread.

I will keep reporting you until mod. take action.


:smitten::pakistan::china:
 
Magnificent Wuhan Railway Station
07:57, December 11, 2009

b04b51084013afba979e75388208bec1.jpg

The main building of Wuhan Railway Station lights up for test, Dec. 9, 2009. Wuhan Railway Station locates in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, and has 11 platforms ,a total of 20 track. The station costing more than 14 billion RMB yuan (2.4 billion U.S. dollars) is scheduled to be put into use on Dec. 20. It is the first station built for the Wuhan-Guangzhou high speed railway passenger special line.

049278fc96276c1a3854764d20f7aab8.jpg


An interior view of the under-construction Wuhan Railway Station is seen in this photo taken on Dec. 10, 2009 in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province.

2efadbf98934f1c33b0f56a36f874172.jpg


An interior view of the under-construction Wuhan Railway Station is seen in this photo taken on Dec. 10, 2009 in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province.(Xinhua/Cheng Min)
 
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