China-Japan-ROK Summit Paves Way for Enhanced Cooperation
We can at least be cautiously optimistic that this summit has paved way for enhanced regional cooperation in the months and, hopefully, years to come.
We can at least be cautiously optimistic that this summit has paved way for enhanced regional cooperation in the months and, hopefully, years to come.
Foreign firms’ strong confidence in the Chinese market undoubtedly attests to the country’s resilient economic development that delivers growth, accompanied by enormous market potential and high-level opening-up.
When the three leaders meet, such matters as peace, stability, cooperation and prosperity will be on each of their minds.
China has always defied doom merchants in the past, those predicting an end to sustained economic growth and rising living standards. There is no reason to suppose that it will not continue to do so.
Tea’s current adaptation in this new stage indicates how ancient philosophies, savvy governance, adaptation of technology, and the passion Chinese people have for their own culture will ensure that the ‘next China’ is still China.
The pragmatic approach exhibited by leaders such as Macron, Orban, and Scholz warrants careful consideration from other regional leaders.
China’s rapid economic recovery post-COVID has prevented a European recession. Recognizing this, European leaders are increasingly visiting China to deepen economic cooperation, even as the U.S. pushes anti-China policies.
Given China’s prominence in global supply chains, dominance in emerging industries, together with its huge domestic market, the EU’s attempts to ‘de-risk’ from the Asian giant will undoubtedly do more harm than good, especially in the long term.
China’s peaceful rise instills hope, and its commitment to nurturing a more equitable and just world order responds to the global aspirations of the vast majority of humanity.
China’s rise has had a foundational global impact, significantly reframing Blinken’s narrative.
This fear isn’t really about China; it’s about blaming China for its own sad state of affairs.
The GCI does not seek conflict with Western civilization — rather, it emphasizes the first principle of Chinese philosophy, ‘harmony’.