Why U.S.-China Cooperation Is Essential for Asia’s Future
The future of the Asia-Pacific, and indeed the stability of the global economy, depends on their ability to coexist constructively in an interconnected world.
The future of the Asia-Pacific, and indeed the stability of the global economy, depends on their ability to coexist constructively in an interconnected world.
The two countries can help lift bilateral trade from its current lows to new heights, benefiting not only both nations but also the global economy as a whole.
Based on the previous achievements and experiences, China will take center stage by increasingly interconnected with the global economy and offering significant opportunities to the rest of the world.
Until Washington stops confusing nationalism with strategy, it will keep losing ground not to China, but to itself.
Should more nations, especially wealthy ones, join with China in making significant promises to enrich the lives of women and girls, that number will be larger than anyone might imagine.
The launch of the GGI at the SCO plus summit reflects China’s growing confidence as both a major economy and a member of the Global South.
Xinjiang’s progress has enhanced the people’s sense of gain, fulfillment and security.
The world multilateral trading system will receive fresh, strong support, and will prevail over unilateralism and protectionism over time.
It is, therefore, more than a road; it is a turning point, signaling international confidence in Sri Lanka’s recovery and a concrete step toward national renewal.
People ask how China can counteract the negative Western media comments and opinions and I simply say, you can’t hide a secret forever. Go, look, enjoy, ask, discover and be convinced. Xinjiang is awesome.
The Philippines must ask itself: when faced with a genuine economic or maritime crisis, will American promises hold, or will Manila be left to manage the consequences alone?
If it succeeds, the organization will not just represent nearly half of humanity on paper, it will shape the daily economic lives of that half in tangible, lasting ways.