CCG releases report China and the United States in the Biden Era
The third part of the report is Biden era, the next stop of China-US relations. According to the analysis of the report, Biden’s presidency is a positive signal for China-US relations. First of all, US policy towards China will become more rational. Second, trade negotiations are expected to restart. Third, fields of multilateral cooperation will expand. Fourth, people to people exchanges are expected to recover.
The report shows that the essence of major power competition like China and the US has its structural drivers. The China containment strategy formulated in the Obama era and will not change because of the shift of Trump to Biden. Instead, the Biden administration is facing domestic governance challenges and the urgency of containing the virus and restoring the economy. What’s more, diplomatic principles of multilateral alliances and the Democrats’ values of the Obama era will return. All of these trends will tend to make China-US relations more complex. Nonetheless, Biden administration’s domestic priority and multilateral trend of foreign policy will still create important opportunities for improvement of China-US relations and promote relations of “cooperative-competition.”
Based on Biden’s campaign commitments and cabinet picks, the report predicts that the Biden administration intends to reshape multilateralism, promote free trade and return to traditional diplomacy. However, regarding policies towards China, it is highly possible for the Biden administration to retain a tough attitude on economy and trade, science and technology and military affairs. 12 Policy recommendations to address opportunities and challenges of the Biden Era
First, resume bilateral high-level, multi-channel dialogue and exchange mechanisms between China and the US. Second, establish a trilateral dialogue and coordination mechanism including China, the US and Europe, and convene a vaccine summit to promote global cooperation on pandemic control and global economic recovery. Third, propose a global climate summit that calls for an expansion of the G7 to a “G10” including China, Russia and India. Fourth, explore avenues for the US and China to join the CPTPP, support WTO modernization, and expand RCEP stakeholders to include the US. Fifth, ease restrictions on market access by both US and Chinese governments, with Washington relaxing sanctions on Chinese firms such as Huawei, TikTok, Tencent, Alibaba and Xiaomi and Beijing opening its market to American high-tech companies including Google, Twitter and Facebook. Sixth, redress the unilateral tariffs levied on Chinese exports to the US, implement the Phase One Trade Deal in full, and accelerate the pace towards the negotiation of a Phase Two Deal. Seventh, revive talks for a US-China Bilateral Investment Agreement to facilitate two-way flows of FDI. Eighth, promote China-US infrastructure cooperation via direct financing, greenfield investment, capacity building, and other measures that align with Biden’s infrastructure drive and US energy exports. Ninth, engage Washington on the Belt and Road Initiative within a framework of multilateral cooperation on infrastructure development financing. Tenth, strengthen ties between Chinese and American subnational governments to tap into local forces supporting increased engagement in both countries. Eleventh, unblock non-governmental and cultural exchanges between scholars, journalists and students between the US and China, and restore the momentum of education cooperation. Twelfth, revisit the merits of multi-party talks on regional security issues such as the Iran nuclear deal and nuclear proliferation on the Korea peninsular, and promote economic cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region.
The report argues that the Biden administration conveys a positive signal for restarting and reforming, and at the same time offers new opportunities for China’s globalization. It also highlights how the Biden administration will face multiple challenges as populism stirred up by Trump will ferment further into US politics. Although the new administration will continue to deal with China-US relations from the perspective of major country competition, its focus will become more domestic. The US will likely tend to compete with China through improving its own strength, leveraging foreign policy and soft power and other rational channels, in contrast to the Trump administration. Against such a backdrop, the report illustrates the common interests of China and the US regarding trade, people to people exchanges, and global governance, which will support the recovery of China-US relations in the Biden era.
Since it was founded in 2008, CCG has been committed to studies on global governance, China-US relations and China-US economy and trade. At critical points in the development of China-US relations, CCG has released reports, including 10 Recommendations to Tackle with China-US Trade Tensions, Understanding the US-China Trade War: Analyses and CCG Recommendations, China-US Trade Relations and Challenges: Past, Present, Future and Policy Options, Prospects for China-US Trade: Seeking a Rational Resolution via the “Argentina Consensus”. On January 19th, 2017, the day before Trump’s inauguration, CCG released Trump’s Coming Era: Challenges, Opportunities and Policy Response. From 2017 to 2019, CCG organized experts’ delegation to visit the US and carry out track II diplomacy on four occasions. The activities contained dialogues with key US think tanks, such as the Hudson Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Brookings Institution, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Cato Institute, and communication with experts in business sector, including the US-China Business Council, the National Committee on US-China Relations, the International Trade Committee and other business leaders, and released researching reports. Due to the pandemic, international travel has been restricted. CCG launched its “China and Globalization Webinar Series” in 2020 and has successfully held more than 60 online meetings. Dozens of US think tank experts discussed and communicated with Chinese top experts, bridging the gap in the freezing era of China-US relations and making proposals to both governments. Since the US election, CCG has held multiple seminars with a focus on the Biden era, studying the trend of bilateral relations and globalization in the future.
CCG Books
● Published by Springer
● Edited by Wang Huiyao, President and Miao Lu, Vice President, Center for China and Globalization(CCG), Beijing, China
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The internationalization of Chinese enterprises is one of the most notable aspects of economic globalization in the 21st century. Despite the 2008 financial crisis and weak global outbound investment, under the “go global“ initiative, Chinese outbound investment has gone from strength to strength, while also diversifying in terms of investment modalities, destinations, and industries. However, growing anti-globalization sentiment in some countries has also created new challenges for Chinese firms expanding internationally.
Drawing on nearly 3000 data samples, using both quantitative and qualitative research methods, this book presents unique insights into the features and patterns of Chinese enterprises’ globalization. The analysis provides a useful reference for enterprises that have already gone global and those that plan to. In particular, this book investigates challenges confronted by Chinese companies when doing business in foreign countries. It summarizes research covering three angles, namely: the current situation, causation analysis and corresponding solutions, and recommendations for firms, government agencies and other institutions.
This book provides a comprehensive overview to help readers to grasp the broad picture of the international expansion of Chinese enterprises. It has important reference value for enterprises to help devise foreign investment strategy, seize opportunities, and navigate challenges in the course of globalization.
● Links:
https://www.springer.com/cn/book/9789811546457
● Published by Edward Elgar
● Edited by Wang Huiyao, President and Miao Lu, Vice President, Center for China and Globalization(CCG), Beijing, China
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An excellent guide for understanding the trends, challenges and opportunities facing China through globalization, this Handbook answers the pertinent questions regarding the globalization process and China’s influence on the world.
With contributions from leading experts and international researchers, each chapter covers key topics regarding China’s participation in globalization, including: China’s new role in global economic governance; outward direct investment; China’s soft power and the implications for foreign relations; global migration, diaspora and talent. An enriching range of case studies and extensive empirical research are used to explore the successes and failures of globalization in China, and to discuss the dilemmas facing decision makers in today’s globalized world. A major contribution to the field, this Handbook offers valuable insights to China’s often misunderstood globalization process.
An essential reference for academics and researchers looking for a go-to empirical resource, this Handbook provides scholars of economics, politics and East Asian studies with an exemplary selection of contemporary research on China and globalization.
● Links:
https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/handbook-on-china-and-globalization
● Published by Springer
● Authors: Wang Huiyao, President and Miao Lu, Vice President, Center for China and Globalization(CCG), Beijing, China
The first effort to address the gap regarding higher-end talent within the scholarly work on internal labor migration in China
Provides an essential overview of the major milestones in China’s talents attraction policies, as well as several recommendations to help further improve those policies
Investigates corresponding policies in Germany, Japan, and Singapore to serve as a basis for comparison
Provides a snapshot of first-hand reference material for relevant stakeholders involved in cooperation with China
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This book offers the most comprehensive, up-to-date assessment of China’s domestic and international migration. Restructuring economic development requires large numbers of educated and skilled talents, but this effort comes at a time when the size of China’s domestic workforce is shrinking. In response, both national and regional governments in China have been keen to encourage overseas Chinese talents and professionals to return to the country. Meanwhile, the Chinese government has initiated a number of policies to attract international highly-skilled talents and enhance the country’s competitiveness, and some Chinese policies have started attracting foreign talents, who are coming to the country to work, and even to stay. Since Chinese policies, mechanisms, and administration efforts to attract and retain skilled domestic or overseas talents are helping to reshape China’s economy and are significantly affecting the cooperation on migration and talent mobility, these aspects, in addition to being of scholarly and research interest, hold considerable commercial potential.
● Links:
https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9789811362552#aboutBook
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