Hu Jintao will fall in insurgence soon?

Discussion in 'Political Discussions' started by 陈天福, Apr 23, 2009.

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  1. 陈天福

    陈天福 member

  2. Kizmet

    Kizmet Moderator

    您在哪里住

    中国的什么部分
     
  3. BillDayson

    BillDayson New Member

    I don't see the dominance of the Communist Party in China being threatened anytime soon. So Hu is secure as long as the Party and the PLA continue to support him.
     
  4. Ian Anderson

    Ian Anderson Active Member

    I'm always suspicous of the intentions of first time posters who comment on areas other than education. What are their agendas?
     
  5. Kizmet

    Kizmet Moderator

    Round up the usual suspects!;)
     
  6. raristud

    raristud Member

    I don't think there will be an insurgence anytime soon. The communist party will not allow that to happen. However, I can agree with the following sentences which talk about the realities of what is currently happening in China's job market.

    The increase in unrest has paralleled the increase of business and factory closings and job losses.

    China's manufacturing sector, which produced 14 percent of the clothing, toys and footwear imported into the United States last year, has decelerated rapidly over the past few months, pulled down by a pair of factors.

    First, the global economic slowdown and the subsequent drop in consumer spending stymied demand for discretionary goods made in China.

    Second, Chinese manufacturers are battling rising labor and material costs at the same time that the yuan's rising value versus the dollar is making Chinese exports to the United States and elsewhere more expensive.

    Because of these challenges, more than 65,000 Chinese factories have gone bankrupt this year, said Lan Hailin, professor of business strategy with the South China University of Technology in Guangzhou, China.

    And as overseas orders continue to shrink, he thinks the number of bankruptcies will keep rising.

    The urban unemployment rate through October this year ( 2008 ) was 4 percent, lower than the government's projection of 4.5 percent.


    http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/11/20/china.jobs/
     
  7. raristud

    raristud Member

    Blending language learning with educational technology

    "The ChinesePod Approach To Learning Chinese"

    "Ken Carroll, Founder of ChinesePod, introduces us to his company's new media approach to learning Chinese and draws upon his 13 years of China experience to lend some advice to newcomers to China's business landscape."

    In recent years Carroll has been focused on melding traditional training with technology, particularly with 'Web 2.0' technologies, such as podcasting, blogging, and RSS syndication. He believes the internet will radically transform corporate training (as well as the disciplines of marketing, PR, etc, and just about everything else) in the next 5 years." I like this website. They do a very good in maintaining the site updated and relevant to business in China.

    http://thechinabusinessnetwork.com
     

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