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Around 10,000 Wuhan Retirees Took to the Streets

On February 8, around 10,000 retirees in Wuhan City, Hubei Province gathered at the municipal building to protest the city’s newly published “Employee Medical Reform” plan.

The plan, effective on February 1, will significantly cut the medical insurance benefits of Wuhan’s 2 million retirees. In the past, the government paid each retiree 286 yuan per month for medical spending , but the new plan only pays 83 yuan, a 70 percent cut. The new plan adds a 500 yuan deductible before any insurance payout. It appears that each person can be reimbursed 4,000 yuan a year, but the reality is only 1,300 yuan. Moreover, many medicines are no longer covered by the insurance.

A WeChat discussion showed that people have demanded that the Wuhan Mayor fix the issue by February 8; otherwise they will hold a large gathering on February 15. If there is no resolution by the end of the month, the retirees will demand that the mayor be impeached.

Police came to the site, but didn’t crack down on the protest. There are unofficial reports that the mayor met with the protesters in the afternoon and later on the city put the new plan on hold.

Source: Aboluo, February 8, 2023
https://www.aboluowang.com/2023/0208/1864549.html

LTN: India Again Blocked Nearly 200 Chinese Apps and Websites

Major Taiwanese news network Liberty Times Network (LTN) recently reported that India has ordered the blockade of 232 apps and websites, most of them linked to China. This underscores tensions between the two countries after years of border clashes. According to a source familiar with the matter, the Indian Federal Technology Ministry has ordered the removal of 138 betting and gambling apps and 94 credit services. The order came from the Interior Ministry, which oversees domestic affairs including national security. The source asked not to be identified because the full content of the order has not been made public. The blocked apps, including several from India, are suspected of transferring data to China. India’s central bank has also tightened digital lending regulations after finding some apps allegedly breached norms and harassed customers. Indian domestic laws allow the government to block public access to content for reasons such as national security interests. Last year, India banned multiple Chinese applications such as Alibaba and Tencent’s WeChat. India also banned the use of Tik Tok. In the meantime, India is also moving to restrict Chinese companies in other areas and is considering restricting Chinese cell phone makers from selling devices below 12,000 Rupees, a blow to a number of brands, including Xiaomi.

Source: LTN, February 8, 2023
https://ec.ltn.com.tw/article/breakingnews/4204452

China’s Marriage Registration Declined for Eight Consecutive Years

Well-known Chinese news site Sina (NASDQ: SINA) recently reported that, in 2021, the number of marriage registrations in China dropped to 7.636 million couples. This meant there had been a decline for eight consecutive years. In addition, the age of each first marriage has been significantly delayed. In 2021, the average age of the first marriage of those in Anhui Province was 31.89 years old for males and 30.73 years old for females. The reasons for the decline in the number of marriages are: first, the decline in the number of young people, second, there are more men and fewer women in the marriageable population, third is the high cost of raising children, fourth is the high cost of marriage, fifth is fierce social competition and employment pressure, and lastly, the younger generation’s perception of marriage has changed. Economists suggested the following to tackle the situation. First, increase the supply of residential land in big cities and provide housing subsidies for families with children; second,reduce the costs of childbirth, childcare, and education; third, establish a social support system that is gender-equal and child-friendly; fourth, relax the conditions for adoption and placement; fifth, lower the legal age of marriage to 18; and sixth, protect single women’s reproductive rights. The suggestion of lowering the legal age of marriage to 18 years old resulted in intense discussions and controversies online, and one time even ranked at the top of the national hot search. Currently, the legal age of marriage in China is 22 for men and 20 for women. It is lower than Japan, the U.S., India, Germany, France, Canada, and even Mexico. The ultra-low birth rate and the rapid shrinkage of the young population have become major challenges facing Chinese society.

Source: Sina, February 8, 2023
https://finance.sina.com.cn/money/smjj/smdt/2023-02-08/doc-imyeyxpn6454987.shtml?cref=cj

Economy: Jiangsu City Coerced Government Employees into Paying 2.5 Billion Yuan in Fines

As many local governments run out of money, one city in Jiangsu Province came up with a creative way to get more money: to impose a hefty fine on those government employees who have taken a part-time secondary job. The city sent special “working groups” to each government unit to check any government employee who “illegally” took on a secondary job. They targeted those people who have skills (so that they were able to get a secondary job), who do not have connections with higher-powers, and who want to have a smooth retirement. Those employees didn’t think it would be a big fine so they co-oporated with the investigation. Then the government fined them from 600,000 yuan (US$ 88,000) to 1 million yuan (US$ 147,000). Many of them depleted their own savings and some even had to borrow money to make the payment.

The city raised 2.5 billion yuan (US $367 million) by using this approach.

Source: Sound of Hope, February 8, 2023
https://www.soundofhope.org/post/694290

The CCP Is Effective in Its International Propaganda Efforts

James Sheen (沈榮欽), is Assistant Professor at York University, Toronto, Canada and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at National Chengchi University, Taiwan. He posted on Facebook that research showed that the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) propaganda against the international audience is very effective.

He said some scholars from Yale University and Harvard University conducted some multi-country research to compare the international propaganda of China with the information from the U.S. Of course, the U.S. promotes democracy and China promotes an authoritarian system.

The researchers sampled 19 countries across six continents, ranging from dictatorships and semi-democracies, to democratic countries, with low, medium, and high incomes. On average, after being exposed to the CCP’s propaganda, people who think that China’s authoritarian system is better than the U.S. democratic system has tripled from 16 percent to 54 percent. The percentage is even higher in Africa and Latin America where the CCP has  focused many of ts diplomacy activities. The U.S. propaganda has had a much smaller influence on people.

Source: Facebook, Posting by James Sheen
https://www.facebook.com/Independent.think/posts/10226251784754625

China Plans to Carry out Many “Work for Food” Programs

On January 10, China’s National Development and Reform Commission promulgated a newly revised “Management Measures of the National Work for Food Program.” The measure will be implemented on March 1, 2023. People’s Daily published the question and answers that occurred in an interview between an official from the National Development and Reform Commission and reporters.

The program is to ask people to perform labor (for which they will be paid) instead of simply receiving government welfare. It states, “If manual labor can be used then do not use a machine; if work can be done by local people (on welfare) then do not use professional teams.”

To encourage local governments and business entities to offer more “Work for Food” projects, the central government will increase its subsidy from 15 percent of the labor cost to 30 percent.

[Editor’s Notes: Promoting such programs may mean Beijing wants to  manage its welfare system more effectively. It may also indicate: one, that Beijing may need to provide more social welfare to its people; and two, Beijing may be running low on money so it uses the welfare money (which it has to pay anyway) to cover projects that it would need to pay for with money from other sources.]

Source: People’s Daily, February 1, 2023
http://politics.people.com.cn/n1/2023/0201/c1001-32616015.html

Getting Veterans to Local Leadership Positions

Pei Jinjia (裴金佳), who is the Communist Party Secretary and the Minister of Veterans Affairs, published an article in People’s Daily that stressed how to get veterans into the local government’s leadership positions.

Pei said that veterans in general are politically loyal to the CCP, broad-minded, and dare to take responsibilities. He asked that the policy be implemented to allow the the “Veteran Party Secretary” practice of letting veterans serve the party secretary at the grassroot level offices.

Source: People’s Daily, February 2, 2023
http://cpc.people.com.cn/n1/2023/0202/c448544-32616175.html

U.S. Chip Policy against China Has Shown Results

Well-known Chinese news site NetEase (NASDAQ: NTES) recently reported that the Chinese tech giant Huawei is once again facing new technology curbs amid an escalation in U.S.-China strategic competition. Some scholars pointed out that, under the cooperation of the United States, Japan and the Netherlands, China’s semiconductor industry is facing real danger. Also, two months after China’s largest chipmaker, Yangtze Memory Technology, was included in the “Entity List” of entities banned by the U.S. Department of Commerce, it announced plans to lay off 10 percent of its workforce. The U.S. government has stopped issuing permits to U.S. companies to export most products and technology to Huawei. This move highlights that the United States has further tightened regulations and related policies on technology exports to China. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a press conference, “This is blatant technological bullying. This practice violates the principles of the market economy and the international economic and trade rules. It damages the international community’s confidence in the U.S. business environment. Mao also emphasized that the bullying behavior seriously undermines the order of international trade. Not only does it damage the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises, but it also affects the stability of the global industrial chain and the supply chain. Part of the reason for the move by the U.S. Ministry of Commerce is that Huawei has changed a lot compared to when it focused on 5G four years ago. For example, Huawei has expanded its business to submarine cables, cloud computing and other fields. Huawei has yet to comment on the matter.

Source: NetEase, February 1, 2023
https://www.163.com/dy/article/HSFTUF1A055618XM.html