Since 2012, Professor Ma Deyong of Nan Kai University in Tianjin has been conducting a poll on the Internet. The results showed that 6.2 percent of Chinese netizens are leftists, 38.7 percent are rightists and 55.1 percent occupy the middle ground. The poll also showed that the Internet has become a major force in leading public opinion and is a platform where people can express their own thoughts.
Masanjia Labor Camp
Only One Quarter of Wealthy Chinese Are Very Confident in China’s Economy
On August 8, 2013, the World Journal published an article titled, “One Third of Chinese Millionaires Have Overseas Assets.” The article was based on The GroupM Knowledge – Hurun Wealth Report 2013. The report showed that only one quarter of China’s millionaires are very confident about the country’s economy in the coming two years, a decline of 3 percent from the previous year and one-half that from the year before. One-third of wealthy Chinese have overseas assets. This accounts for an average of 19 percent of their total assets. Nearly 30 percent of the Chinese millionaires who do not have overseas assets plan to make overseas investments in the next 3 years.
Since last year, over 80 percent of millionaires have planned to have their child educated outside of China. The major choices for foreign education are the US, the UK, and Canada. The main destinations for study abroad are also popular locations for them to purchase overseas residential properties. According to the "2013 Report on Private Wealth in China" jointly issued in May of 2013 by China Merchants Bank and Bain & Company – Management Consulting Firm, since 2010, about 60 percent of those respondents who have investable assets of more than 10 million yuan (US$1.63 million) have been considering or have already completed investment immigration.
Source: World Journal, August 8, 2013
http://www.worldjournal.com/view/full_news/23395704/article-%E4%B8%AD%E5%9C%8B%E5%AF%8C%E8%B1%AA1-3%E6%93%81%E6%B5%B7%E5%A4%96%E8%B3%87%E7%94%A2?instance=m1b
The Increase in Financial Black Holes in Jiangsu Province
On August 21, 2013, 21cbh.com, a professional financial news website under the 21st Century Media Group in Guangdong Province, published an article on the increasing financial black holes in Jiangsu Province. Over 10 heads of bank branches have been removed from their positions or held legally responsibile for financial black holes in the steel trading market. From January to June 2013, the number of bad loans in Jiangsu Province increased by 18.2 billion yuan (US$2.97 billion). By the first half of 2013, the total bad loans belonging to the steel trading market in Jiangsu Province were 21.3 billion yuan (US.3.48 billion), among which, the nonperforming loan (NPL) ratio was 42.3 percent, 23.3 percent higher than it was at the beginning of this year. It is expected that the number of new bad loans will continue to increase.
To effectively resolve the steel trade market’s credit risk, the Jiangsu government recently proposed to repackage bad loans for State-owned enterprises to take over. Some financial professionals have concerns that such repackaging process may change these debts in the financial markets into the taxpayers’ responsibility.
Source: 21cbh.com, August 21, 2013
http://www.21cbh.com/2013/8-21/yONTg5Xzc0NjIyOA.html
The CCP’s File No. 9 Circular Labels Promoting Democratic Ideologies as Seven Reactionary Trends
On August 21, 2013, Hong Kong Apple Daily published an article on the Chinese Communist Party’s “File No. 9” titled, “Circular on the Current Ideological Situation.” The circular, authorized by the CCP’s General Secretary Xi Jingping, labels seven democratic ideological trends. Although popular in China recently, they are called reactionary trends; the circular warns CCP officials that they will lose their power if they cannot eliminate these seven reactionary trends from Chinese society. According to the circular, “Those who oppose the CCP’s one-party rule make trouble, call for publicizing officials’ assets and property holdings, take advantage of the Internet to oppose corruption, media control, and other sensitive problems so as to incite discontent about the Party and the government.”
Below are the seven reactionary trends cited by the CCP:
- Promoting Western Constitutional Democracy and thus denying the CCP’s leadership and the socialist system.
- Promoting universal values and thus shaking the theoretical foundation of the CCP’s rule.
- Promoting civil society and thus disrupting the social foundation of the CCP’s rule.
- Promoting neo-liberalism and thus changing China’s economic system.
- Promoting Western journalism [freedom of the press] and thus challenging the CCP’s media management system.
- Disseminating historical nihilism and thus negating the history of the CCP and New China.
- Questioning China’s reform and opening up is to question the nature of Chinese socialism.
Source: Hong Kong Apple Daily, August 21, 2013
http://hk.apple.nextmedia.com/international/art/20130821/18387627