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Jiangsu Province Downgrades Government Titles in Administrative Restructuring

Several cities in China’s Jiangsu Province have begun downgrading the titles of government offices and officials as part of an administrative standardization campaign, according to a June 20 report by Shanghai-based The Paper. Multiple municipal agencies have renamed departments previously designated as “Chu” (处, division) to “Ke” (科, section), resulting in corresponding title changes from division chief and deputy division chief to section chief and deputy section chief.

Government notices issued by agencies in the cities of Huai’an and Nantong state that the changes were made in accordance with unified administrative requirements. In Huai’an, all departments previously designated as “Chu” were renamed “Ke,” with the corresponding leadership titles adjusted automatically without separate personnel appointment notices.

According to a source familiar with China’s government system, the restructuring reflects Beijing’s effort to curb the continued expansion of local government staffing amid mounting fiscal pressures. Chinese media have previously estimated that a typical prefecture-level city with a population of several million employs roughly 1,500 to 1,850 division-level officials across Party and government agencies, public institutions, and state-owned enterprises, while the number of section-level officials may exceed 11,000.

Source: Epoch Times, June 25, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/6/24/n14795383.htm

China National Defense News: B-52H Test Aircraft Crash Raises Questions About U.S. Bomber Modernization

A U.S. Air Force B-52H Stratofortress crashed shortly after takeoff from Edwards Air Force Base, California, on June 15 while conducting a flight test for the aircraft’s radar modernization program, killing all eight personnel on board. The accident marks the first B-52 crash since 2016.

According to the U.S. Air Force, the aircraft was the first B-52H equipped with the new AN/APQ-188 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, designed to replace the legacy AN/APQ-166 mechanically scanned radar. It was scheduled to undergo a year-long flight test program. The loss therefore includes not only the aircraft itself but also a critical radar test platform and valuable flight-test data.

The crash comes as the Air Force advances the B-52J modernization program, which includes a new AESA radar, Rolls-Royce F130 engines, upgraded avionics, communications, and weapons interfaces to extend the bomber’s service life into the 2050s. The program has already experienced schedule delays and cost growth, with the radar upgrade triggering congressional review under the Nunn-McCurdy Act. The accident could further delay flight testing, depending on the investigation’s findings and the availability of a replacement test aircraft.

The B-52 modernization effort is proceeding alongside development of the B-21 Raider stealth bomber. While the B-21 is designed to penetrate heavily defended airspace, the upgraded B-52J is expected to remain the Air Force’s primary stand-off strike platform because of its large payload and long endurance.

In the near term, the U.S. Air Force has no ready replacement for the B-52. Although the loss of the radar test aircraft is unlikely to alter the overall modernization program, relying on airframes that entered service more than 60 years ago to meet operational requirements for another three decades carries inherent risks. Despite its durable airframe, large payload, and mature sustainment infrastructure, the B-52 continues to face challenges from airframe aging, supply chain constraints, complex modernization requirements, and limited test resources.

Source: People’s Daily, June 26, 2026
http://military.people.com.cn/n1/2026/0626/c1011-40747966.html

AI Reshapes Classroom Dynamics in Chinese Universities

Chinese universities are grappling with the growing impact of generative AI on classroom teaching, as educators report declining student engagement and the erosion of the traditional teacher-centered model. A recent Wenhui Daily article highlighted an online post by a university instructor declaring that “the classroom is dead,” arguing that conventional lectures have become increasingly ineffective as students turn to AI tools instead of classroom instruction.

At the 2026 Sohu Technology Forum, Peking University professor emeritus Qiao Xiaochun said AI has fundamentally altered the teaching environment. He argued that students can instantly verify or challenge instructors’ lectures using AI, while many believe classroom content is already available through AI tools, reducing their motivation to attend class or participate actively. Qiao also described an “AI arms race” in coursework, with students using AI to generate assignments, universities deploying AI to detect AI-generated content, and students then using AI to remove signs of AI assistance.

According to a 2026 MyCOS survey, 77 percent of Chinese university students reported using generative AI frequently, up from 64 percent in 2024. At the same forum, Tianjin University Vice President Li Bin said higher education is evolving from a traditional teacher-student model to a “teacher-student-AI” model.

Source: Sohu, May 27, 2026
https://m.sohu.com/a/1028433695_121294?scm=thor.488_14-200000.0.0-0-0-0-0

CCP Launches Personnel Vetting Ahead of the 21st Party Congress

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is expected to begin nationwide personnel assessments in the second half of 2026 as part of preparations for the 21st Party Congress, scheduled for the fall of 2027. According to publicly available information, the CCP Central Committee will dispatch 45 inspection teams to assess officials across China’s provinces and central Party and state organs, while the Central Military Commission will send eight teams to evaluate senior PLA officers.

According to sources familiar with the CCP personnel system, the assessments will evaluate political loyalty, job performance, personal conduct, family circumstances, and private lives through interviews with colleagues and subordinates. One source said the evaluations are now being conducted jointly by the CCP’s Organization Department and the State Council, rather than solely by the Organization Department.

Sources also said that “Xi Jinping Thought on Party Building,” first introduced at a national Party-building conference on June 15, has become a key criterion in evaluating officials. According to one source, loyalty to Xi Jinping will be the primary factor in promotion decisions.

Source: Epoch Times, June 26, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/6/26/n14796976.htm

Former Tsinghua Scholar’s Lecture on China’s Economy Reportedly Triggers Police Inquiry

A paid seminar led by former Tsinghua University associate professor Zheng Yuhuang in Beijing was reportedly interrupted by police after someone allegedly reported it as an “illegal gathering,” apparently objecting to the event’s pessimistic assessment of China’s economy, according to Hong Kong media.

Zheng, a former associate professor at Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management who has since become an online influencer, hosted a two-day “Harvard Business School Case Analysis Camp” at a hotel near Beijing Capital International Airport on June 27–28.

On the first day, former Tsinghua sociology professor Sun Liping delivered a lecture on macroeconomic trends. According to attendees, Sun described China as being in a “recessionary period,” while the United States and Europe were “overheating” economically and Japan and South Korea were “recovering.”

During Zheng’s session on future economic trends on the second day, two police officers reportedly entered the venue and asked him to step outside for questioning. Participants said Zheng characterized China’s economic outlook as “pessimistic at the macro level, optimistic at the micro level,” predicting that the current environment could persist for another 20 to 30 years and drawing comparisons with Japan’s prolonged economic stagnation.

Zheng later wrote on social media that the event had been reported as a suspected “illegal gathering.” After he explained the nature of the seminar, the officers left within about five minutes, allowing the session to resume. He added that public visibility often attracts controversy and criticism.

Zheng left Tsinghua University about two years ago to establish the CMSI Institute of Scientific Marketing. The organization charges an annual membership fee of 999 yuan (approximately US$147), which includes one in-person lecture each year. The June seminar attracted around 500 attendees, while the separately ticketed “Harvard Business School Case Analysis Camp” that reportedly prompted the complaint cost 9,800 yuan (approximately US$1,444) per participant.

Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), July 2, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202607020038.aspx

China’s Short-Drama Industry Becomes AI’s First Major Casualty

China’s booming short-drama industry is rapidly embracing AI-generated content, transforming production workflows and disrupting employment across the sector. According to industry reports, AI-generated short dramas have gained rapid audience acceptance, reducing demand for human actors and traditional production crews. The shift is affecting an industry that supports more than 2 million jobs.

The transition has been swift. Popular short-drama actors who only months ago earned daily rates ranging from RMB 5,000 (US$740) to more than RMB 20,000 (US$2,955) reportedly now struggle to find work even at RMB 1,200 (US$177) per day. Industry data show that AI-generated productions accounted for 38 percent of the top 100 AI short dramas in January 2026, up from about 7 percent a year earlier, with total views reaching 2.55 billion.

The industry’s transformation accelerated after ByteDance introduced its Seedance 2.0 AI video-generation model in March 2026. AI tools are increasingly replacing actors while reducing demand for directors, screenwriters, lighting crews, camera operators, set designers, and other production staff. Production teams that previously required 40 to 50 people can now reportedly complete projects with as few as four or five people, while production cycles have been shortened from roughly three weeks to one week.

The rapid adoption of AI marks a dramatic reversal for an industry that only a year earlier had been widely promoted by local governments as a driver of employment, entrepreneurship, and tourism. Local authorities invested heavily in dedicated filming facilities and incentive programs as the sector expanded. According to a Peking University report, the short-drama industry supported approximately 2.03 million jobs, including about 690,000 new positions created in 2025 alone.

Source: BBC, June 23, 2026
https://www.bbc.com/zhongwen/articles/cvgdqjvzv9go/simp

China Turns to Tax Collection as Local Governments Seek New Revenue Sources

China is accelerating the digital transformation of its tax administration while significantly expanding recruitment within the tax system, highlighting efforts to strengthen revenue collection amid mounting fiscal pressures on local governments. According to individuals familiar with the system, the issue is not simply declining revenue but a structural shift in local government finances. As land-sale income continues to shrink, local authorities are increasingly relying on tax audits, back-tax collections, administrative fines, and other non-tax revenues to fill budget gaps.

The tax system has become an exception to the broader reduction in civil service hiring. Of the 38,119 positions planned for China’s 2026 national civil service recruitment, 25,004—or 65.6 percent—are allocated to the tax administration, up from about 23,000 positions, or 58 percent of total recruitment, in 2025. Meanwhile, tax authorities report that AI, big data, and blockchain technologies have been largely integrated into a nationwide “smart tax” system, increasing average tax revenue collected per employee from RMB 27 million (US$4 million) in 2021 to RMB 45 million (US$6.6 million), a 66.7 percent increase.

The enhanced enforcement has coincided with a wave of back-tax collections. Since early June, more than a dozen A-share listed companies have announced tax reassessments and late-payment penalties totaling approximately RMB 485 million (US$71 million) across sectors including electronics, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, environmental services, and packaging. In May, 14 listed companies also disclosed additional tax payments and penalties exceeding RMB 2 billion (US$290 million).

Tax enforcement has also expanded to individuals. China’s State Taxation Administration reported that personal income tax revenue rose 12 percent year-on-year to RMB 764.4 billion (US$112 billion) during the first five months of 2026, while taxpayers paid RMB 13 billion in back taxes on overseas income during the same period. Reports also indicate that authorities in several provinces have begun requiring high-net-worth individuals to disclose offshore trust holdings, with some cases resulting in additional tax assessments and penalties. Source: Epoch Times, June 12, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/6/11/n14786670.htm

European Parliament Adopts Resolution Condemning Transnational Repression, Cites China as Primary Concern

On June 16, the European Parliament overwhelmingly adopted a resolution titled “Countering Transnational Repression: A European Strategy for Sovereignty and Democratic Values.” The resolution identifies transnational repression by authoritarian governments as a growing threat to democratic societies, arguing that it undermines freedom of expression, academic freedom, and the resilience of democratic institutions across Europe.

The resolution expresses particular concern over the Chinese government’s alleged use of overseas organizations to systematically monitor, intimidate, and pressure dissidents and Chinese diaspora communities in Europe. It also accuses Beijing of abusing INTERPOL mechanisms to target political opponents abroad and of attempting to suppress academic research on issues including forced labor, supply chains, Tibet, and Taiwan. The resolution further cites efforts to pressure cultural institutions and artists to cancel events involving Taiwan.

The resolution calls on the European Union and its member states to strengthen coordination in countering transnational repression through enhanced legislation, stronger protections for victims, improved accountability mechanisms, and targeted sanctions.

Source: China Aid, June 22, 2026
https://www.chinaaid.net/2026/06/blog-post_52.html