. Medical and Hospital News .




TRADE WARS
China IMF boycott 'a sign of things to come': analysts
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 14, 2012

Japanese, US troops mull drill to take island: reports
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 14, 2012 - Japan and the United States are mulling a joint military drill to simulate retaking a remote island from foreign forces, reports said, amid a festering row between Tokyo and Beijing over disputed islets.

The exercise, part of broader joint manoeuvres to start in early November, would use an uninhabited island in Okinawa, southernmost Japan, Jiji Press and Kyodo News agencies quoted unidentified sources as saying on Saturday.

The drill would involve Japanese and US troops making an amphibious and airborne landing to retake the island using boats and helicopters, Kyodo said.

Japan and China have long been at loggerheads over the sovereignty of rocky outcrops in the East China Sea known as the Senkaku Islands in Japan and the Diaoyu Islands in China.

The Tokyo-administered island chain is uninhabited, but is thought to be sitting on top of valuable resources.

The dispute flared in August and September with landings by nationalists from both sides and the subsequent nationalisation of the islands by Tokyo.

The exercise would reportedly use the uninhabited island of Irisunajima. The tiny island, used as a firing range for US forces, is also in the East China Sea but hundreds of kilometres (miles) away from the disputed island chain.

Jiji said some Japanese and US government officials were cautious about holding the drill, fearing a likely angry response from China.


China's top level boycott of global financial meetings in Japan this week is a sign of things to come, analysts say, as an economically emboldened Beijing shows struggling Western nations it doesn't need to play by their rules.

With global growth slowing, many in the developed world are looking to Beijing to pick up the slack, and the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank seemed a good place to press the point.

But while Tokyo was graced with global financial luminaries such as Timothy Geithner from the US and Wolfgang Schaeuble from Germany, China's finance minister and central bank chief both stayed at home.

Beijing gave no official reason for sending their deputies, with foreign minister Yang Jiechi telling reporters in Beijing only that "the arrangement of the delegation for the meeting was completely appropriate".

Observers say China's stay-away was the result of a spat with Japan over disputed islands, and points to Beijing's calculated willingness to use its financial muscle to make a political point.

"China made this decision by precisely weighing the disadvantages of the no-shows against the advantages of its presence," said Yoshikiyo Shimamine, executive chief economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo.

"It was an example of how China won't always act within the Western-dominated framework and doesn't see any contradiction between such absences and its responsibility as a major power," he said.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde rapped Beijing, saying it would "lose out" by not showing up, while World Bank President Jim Yong Kim urged the two countries to sort out their differences for the good of the global economy.

China -- whose predicted growth of 7.8 percent this year is slower than the blistering pace of the last few years, but still leaps and bounds ahead of the West -- merely shrugged.

In his report to a key committee that advises the IMF board, deputy central bank governor Yi Gang said the failure by Washington and Tokyo to fix their fiscal problems was the reason the global economy was struggling.

"Uncertainties related to fiscal sustainability weigh on sentiment and confidence, negatively affecting consumption, investment, and hiring decisions," Yi said.

"The slow recovery in these major advanced economies poses costly spillover effects to the rest of the world," he added.

While Chinese officials did take part in a number of meetings and seminars, their absence at a Japan-chaired lenders' gathering on Myanmar was noted, with Tokyo saying it was "disappointing".

Japanese politicians repeatedly urged Beijing to look at relations "from a broader standpoint".

The dispute over Tokyo-controlled islands known as the Senkakus in Japan and the Diaoyus in China flared in August and September with landings by nationalists from both sides and the subsequent nationalisation of the islands by Japan.

Street protests erupted in China, alongside consumer boycotts of Japanese goods, as reports emerged that firms were finding their China operations hampered by sudden extra red tape.

Japan's big three automakers -- Toyota, Nissan and Honda -- reported plunging sales, while airlines said tens of thousands of bookings had been cancelled.

Figures released in China this week showed trade with Japan slumped 1.8 percent to $248 billion for the year's first three quarters, although the customs bureau made no link with the row.

Analysts say Beijing is likely to continue to conflate bilateral political issues with multilateral financial ones.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto, honorary professor of international politics at the University of Tokyo, said at a time when the world needed China to be paying attention, it was focused instead on the sovereignty spat.

"The move was intended to expose Japan to international pressure to solve the spat with China," he said.

"For Beijing, the top priority is national governance. For the sake of this objective, China is likely to take similar action in the future."

But some argue that China's behaviour is self-defeating because it will make it seem like a less attractive place to do business.

Some Japanese insurance firms have reportedly stopped offering coverage against riots for companies operating in China and manufacturers are said to be looking anew at third countries as a base for operations.

Dai-Ichi Life's Shimamine said Beijing runs the risk of cutting its nose off to spite its face.

"China's policy of putting weight on politics has given the impression that China has risks and is not an easy country to deal with," he said.

Related Links
Global Trade News




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries


Chinese political system could 'blow up', says US academic
Paris (AFP) Oct 13, 2012 - China's top-down political system, under pressure from a growing middle class empowered by wealth and social networks, is likely to "blow up at some point," US academic Francis Fukuyama told AFP in an interview.

"China has always been a country with a big information problem where the emperor can't figure out what's going on" at a grassroots level, said Fukuyama, best known for his 1992 book "The End of History and the Last Man," which argues that liberal democracy is the fulcrum of social evolution.

"This is in so many respects exactly the Communist Party's problem. Because they don't have a free media, they don't have local elections, they can't really judge what their people are thinking," he said this week, ahead of a conference on geopolitics in Paris.

An isolated central Chinese leadership compensates by gathering information through polling and eavesdropping on the nation's massively used micro-blogging platforms, especially the Twitter-like Sina Weibo, Fukuyama contends.

But these same networks are fueling "the growth of a national consciousness that did not exist under the controlled media setting of the Communist regime," he said.

"That is one of the reasons I think that China's system is going to blow up as some point."

The US academic, based at Stanford University, pointed to the fallout from a crash of China's showcase high-speed trains in July 2011 that left 40 dead and deeply shocked the the nation.

High-level officials sought to bury parts of the twisted wreckage, presumably to impede a thorough investigation as to what caused the accident, but a tsunami of chatter and photos on Weibo forced the government to backtrack.

A historically strong central state held in check neither by organized religion nor by civil society has helped China's leaders engineer spectacular and sustained growth, Fukuyama argues.

"You have to credit them with an amazing performance over the last 30 years."

But the absence of genuine rule by law and mechanisms for holding those in power accountable also leaves he country vulnerable to what he calls "the bad emperor" problem, he added.

"Up to now, their leadership has been composed of people who lived through the Cultural Revolution, and they do not want to see that repeated. But once they die off there's no guarantee you won't get another Mao," he said.

The recent purging of Communist Party boss Bo Xilai on charges of corruption was driven in part by other leaders' fear of his growing popularity, Fukuyama said.

"One of the reasons they felt they had to get rid of him was that he was a charismatic leader... developing a populist base that could blow up the whole system."

The full transcript of the interview can be found at http://blogs.afp.com/geopolitics.



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



TRADE WARS
Argentina, Brazil trade row eases for now
Buenos Aires (UPI) Oct 12, 2012
Argentina's trade row with Brazil has been averted for now but its deep impact on Brazilian exporters meant losses running into several million dollars. Argentine traders also suffered in the protectionist wrangle. Argentina slapped tough trade curbs, banning most imports, earlier this year in a bid to reduce its import bill and build reserves of foreign exchange earned through its own ... read more


TRADE WARS
Planning can cut costs of disasters: World Bank

12 Chinese workers killed, 24 hurt in dormitory blaze

Far, far beyond wrist radios

World leaders meet on disaster management in Japan

TRADE WARS
Two more satellites for the Galileo system

Deployment of Europe's Galileo constellation continues

Soyuz orbits two Galileo satellites for Arianespace

Galileo launch brings Europe's satellite navigation system another step closer

TRADE WARS
UN report warns of possible rise in child marriages

Chimps said attacking humans in Africa

New human neurons from adult cells right there in the brain

Dating encounters between modern humans and Neandertals

TRADE WARS
Sitting on top of the world

US zoo cites liver disease in baby panda's death

Cambrian fossil pushes back evolution of complex brains

Swimming with hormones: Researchers unravel ancient urges that drive the social decisions of fish

TRADE WARS
Glowing DNA invention points towards high speed disease detection

Mosquito genetics may offer clues to malaria control

Moving forward with controversial H5N1 research

'Brain-eating' amoeba kills 10 in Pakistan: officials

TRADE WARS
Liu still China's invisible man two years after Nobel

China bloggers expose more corruption: reports

'Stunned' Mo Yan welcomes Nobel prize

Mo Yan of China wins Nobel Literature Prize

TRADE WARS
Dutch navy detains alleged Somali pirates after attack

Colombia hopes FARC deal will bring peace

Mexico captures Zetas cartel capo 'El Taliban': navy

Indian state in grip of a drug epidemic

TRADE WARS
China central bank focused on inflation before growth

China calls on US, Japan to fix their finances

Walker's World: Why the IMF was wrong

Fiscal policy should be 'growth friendly': IMF body


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement