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2015 Boao Forum: Chinese President delivers keynote speech

mandarin has 5 tones. xi jinping may stress it. believe me. that will make his speech more interesting. regardless what topic he speaks, be promoting silkroad or selling other chinese propaganda.

It has 4 tones, and it is a calm down language. You don't have any idea what you were talking about.

It seems u are much obsessed with the Indian PM. For a Chinese to be so much obsessed and jealous of Modi could strike others as something pretty fishy!!!

lol, I didn't even have Modi in mind when I typed the comment above.
 
The only thing Vietnamese this guy has was his birthplace. He was raised by German parents, speaks not a word Vietnamese, has even dissociated himself with being Vietnamese, he doesn't even have a Vietnames name.
na ...are you sure? philipp lost his parents, was an orphan, a baby, when a german couple adopted him. he grew up in germany ever since. no wonder he can´t speak vietnamese. not true that he dissociated from vietnam. he visited many times vietnam, and even the vietnamese community here in germany.

‘Vietnam Is a Part of My Life’ | VIETNAM LANGUAGE CENTRE IN SINGAPORE

philipp_roesler2.jpg


It has 4 tones, and it is a calm down language. You don't have any idea what you were talking about.

.
5 tones if you add the neutral tone.
Tones-in-Mandarin-Chinese.png
 
na ...are you sure? philipp lost his parents, was an orphan, a baby, when a german couple adopted him. he grew up in germany ever since. no wonder he can´t speak vietnamese. not true that he dissociated from vietnam. he visited many times vietnam, and even the vietnamese community here in germany.

‘Vietnam Is a Part of My Life’ | VIETNAM LANGUAGE CENTRE IN SINGAPORE

philipp_roesler2.jpg

Of course, it's part of his life since he was born there. I remember in one occasion that he feels uneasy that the Vietnamese gov. treats him as if he is a Vietnamese citizen working in Germany advancing Vietnamese interests. Anyway, under his leadership his party got kicked out of the Bundestag.
 
Xi worked his way up from lowest rank to the top position without feeling the need to using speeches to woo voters
He got promoted, by doing a good job, not elected, like Obama

haha I guess that’s another “disadvantage” for NOT being a democracy then:Leaders are not good at giving entertaining speech
However, for leading a country,I much prefer a Doer than a Talker
 
China committed to openness, Xi says
2015-03-30

He noted how some people believe that because China is now a global investor itself, it no longer needs foreign capital, or that its recent monopoly penalties on a few international corporations signal a rise in protectionism.

"Such views are all biased," he said.

The president said China will remain unchanged in its policies on foreign capital, in its protection of foreign investors' lawful rights and interests, and in its effort to improve its services to them.

Data from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development show that China took in the most new foreign investment of any country last year.

That shows the country's "new normal"-a transition to high-quality products and service despite a slowdown in growth-can only result in more business opportunities for overseas investors, Xi said.

The interaction between China and the rest of the world is becoming increasingly closer, underscoring their shared destiny and opportunities more than ever, he said.

Opportunities will arise from developing the domestic market, in upgrading public infrastructure, in all new technologies and new business processes, and in environmental protection and energy conservation.

Xi welcomed investors to participate in China's initiative to revive the transcontinental trading routes.

China hopes to increase its trade volume with its Silk Road partner nations to $2.5 trillion in a decade, Xi said, adding that the initiative will be a boost to infrastructure development in those nations and serve to facilitate their industrialization.

The growth target for China's economy this year is around 7 percent-robust by global standards, but still the slowest rate in a quarter-century.

Xi said on Saturday in his keynote speech at the Boao Forum that as the economy continues to grow, the momentum it generates will be larger than the double-digit growth of previous years.

The latest AmCham China's Business Climate Survey found that although a majority of corporate executives remain optimistic about the prospects for China's domestic growth, "increasing Chinese protectionism" ranks among the top five challenges.

The Chinese economy's entry into "new normal" not only has significant implications for the nation itself, but also for Asia and the world, said Chi Fulin, president of the China Institute for Reform and Development.

Lawrence Chia, CEO of Deloitte China, said: "Depending on what sector they are in, our clients have come up with various strategies to cope with the slowdown or the 'new normal', and the slowdown might actually provide opportunities for certain firms that are in the sectors plagued by overcapacity."
 
Boao Forum | Zhou warns on growth slowdown, says PBOC has room to act
- Monday, March 30, 2015 - 2 days ago No Comments 303 Views



Zhou Xiaochuan



China’s central bank chief said that the nation’s growth rate has tumbled “a bit” too much and that policy makers have scope to respond, underscoring forecasts for further monetary easing in the world’s second-largest economy.
“China’s inflation is also declining, so we need to be vigilant to see if the disinflation trend will continue, and if deflation will happen or not,” People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan, 67, said in remarks at the Boao Forum for Asia, an annual conference on the southern Chinese island of Hainan. “China can have room to act,” both with interest rates and “quantitative” measures, he said.
Zhou’s remarks followed fresh signs that China slowed further in the first quarter, after recording its weakest expansion since 1990 last year. A gauge of manufacturing slid to an 11-month low in March, a private report showed last week. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News expect the PBOC will lower both benchmark lending rates and banks’ required reserve ratios, adding to cuts made in recent months.
China’s leadership is trying to wean the economy off debt-fueled property investment and old-line polluting industries, shifting toward services and domestic-consumption led growth. While President Xi Jinping has repeatedly said his nation is comfortable with a “new normal” of less-rapid expansion, officials are also wary of the slowdown weakening too much.
Premier Li Keqiang earlier this month set a growth target of about 7 percent for this year, while pledging action if it slows toward the lower limit of the range and cuts into jobs and income. Zhou said at Boao Sunday that the economy had slowed “a bit too sharply,” while adding that patience was needed to see the effect of steps already taken.
Even with a more moderate pace than in the past, Xi told Boao attendees Saturday that his nation “will continue to provide countries including Asian nations more markets, growth, investment and cooperation opportunities.”
China is building its influence even amid the slowdown, championing new lending institutions, including the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which saw additional nations signing up in recent days. U.S. allies including the U.K., Australia and South Korea are among the supporters of the AIIB, after they set aside American opposition.
Zhou at Boao Sunday highlighted how China is working on reform of its currency, the yuan, which has been subject to limits on capital flows and restricted movements against counterparts. China will revamp foreign-exchange regulation “relatively radically” this year, the PBOC chief said. Earlier this month, he pressed the head of the International Monetary Fund to consider the yuan for inclusion as an official reserve currency — by adding it to the fund’s special drawing rights unit.
In addressing the risk of deflation, Zhou’s concerns reflect those of many counterparts around the world. Japan saw its benchmark gauge of inflation stagnate in February, according to a report released on Friday. European monetary policy makers have stepped up easing to combat the danger of falling consumer prices, which can inflate the real burden of loans.
“Further policy easing is on the way, there’s no doubt about that,” said Guan Qingyou, chief macro-economic researcher with Minsheng Securities Co. in Beijing. “The central bank seems to realize that it’s better to act sooner than later given consideration to China’s deepening slowdown and deflationary pressure.”
The major economy with perhaps the least concern on that score is the U.S., which has enjoyed a strengthening job market in recent months. As a consequence, the Federal Reserve has been preparing the ground for its first interest-rate increase in years, a shift that has seen the dollar climb since the middle of last year.
Zhou told an audience that included central bankers from Japan and Germany that by many nations easing policy, the dollar could become too high. Officials will need to be cautious about capital flows, he said.
The governor said that patience is needed to observe the impact of monetary measures. The PBOC announced its first interest-rate cut in two years in November and followed with another reduction Feb. 28. It also lowered banks’ reserve ratio requirements last month.
China’s disinflation eased in February after the central bank stepped up easing and the Lunar New Year holiday pushed up food and transport costs. The consumer-price index rose 1.4 percent from a year earlier, compared with January’s 0.8 percent, data from the statistics bureau show.
The government set a 2015 consumer inflation target of 3 percent in its annual work report earlier this month.
The room the country has to move on monetary policy “is not necessarily for quantitative easing,” Zhou said. There is scope “on both the price side and the quantitative side,” he said.
Chen Yulu, an academic member with the central bank’s monetary policy committee, an advisory body, was quoted by Chinese journal Caixin as saying Sunday that the “non-conventional” policy in China means “continuous policy relaxation.”
“In the monetary policy committee, the discussion is always about looking for new structural tools to use, including targeted easing,” Chen was quoted as saying. Bloomberg
 
China welcomes Nepal to join Belt and Road initiative
(Xinhua) 10:09, March 29, 2015

FOREIGN201503291010000348002100968.jpg

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Nepalese President Ram Baran Yadav in Boao, south China's Hainan Province, March 28, 2015. (Xinhua/Pang Xinglei)


BOAO, Hainan, March 28 -- Chinese President Xi Jinpingmet with Nepalese President Ram Baran Yadav during the 2015 Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) in South China's Hainan Province on Saturday, welcoming Nepal to participate in the Belt and Road cooperation.

Welcoming Yadav to the annual conference, Xi said China-Nepal relationship is a model of peaceful coexistence and mutually beneficial cooperation between big and small countries.

We cherish the traditional friendship with Nepal, said Xi, adding that China is willing to be Nepal's good friend of mutual respect and mutual support, good partner of common development and common prosperity and good neighbor of mutual assistance in security.

As this year marks the 60th anniversary of the establishment of China-Nepal diplomatic ties, Xi called on the two sides to be well prepared for a series of commemorative activities.

He suggested the two countries should strengthen cooperation in traffic interconnectivity, infrastructure, hydropower development, modernization of agriculture, science and technology.

China is willing to initiate the negotiations on Free Trade Agreement with Nepal at an early date, he said, also calling on the two sides to enhance law-enforcement and security cooperation.

China appreciates Nepal's firm support on issues concerning China's core interests, including issues related to Tibet and Taiwan, said the president.


China will continue to support Nepal's effort in safeguarding independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, he added.

Xi voiced the hope that Nepal would not allow any forces to use Nepal's territory to engage in anti-China separatist activities.

He also called on the two sides to beef up cooperation in the areas of youth exchanges and tourism and enhance coordination on multilateral occasions to safeguard their common interests.

Yadav said Nepal would never allow its territory to be used by any anti-China activities.

Nepal supports China's initiatives of jointly building the Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road as well as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), said Yadav.

Nepal calls for strengthened cooperation between the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) and China, in a bid to promote regional interconnectivity and economic development, he said.


Nepal appreciates China's important and positive role in international affairs and hopes to enhance cooperation with China, he added.
 

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