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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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Mostrando postagens com marcador Shanghai Daily. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Shanghai Daily. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 26 de junho de 2019

A batalha do 5G: uma vertente da Guerra Fria Econômica? - Shanghai Daily

Huawei expects to retain lead position on 5G

Huawei expects to retain lead position on 5G
Zhu Shenshen / SHINE
Huawei remains 5G leading position and it calls for "technology back to technology," according to Ken Hu (second from right), the company’s deputy chairman.
Sanctions-hit Huawei Technologies will remain a leading player in the global 5G market, thanks to multiple-layer supply system and overseas expansion outside the United States, the tech giant said on Wednesday.
Huawei made a plea for “non-discriminatory treatment” from the authorities and governments worldwide, the company’s deputy chairman Ken Hu said in Shanghai. 
Huawei Technologies has secured 50 5G commercial contracts globally — two-thirds of the world's total. It has offered 150,000 5G base stations globally now, which is likely to touch 500,000 this year.
US put Huawei on a trade blacklist in May and has since put restrictions on American tech firms to offer chips and services to Huawei. 
“It won’t influence Huawei’s 5G leading position at all,” said Hu. “It’s a huge loss for carriers and consumers to enjoy 5G without Huawei’s devices and advanced technologies.”
Without Huawei, Europe’s 5G development will lag “at least two years," Hu added.
At the opening session of Mobile World Conference Shanghai, China’s biggest telecommunications event held annually in Shanghai, a senior government official also spoke against “technical bullying.”
“Unfair and technical bullying” still exists in the world. They are challenges to the healthy and sustainable development of 5G and the whole digital economy, said Liu Liehong, vice director of the Cyberspace Administration of China. 
JSC Kazakhtelecom, a telecom operator in Kazakhstan, said it’s “open to all vendors” on 5G construction. The country cares about technology and profitability than political reasons.
Huawei’s devices are used in over 30 countries, including Europe, the Middle East, Asia Pacific and Africa. China, as the world’s biggest mobile network, gave out commercial 5G licenses on June 6. Huawei expects new contracts from Chinese operators. 
Huawei has invested US$4 billion on 5G and it will keep increasing investment. It has established a multiple-layer supplier system for chip and software, and does not have to depend solely on US suppliers, said Hu.

segunda-feira, 17 de dezembro de 2018

40 anos de relações EUA-China: trade war trumpista e serenidade chinesa

Enquanto Mister Trump pretende, eroticamente, enfrentar a China, não se sabe bem por quais motivos legítimos – sim, tem os falcões e os paranóicos americanos, que acreditam que a China é o grande inimigo dos EUA –, os chineses, e colegas acadêmicos americanos interagem sobre os 40 anos de relações bilaterais entre os dois países. Não vamos edulcorar a postura chinesa, que é oportunista por todas as vias possíveis, e denegrir a postura americana, por mais idiota que ela seja. A verdade é que a velha Guerra Fria geopolítica dos tempos da URSS (que deu dois suspiros e depois morreu) foi agora substituída por uma nova Guerra Fria, econômica desta vez. Em função da estupidez americana atual, os chineses estão ganhando essa guerra fria econômica, e vão continuar ganhando, enquanto o governo americano tiver um aloprado em seu comando...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Experts reflect on 40 years of Sino-US ties

Ni Tao

Chief Opinion Writer, Shanghai Daily, December 16, 2018
Confucius once said, “At forty, I had no doubts.”
For a man, age forty is construed as a mark of maturity, the beginning of a phase in life moderated by a deflated ego, a mild temperament, and most important, the freedom from doubts and bewilderment.
But the sage’s musings don’t necessarily apply to relations between countries. China and the United States, who will soon be celebrating the 40th anniversary of the normalization of their diplomatic ties next year, apparently are far from attaining maturity in their ties.
The world’s two largest economies have been locking horns in a possibly protracted trade war that has destabilized world markets and unnerved international observers.
At a forum held in Shanghai on December 13, leading scholars from China and the US called on the public to look beyond newspaper headlines to take a long view of the achievements and setbacks of the bilateral relations.
David M. Lampton, professor at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, recalled his first visit to China in 1976, when he was travelling with a US delegation of scientists, and saw the real China he became fascinated with while growing up in Palo Alto, California, an area teeming with Chinese immigrants.
“The big phrase then was zi li geng sheng, or self-reliance,” said Lampton.
But in the era of the new Chinese leadership, especially since President Xi Jinping took office, “we hear more phrases like interdependence, that China will do things that it is best at doing and rely on the world system for some of the things it is not so good at doing,” he noted.
As president of the National Committee on United States-China Relations from 1988 to 1997, Lampton once received a Chinese delegation headed by five mayors, including the then Shanghai mayor Zhu Rongji, who was to become the country’s premier.

Vision and statesmanship

He was impressed by the pragmatism, vision and statesmanship of leaders like Zhu, who paved the way for a more constructive and eventually one of the world’s most important bilateral relationships.
His views were echoed by many of the forum’s attendees, including Zhou Wenzhong, China’s ex-deputy foreign minister and former ambassador to the US. Having served in the Chinese mission in the US for 16 years, Zhou had dealings with every US administration since President Jimmy Carter.
Some of the high moments of his career involved handling crises like the August 17, 1982 China-US Communiqué on arms sales to Taiwan, the US-led NATO’s bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade in 1999, and the spy plane crash over the South China Sea in 2001.
Despite all these upheavals that could have derailed Sino-US relations, the two countries, mindful of the “bigger picture,” have managed to overcome their differences and expand their common interests. Consequently, the bilateral ties on the whole have been “fairly successful,” said Zhou.
However, the veteran diplomat said he did note disconcerting developments exemplified by the Trump administration’s initiation of a tariff war and other acts of provocation.
Having recently returned from a trip to the US, where he hobnobbed with old friends from the business and academic community, Zhou observed that many Americans too were concerned about the extent to which President Trump appears ready to push his trade demands.
To prove that China’s market is increasingly important to American manufacturers and exporters, he cited the skyrocketing sales of American bourbon whisky in China.
The booze has seen its sales leap 1,200 percent over the past 20 years, and China is a key factor behind that dramatic growth. “Last year alone, China contributed approximately US$9 million to the US bourbon whisky’s global sales,” said Zhou.

An ‘inside out’ perspective

Agricultural products are a bulk of American exports to China. Soybeans shipped to China, for example, account for almost 60 percent of the total US soybean exports.
Therefore, Zhou believed the tit-for-tat tariffs are in no country’s interests, and both China and the US would do well to remain open to negotiating an end to their six month-old trade tensions during the 90-day truce reached at the dinner meeting of the two presidents in Buenos Aires on December 1.
Meanwhile, Lampton argued for more serious attempts at deepening mutual understanding, especially among those tasked with studying each other’s country for the purpose of making policies.
He recounted his time as a student of China learning mostly by talking to the Chinese people. Similarly, today’s generation of China watchers in the US should bring an “inside out” perspective to their China studies, rather than observing China from the outside in, said Lampton.
In response to heated discussions about the Thucydides’ Trap, the celebrated scholar of international relations did agree that problems can happen with a “rising, confident power” and a “dominant, defensive power,” but he dismissed the notion that it inevitably means war. Instead, given the levels of interdependency between the two nations, he explained that it is all the more important that both the US and China rely more on each other on fronts such as ecological and economic cooperation to conquer the Thucydides’ problem.
“The problem exists, but smart, well-meaning people can overcome that,” he said.
During the December 13 forum, organizers also unveiled a multimedia program called “40 on 40,” which consists of a series of high-profile interviews with 40 distinguished thinkers on US-China relations.
They include former US President Jimmy Carter, the father of “soft power” and Harvard university professor Joseph Nye, Lamtpon and Zhou. The interviews will be published in books next year.

sábado, 19 de dezembro de 2015

Cidade Proibida de Beijing: visitas virtuais - Shanghai Daily

Para quem ainda não visitou a Cidade Proibida, ou o antigo Palácio Imperial da capital dos imperadores chineses até a dinastia Qing, esta é uma oportunidade para fazer uma visita virtual por meio de um museu digital.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Palace Museum to open digital gallery


The digital gallery is located at Duanmen Gate, the principal entrance to the imperial palace grounds. The gallery hall features screens displaying and explaining architectural features and cultural relics, some of which are too old and fragile for real display, said curator Shan Jixiang.
The gallery's first exhibition will introduce the palace through a digital architectural model and give visitors better access to the museum's treasures through virtual reality display.
Completed on Friday, the Duanmen digital gallery will be piloted from Dec. 22, 2015 to Jan. 17, 2016. Visitors can make reservations to visit for free on the official website of the Palace Museum.
The English version of the website of the Palace Museum was also launched Friday.

terça-feira, 15 de julho de 2014

Deu no Shanghai Daily: herois alemaes da Copa saudados por centenas de milhares

German heroes get huge welcome

GERMANY’S World Cup winners shared their fourth title with hundreds of thousands of fans by parading the trophy through cheering throngs to celebrate at the historic Brandenburg Gate yesterday.
An estimated 400,000 people packed the “fan mile” in front of the Berlin landmark to welcome home coach Joachim Loew’s team and the trophy — which returned to Germany for the first time in 24 years. It crowned years of work by Loew to modernize the team, and followed a string of near misses at recent tournaments.
“We’re all world champions!” Loew told the crowd.
“Of course, it was a long way to the title, and an incredibly tough one in the end. But we’re incredibly happy to be here with the fans now.”
Captain Philipp Lahm hoisted the World Cup trophy to a giant roar from the crowd.
“What a mood here, thanks so much to everyone,” Lahm said as he passed the golden statuette to his fellow players.
Team members wearing black shirts emblazoned with the number 1 took the stage in groups to greet ecstatic supporters.
They carried a long banner reading “Obrigado Fans”, “thank you” in Portuguese in a nod to tournament host Brazil, and “the fourth title is ours”.
Mario Goetze, the scorer in the 1-0 win over Argentina in the final at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday, was greeted with deafening cheers by the sea of fans waving black, red and gold Germany flags.
The midfielder called the Mannschaft’s win “a dream”.
“We played an amazing tournament,” he said. “It’s an incredible feeling.”
Midfielder Toni Kroos led the crowd in a chant of “Miro Klose” — a tribute to veteran striker Miroslav Klose, whose two goals took his World Cup tally to 16 and made him the tournament’s all-time leading scorer.
The players jumped and danced in a raucous circle on the stage, singing “this is how the Germans win, this is how the Germans win”.
The team plane landed at Tegel Airport in midmorning after flying low over the “fan mile” — which by then had been packed for hours, with some waiting overnight to get places at the front.
Lahm led the team off the aircraft holding the trophy aloft, to cheers and a chorus of “Football’s Coming Home” from fans on the airport’s viewing terrace.
He was followed by midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger, draped in a German flag and sporting a bandage under his right eye, the result of a cut in the final.
From the airport, the team set off on a two-hour trip to downtown Berlin in a bus painted with the years of Germany’s World Cup victories: The previous occasions were in 1954, 1974 and 1990. The players climbed aboard an open-top truck for the last part of the trip to the Brandenburg Gate, crawling through the crowds.
Forward Lukas Podolski posted a selfie with Schweinsteiger and the trophy. He tweeted: “The Cup is in Berlin!!!”
Midfielder Mesut Ozil tweeted photos of fans, writing “What a crowd! Unbelievable!”

terça-feira, 20 de maio de 2014

China e sua preparacao para o espaco: um bom teste para "ecologistas sustentaveis"

Agora, cada vez que um ecologista vir com aquela conversa fiada de viver consumindo poucos recursos da Mãe Terra (como certa candidata a vegetal semi-presidencial), eu vou mandar ele se inscrever nesse programa chinês de preparação para viver na Mãe Lua.
Sempre que alguém vir com aquele papo chato de respeito ao meio ambiente, não consumismo, equilíbrio natural, já sei para onde tenho de mandar o sujeito.
Direto para a China: vegetais cultivados em sistema autossustentável, insetos, é tudo o que eles precisam para deixar a gente em paz...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

105 days in ‘miniature Earth’ raising fruit, veg ... and bugs

THREE Chinese volunteers yesterday ended an experiment that saw them live for 105 days in an enclosed capsule, eating only laboratory-raised plants and insects.
This was China’s first manned test of Moon Palace 1 — Yuegong-1 — a 500-cubic-meter module that is China’s first and only the world’s third bioregenerative life support base.
In a closed lab on the campus of Beihang University, volunteers Xie Beizhen, Dong Chen and Wang Minjuan fed themselves by cultivating grain, vegetables, fruit and grubs.
Featuring a cabin and two plant growing labs, the system also produces water and fertilizer, processes waste and recycles air.
Liu Hong, chief designer of the system, described it as a miniature version of the Earth’s biosphere.
It can help make it possible for astronauts to live safely on space stations for long periods without deliveries of supplies, explained Liu.
The cabin includes living quarters, a room for socializing, a bathroom, a waste treatment room, plus a room for breeding insects for the dinner table.
Two plant cultivation rooms offer different temperatures and levels of humidity.
Liu said the research team cultivated five grains, 15 types of vegetables, one kind of fruit, plus yellow mealworm — providing protein for the volunteers.
The team of 26 scientists began investigating the system in 2004 and all facilities and techniques are domestically developed, said officials.
It is said to be one of the world’s most advanced systems of its kind, providing core technology for manned space exploration.
In the closed system, waste produced by the inhabitants is used to fertilize the soil.
Carbon dioxide produced by inhabitants and insects is used to facilitate photosynthesis, while oxygen from the process is returned to the human cabin.
Some distilled water is collected for drinking, with the remainder plus urine used to irrigate plants.
Last June, three Chinese astronauts spent 12 days in  Heavenly Palace 1 — Tiangong-1 —in the country’s longest manned space mission.
China’s manned space mission has entered its second decade with ambitious plans including building a permanent space station and launching a manned lunar probe.

domingo, 6 de abril de 2014

Xangai, que figura no primeiro lugar da educacao mundial, internacionaliza as suas escolas

Xangai, como se sabe, encontra-se em primeiro lugar nos exames do PISA. Não a China, mas Xangai, com todo o artificialismo -- e o stakanovismo educativo -- que isso possa representar. A cidade fez questão de preparar os seus alunos para os exames do PISA e eles responderam ao desafio.
Tendo vivido em Xangai durante boa parte do ano de 2010, quando esse grande salto estava sendo feito, posso testemunhar sobre essa realidade, pois inúmeras vezes vi jovens, crianças, saindo da escola no sábado em torno das 12hs, ou indo compensar algum feriado aos domingos. Esse é um esforço necessário para tirar o primeiro lugar.
Sacrificado para as crianças? Talvez, mas as famílias sabem que esse é o único caminho para sua ascensão social, num país altamente competitivo, e num mundo que oferece todas as oportunidades para a China.
Agora a cidade caminha para a internacionalização ampliada de suas escolas, públicas e privadas.
Enquanto os alunos do primário no Brasil são obrigados a perder tempo com estudos "afrobrasileiros" -- o que é uma mistificação e uma empulhação -- e com "portunhol" -- os alunos chilenos estão se preparando para se tornar bilingues em inglês em poucos anos, e os chineses, pelo menos os de Xangai, avançam rapidamente para colocar suas escolas no compasso dos países mais avançados.
Quando é que o Brasil vai aprender?
Acho que vai demorar.
Sinto muito dizer isto, mas SOU ABSOLUTAMENTE PESSIMISTA quanto ao futuro (ou falta de) da educação brasileira, hoje entregue à imbecilização freireana dos dinossauros do MEC e das faculdades de pedagogia. A idiotice e o atraso mental dos professores brasileiros me parecem irrecuperáveis pelos próximos anos, e com isso vamos afundando na mediocridade educacional.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

City trial for international curriculum

A TOTAL of 21 local high schools have been chosen for a trial of international curriculum following a study by the Shanghai Education Commission, officials said yesterday.
The schools ­— 11 public schools and 10 private ones — will begin admissions from this year, providing an option of mixed Sino-foreign education for local students.
Students who want to learn international curriculum need to sit for a pre-admission exam held by the school. They must attend the city’s unified entrance exam for high schools as well, according to the SEC.
Even before the commission’s study last year, 33 schools had their own international curriculums since Shanghai began encouraging the measure to diversify school syllabus in a bid to meet different needs of a varying crop of students. For example, those who want to go abroad or those who are children of overseas returnees.
These schools offered 18 kinds of international courses, including IBDP (International Baccalaureate Diploma Program), A-level (General Certificate of Education Advanced Level) and AP (Advanced Placement).
The 21 schools were selected based on strict evaluation and discussions to ensure quality, the commission said.
Chinese language, ideology and politics, history and geography subjects will still be mandatory for students who opt for international syllabus as they are part of the national curriculum, said Ni Minjing, director of the SEC’s basic education department.
Ni said the integrated curriculum and textbooks will be scrutinized by the commission before classes begin.
Authorized public schools include No. 2 High School of East China Normal University, High School affiliated to Fudan University, and High School Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Private schools include Shanghai International Studies University Xiwai International School and Shanghai United International School.

terça-feira, 28 de janeiro de 2014

Um leitor voraz, que deveria estar no Guiness dos maiores leitores do mundo (Shanghai Daily)

Incrível motorista-leitor, mas é duvidoso que ele consiga ler oito livros por dia. Em todo caso, se trata de um amigo dos livros, e portanto meu amigo.
Não tive o prazer de encontrá-lo, quando morei em Shanghai, em 2010, mas vou procurá-lo, da próxima vez que passar por lá.
Quero conhecer sua receita mágica para ler assim rapidamente...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Chauffeur is top borrower of library books

A CHAUFFEUR who has been named the top borrower of books from the Shanghai Library for two years in a row said he reads voraciously to kill time when waiting for his boss.
Li Guanghua, 35, borrowed 2,846 books last year. That works out to an average of eight books a day.
He was also named the reading champion of 2012 during which he borrowed 3,134 books, library officials said.
Li said he reads fast and had time to read the books because he is required to wait in the car for his boss for a long time. He usually visits two library branches a day.
“Nowadays, more and more people read e-books on iPad, but I still prefer to read paper books,” Li told Youth Daily.
According to the Youth Daily report, Li became a taxi driver after graduating from middle school. He worked every other day so that he could spend much more time on reading.
After he became a chauffeur for a private company boss, he had far more time because he needed to wait when the boss was out for business deals or playing golf.
Martial Arts fiction, history, military, and automobile-related books are Li’s favorites.
His favorite writers are Hong Kong author Jin Yong and Taiwan author Gu Long, both specializing in martial arts writings.
Li said this is because he had a hero complex of the classic martial arts fiction.
Li borrowed automobile magazines to learn car maintenance, which made him a car expert and won the confidence of his boss.
He said he used to have a bad temper but reading changed that and made him calm and mature.
Li’s passion for reading  rubbed on his father who also started to frequent the library.
Li is now grooming his son, a preschooler, to form a reading habit, which he thinks is better than playing games on iPad.
Shanghai Library said in general, the most borrowed books for the year were literature, medicine and health books.
Popular books include the Chinese version of the biography “Steve Jobs,” “A Bite of China” and books that teach seniors how to remain healthy.
The library has 1.92 million readers with valid library cards. From Friday, it will allow readers to borrow up to 10 books at a time, up from four books, to satisfy more bookworms.

quarta-feira, 25 de dezembro de 2013

Mao Tse-tung: um tirano de 120 anos, se ainda existisse... - Shanghai Daily, Le Monde

E os herdeiros do PCC continuam a honrá-lo, como se fosse um grande salvador do povo chinês, quando na verdade contribui para a morte, morrida ou matada, de pelo menos 60 milhões de chineses...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida


Qiu, 65 ans, dans les rues de Shanghai en décembre 2013. REUTERS/ALY SONG

La Chine commémore le 120e anniversaire de Mao

Le Monde.fr avec AFP et Reuters

Admirateurs et nostalgiques de Mao Zedong célèbrent, jeudi 26 décembre, le 120ème anniversaire de la naissance du révolutionnaire qui fonda la Chine communiste, aujourd'hui divisée sur son héritage. Douze décennies représentent un jalon symbolique en Chine, où le temps est traditionnellement découpé en cycles de soixante ans.

Après trois décennies de réformes qui ont introduit le capitalisme en Chine, Mao est devenu un point de ralliement pour ceux qui déplorent l'écart abyssal entre riches et pauvres et la corruption endémique, source d'inquiétude majeure pour le Parti communiste chinois (PCC), qui s'applique à faire taire toute contestation.

>> Lire l'éditorial (en édition abonnés) : Pékin réforme l'économie, pas la politique

En vénérant Mao, l'aile gauche du parti tente ainsi de faire pression sur le pouvoir, favorable à une certaine libéralisation économique, tout en évitant d'entrer ouvertement en dissidence. Selon une source politique, les membres du Comité permanent du bureau politique du PCC participeront aux commémorations« pour apaiser l'aile gauche du parti », après les décisions du troisième plénum du XVIIIe Comité central, dont l'assouplissement de la politique de l'enfant unique et une série de réformes économiques et sociales.

>> Lire : Pékin et le dogme de l'enfant unique

DES CÉRÉMONIES « GRANDIOSES »

Mais si les principaux dignitaires du PCC devraient participer aux commémorations prévues à Pékin, de nombreuses cérémonies ont été annulées en province, selon des sources proches du pouvoir. « Il y aura une représentation de haut niveau, mais un nombre réduit d'événements », a dit l'une d'elles. « Les cérémonies doivent être grandioses, sinon les gens ne seront pas contents », souligne une autre source.

Les partisans du « grand timonier », qui dirigea la Chine pendant plus d'un quart de siècle, sont attendus par milliers dans sa ville natale de Shaoshan, dans la province centrale du Hunan, où il a passé sa jeunesse. Ces cérémonies évoqueront « une image sans tache de Mao, grand dirigeant révolutionnaire », assure Kirk Denton, professeur à l'Université américaine de l'Ohio, qui a mené des recherches à Shaoshan.

Les révélations en octobre dans la presse chinoise du coût des célébrations – l'équivalent de 2,5 milliards de dollars – ont fait scandale sur Internet, jusqu'à ce que le président Xi Jinping demande un hommage « solennel, simple et pragmatique ». Son corps embaumé reste exposé au mausolée de la place Tiananmen à Pékin, où trône toujours son portrait, et toute discusion ou publication à son sujet sortant de la ligne officielle demeure interdite.

FORTE POPULARITÉ

Après sa mort en 1976, le PCC a décrété que Mao avait eu« raison à 70 % et tort à 30 % »Mais selon un sondage publié mardi par le Global Times, un quotidien du PCC, les Chinois seraient encore plus bienveillants à son égard. 85 % des sondés se sont déclarés d'accord avec le fait que ses mérites dépassent ses erreurs, contre 12 % qui n'étaient pas d'accord. Près de 90 % des sondés ont aussi estimé que « le plus grand mérite » de Mao était d'avoir « fondé une nation indépendante grâce à la révolution ».

Bouquiniste sur un marché de Pékin, le 26 décembre. AP/Alexander F. Yuan

« L'anniversaire est un grand jour pour le peuple chinois », a déclaré, jeudi, Shen Yang, une homme d'affaires de 48 ans qui fera le voyage à Shaoshan. « Je crois que la nouvelle Chine créée par Mao est grandiose, et c'est pour cela que nous devrions lui rendre hommage et croire en lui », dit-il, précisant qu'il déposera une gerbe de fleurs à la maison natale de Mao et s'offrira pour l'occasion un repas de nouilles, le mets traditionnel des anniversaires.

Une stricte censure empêche les Chinois d'accéder à toute autre version que celle du PCC, soigneusement expurgée, des vingt-sept ans durant lesquels Mao a dirigé leur pays. La « grande famine » des années 1958-1962 et son bilan catastrophique restent ainsi un phénomène largement ignoré du grand public. Parmi les sondés, les jeunes et les plus instruits se sont montrés plus critiques à l'égard de Mao, selon le Global Times.

FAMINES, GUERRE CIVILE, RÉPRESSIONS

Mao Zedong, qui mena le Parti communiste chinois à la victoire en 1949 après une sanglante guerre civile, reste toutefois, pour certains Chinois, un tyran dont les désastreuses campagnes politiques ont coûté des millions de morts au pays. Les historiens estiment qu'au moins un million de Chinois ont été massacrés dans le mouvement de redistribution des terres des années cinquante, sans compter les purges d'opposants réels ou supposés destinées à consolider son pouvoir.

Bien plus sanglant encore a été le « grand bond en avant » déclenché en 1958 pour rattraper les économies occidentales, qui laissera derrière lui en 1962 plus de 40 millions de morts, la plupart de famine. Dès 1966 et pour dix ans, il est suivi de la« révolution culturelle », déclenchée par Mao pour reprendre les rênes et éliminer ses adversaires, plongeant le pays dans une quasi-guerre civile qui a fait un demi-million de morts pour la seule année 1967.

« La plus grande faute de Mao a été d'interrompre la progression de la Chine vers un système constitutionnel et la démocratie », estime l'historien Zhang Lifan dans un commentaire sur Internet, à l'occasion de l'anniversaire. « Il a entraîné la Chine dans la guerre de classes et la voie sans issue du régime de parti unique ». Le président Xi Jinping a lui-même souffert des conséquences de la révolution culturelle puisqu'après l'emprisonnement de son père, il avait été envoyé vivre à la campagne, comme des millions de jeunes urbains.

>> Voir l'infographie : De Mao à Xi Jinping : cinq générations au pouvoir en Chine

Mais le PCC continue « de se servir de Mao comme d'une sorte de figure paternelle de la révolution », source de « sa légitimité et de son discours sur la libération nationale », relève Kirk Denton. Si le PCC a conservé le pouvoir après la mort de Mao, c'est pourtant en pratiquant une politique économique à l'exact opposé de celle préconisée par l'ancien leader.

>> Lire aussi (en édition abonnés) : En Chine, "rectification des cadres" et retour à Mao

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Mao’s residence spruced up

terça-feira, 3 de dezembro de 2013

Educacao em estagnacao, Brasil recua (alguma surpresa?); Enquanto isso, em Xangai...

Nenhuma: com a educação companheira, o Brasil só poderia recuar, absoluta e relativamente.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Avaliação

Avanço do Brasil na educação perde fôlego, revela o Pisa

Especialistas divergem sobre razões da melhoria passada, mas concordam sobre o futuro: para acelerar, é preciso promover mudanças profundas. Confira ranking completo da mais importante avaliação do ensino mundial

Jadyr Pavão Júnior
Alunos do Centro de Ensino Médio Elefante Branco se preparam para um simulado às vésperas do Enem 2013
Alunos do Centro de Ensino Médio Elefante Branco se preparam para um simulado às vésperas do Enem 2013 (Wilson Dias/Agência Brasil)
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O Pisa (Programme for International Student Assessment) é uma avaliação realizada a cada três anos pela OCDE, Organização para a Cooperação e Desenvolvimento Econômico. Participam estudantes com 15 anos de idade. A avaliação pretende aferir o quanto os alunos aprenderam em sala de aula, mas também se conseguem aplicar conhecimentos na solução de problemas reais. Outro objetivo da avaliação é fornecer subsídio para políticas de educação. Em 2012, 501.000 jovens de 65 países ou regiões econômicas delimitadas (caso de Xangai) aplicaram a prova. No Brasil, foram 19.877 estudantes, divididos em 837 escolas.
O ensino nas escolas públicas brasileiras é, em geral, muito ruim. Ponto. Resta saber se ele está melhorando. O relatório do Pisa, mais importante avaliação da educação internacional, publicado nesta terça-feira mostra que a formação oferecida nas escolas (públicas e privadas) do país vem avançando desde 2000, quando a primeira edição do levantamento foi lançada. Contudo, o movimento ascendente vem perdendo força muito antes de colocar o Brasil ao lado dos melhores ou até mesmo dos medianos. Isso faz com que especialistas sentenciem: para avançar mais, o país terá que promover reformas profundas. "Não cresceremos mais sem isso", diz Priscila Cruz, diretora-executiva do Todos pela Educação, ONG que atua ao mesmo tempo vigiando e propondo políticas públicas.
Comparadas as notas das avaliações de 2009 e 2012, o Brasil — 58º do novo ranking — caiu em leitura (412 pontos para 410), marcou passo em ciências (405) e registrou melhora em matemática (386 para 391). Praticamente estagnado na faixa dos 400 pontos, o país permanece distante dos líderes do levantamento — a província chinesa de Xangai, por exemplo, com média geral de 588 pontos — e se mantém na vizinhança de nações como Albânia, Tunísia. A pontuação não é decorativa. Continue a ler a reportagem
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Shanghai students top of the class ... and the world
By Zhao We
Shanghai Daily,  December 4, 2013, Wednesday |  PRINT EDITION

Shanghai again ranked first for mathematics, science and reading in a three-yearly report on global education as students in Asia continued to outshine their Western counterparts.
They also spent more time doing homework than their peers in the 65 countries and regions which took part in the tests for the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Its PISA report (Program for International Student Assessment) is the single largest study of global schooling.
It is highly influential, with participating countries and regions representing more than 80 percent of the global economy and often adapting policy in response to the findings.
The first PISA survey was carried out in 2000, and Shanghai joined in 2009, coming first in the three categories.
Around 6,400 students from 155 schools in Shanghai took part in the latest assessment in April last year. Globally, about half a million 15-year-olds took part.
The tests are based on a 1,000-point scale.
In mathematics, average scores ranged from 368 in Peru to 613 in Shanghai. The US average was 481, below the global average of 494. Singapore and Hong Kong took second and third with scores of 573 and 561.
In science, average scores ranged from 373 in Peru to 580 in Shanghai. The US scored 497. The global average was 501.
In reading, average scores ranged from 384 in Peru to 570 in Shanghai. The US scored 498, just above the global 496.
“The results are very inspiring. While it is good to see our students have performed so well, it is worth thinking if we really need so many students to be so good at mathematics,” said Zhang Minxuan, leader of the Shanghai PISA program and president of Shanghai Normal University.
Shanghai students reported an average of 13.8 hours every week doing school assignments, the highest and almost three times the average 4.9 hours.
Zhang said an analysis showed the optimal time for students to do homework is 11 hours per week including weekends. “We found that students who spent more than 11 hours on homework didn’t make significant progress, which deprived their time of discovering other talents.”
The mathematics test was divided into several parts to examine students’ skills to solve real-world questions using a knowledge of geometry, algebra, calculation and statistics. Shanghai students performed well in translating a real-world problem into a mathematics problem but were poorer at explaining the results.
Zhang attributed Shanghai’s students’ good performance in mathematics to more chances to learn the subject, personal ability and family background.
Boys and girls have a similar performance in mathematics but girls were more modest in assessing their ability.
“We should encourage girl students to think they can do math as good as boys and help them build confidence,” Zhang said.
In reading and science, the score gap between boys and girls in Shanghai has narrowed compared to 2009, Zhang said.
He said the results showed that Shanghai’s education was well-balanced as the gap between low proficiency and high proficiency was smaller than the average level.
Zhang said the PISA results had given thoughtful hints on how to provide a balanced education for students.

Schools are advised to give fewer after-school assignments and reduce homework so that students can have more time for individual development. For teachers, they should think about how to help students use mathematics skills to solve real problems instead of learning how to solve a math problem only. It is also suggested that parents not overburden their children with after-school tutoring.

sexta-feira, 6 de setembro de 2013

Xi para Obama: seja pacifico, paciente, calmo, nao se meta (sobre a Siria) - Shanghai Daily

Nada como um bom conselho para acalmar ardores guerreiros.
Na verdade, o bom mesmo é não fazer nada, deixar que se matem; em qualquer hipótese, o vencedor vai continuar comprando armas e vendendo petróleo, se for o caso...


Xi urges Obama to find political solution on Syria
Chinese President Xi Jinping told his US counterpart Barack Obama yesterday that the crisis in Syria should not be resolved through a military strike and urged him to consider a political solution.
(From: Shanghai Daily)

sábado, 15 de dezembro de 2012

Quer dirigir na cidade? Que tal pagar 11 mil dólares pela placa?

Pois é, esta é a receita de Shanghai, como nos informa esta matéria.

Bids fall, but city plate prices keep on rising

By Lu Nengneng
Shanghai Daily,  December 16, 2012

Bids fall, but city plate prices keep on rising

By Lu Nengneng  |   2012-12-16  |     NEWSPAPER EDITION

The story appears on Page A3
Dec 16, 2012

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2012-11-18

2012-10-21 0:59:17

2012-9-16 0:18:34


SHANGHAI'S car plate prices hit a record high for the sixth consecutive month yesterday, even though the number of bidders fell.

The lowest price for a Shanghai car plate surged to 68,900 yuan (US$11,030) at the last auction of 2012 - up 2,400 yuan on last month's figure - while the average winning bid rose 2,500 yuan on November to 69,346 yuan, the Shanghai Commodity International Auction Co said.

After keeping the number of plates on offer at a year-high of 9,500 for the previous six months, the city lowered the quota to 9,300 for December.

The number of bidders dropped nearly 900 to 18,244, the lowest this year.

Eddie Zhang, a car dealer in Shanghai, said the drop in bidders shows scalpers are leaving the game following the introduction of new rules governing car plate resales in July.

These extended the minimum holding period from one to three years, thwarting speculators seeking a quick sell on.

But this has had little impact on car plate price trends, which remain bullish.

The average price has surged nearly 20 percent since June, and is up more than 30 percent on January's figure.

"Shanghai's car plate prices have strengthened their upward trend in the past few months, even though many bidders expected to see the new rules bring them down," Zhang said.

"Now people tend to overbid, betting that the prices will go higher, which leads to a self-fulfilling prophecy."

Vicky Ye, a would-be car owner who has been monitoring the Shanghai plate price trend this year, said she is tired of waiting for it to shift into reverse.

"I've no doubt the Shanghai plate is the most expensive non-precious metal plate on Earth, and will continue to hold this reputation," said Ye, who had planned to buy a car in Shanghai.

Ye said she will consider applying for an out-of-town car plate. While this won't give her the same privileges as a local plate - there are restrictions on when cars with out-of-town plates can travel on certain roads - it will save her a lot of money, reasons Ye.

Meanwhile, Beijing is to continue with its car plate lottery program next year, the Beijing Municipal Commission of Transport said this week.

The program has helped cool down car purchases with new car registrations dropping 78.1 percent to 173,000 units last year, said the commission.

Car plate number restrictions are designed to ease congestion in major Chinese cities.
 

domingo, 15 de julho de 2012

A historia do salario minimo... nos EUA -- Shanghai Daily


Fair minimum wage essential for stronger American economy

By Christine Owens 
Shanghai Daily, July 15, 2012


JUNE marked the 100 year anniversary of the first minimum wage law passed in the United States. And, while there is nothing new about low-wage work ? we should take this occasion to recognize an even more dispiriting fact about the low-wage workforce: It could have been a thing of the past. 

The first minimum wage law in the United States was established on June 4, 1912, in Massachusetts. More than a dozen states would follow over the next 10 years, and in 1933 the new US Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, wrote an essay to make the case for a federal minimum wage. 

Reading Perkins' essay today reminds us of the potential that minimum wage laws hold for shaping a fair and productive economy. At the time of her writing, the nation was in the midst of the Great Depression, and Perkins feared the destructive potential of the growing number of "fly-by-night" sweatshop operators attempting to gain an unfair advantage over their competitors by selling cheaper products made possible by rock-bottom labor costs. 

These low-wage sweatshop operators were, in other words, cheaters. They offered cheaper products by taking advantage of workers who, in a period of record unemployment, had no choice but to accept whatever job they could get - in some cases, earning only 3.5 US cents per hour (back then).The purpose of a minimum wage law was not only to protect workers from abuse by their employers, but to also ensure fair competition by requiring that all businesses play by the same rules. 

The first federal minimum wage law was established in 1938, five years after Perkins' article appeared. Yet, after several decades of Congressional stewardship maintaining a strong minimum wage, the real value of the minimum wage was allowed to plummet over the last four decades. 

As a result, the minimum wage peaked in 1968, and has since trailed behind the rising cost of living. In fact, the minimum wage would be well over US$10 today if it had simply kept pace with inflation. Instead, it's only US$7.25 an hour - or just over US$15,000 a year. 

The problems associated with low wages are no longer just an emerging threat, as Perkins once feared, but have instead come to define a significant share of the labor market. These problems will persist. Low-wage industries are now among the economy's fastest-growing sectors, and some of the lowest paid occupations are expected to create the largest numbers of new jobs over the next several years.

For many employers, low wages are part and parcel of a robust growth strategy. As of last year, no fewer than 35 of the nation's 50 largest low-wage businesses had posted profits that exceeded their pre-recession levels. 

Meanwhile, the vast majority of businesses in the US have yet to recover from the recession, particularly small businesses. A Gallup poll from earlier this year revealed that fully 85 percent of small businesses still have no intention of hiring or expanding their business because demand remains so weak. 

We are now three years out from the official end of the recession, and workers' wages are actually declining rather than rebounding. From March 2011 to March 2012, real average hourly earnings fell 0.6 percent for all private sector workers and declined by a full 1 percent for non-supervisory and production workers. 

Perhaps the saddest fact is that the low-wage workforce has become an all-too-familiar fixture of the American economy. If Perkins were alive today, she would only need one look at our outdated minimum wage law to know that our economy has become an anti-competitive environment where low-road employers can thrive at the expense of both other employers and workers. 


Now, 100 years after the first minimum wage law was passed, low-wage industries once again threaten to impoverish America's workforce and derail the entrepreneurial ambitions of small business owners. And the American people have noticed. According to a recent poll, more than two-thirds of Americans support raising the minimum wage to over US$10 per hour. This support is behind a proposal by Senator Harkin, an Indiana Democratic, that would raise the minimum wage to US$9.80 an hour, significantly raise the minimum wage for tipped workers (currently at US$2.13 an hour), and provide for annual cost of living adjustments for both. 

There was nothing inevitable about the low-wage economy that we find in the US today. What decades of experience tell us, however, is that unless we seriously acknowledge our responsibility to maintain the value of the minimum wage, we have little reason to expect anything different in the century ahead. 

Christine Owens is executive director of the National Employment Law Project. Copyright: American Forum

sábado, 7 de julho de 2012

Apple vs China: o que os chineses nao inventaram?


Apple faces new legal challenge in China


Shanghai Daily, July 8, 2012


A CHINESE technology firm has filed a legal challenge accusing US giant Apple of infringing its patented voice recognition software with its Siri function on the iPhone, the company said yesterday.

The move comes days after Apple paid US$60 million to end a dispute over who could use the iPad name in China.

Shanghai Zhizhen Network Technology Co Ltd patented its Xiao i Robot software in 2004, while Apple's Siri, which made its debut with the iPhone 4S last year, was first developed in 2007. The Chinese company's version operates in a similar way to Apple's personal assistant.

Si Weijiang, a lawyer acting for the Shanghai-based firm, said it had tried to contact Apple two months ago over the alleged infringement but received no response.

"We filed the lawsuit in late June to the Shanghai No. 1 Intermediate People's Court," Si said. "The case is at the court-mediated stage."

"We mainly ask Apple to stop infringing on our patent and cover the court costs, but once the court confirms Apple has infringed on our patent, we will propose compensation," he added.

The company's chairman, Yuan Hui, told the Apple Daily newspaper that the firm had 100 million users in China. 

"People feel that China has no innovation, that companies here just copy. But in fact, we are leaders in our field, and have created our own innovation," Yuan said.

It added that Apple was also facing legal action from another Chinese company for allegedly infringing its "Snow Leopard" trademark.

The High Court of the southern province of Guangdong said on Monday that Apple had paid US$60 million to settle a legal battle with Chinese computer maker Shenzhen Proview Technology over the iPad name.