As the U.S. threatens new tariffs and economic fragmentation looms, China is doubling down on commitment to global trade integration with flagship supply chain exhibition this summer.
Despite headwinds of rising protectionism, increasing signals point to a good start for China's economy for the first quarter (Q1) of 2025, injecting much-needed certainty and confidence into the world.
In a world afflicted with growing instability and uncertainty, Asia's unity in promoting common prosperity stands as a telling example of what win-win cooperation can achieve.
As the U.S. administration under Donald Trump is scrambling to remodel global free trade into a zero-sum game, it would do well to recall a consistent truth: trade wars produce no winners.
By announcing the so-called "reciprocal tariffs" scheme, the U.S. administration is dealing a heavy blow to the world trading system and the global economy at large.
By turning trade into an oversimplistic tit-for-tat game, Washington is dismantling a global trade system based on efficiency, specialization and mutual benefit and hurting both the U.S. economy and the global economy at large.
As protectionism surges across the globe, bringing in economic headwinds, China is doubling down on opening its doors and positioning itself as a stabilizing force in an increasingly fractured global economy.
When US internet celebrity iShowSpeed embarked on a marathon livestreaming tour across China, he vaporized the meticulously constructed "China threat theory" peddled by some in the West.
The China Development Forum 2025, held in Beijing from Sunday to Monday, has once again shown itself to be a pivotal platform for global dialogue on economic growth, innovation and sustainable development.