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By 2006, China, in conjunction with Hong Kong, was the second-largest trading nation in the world – up from 15th in 1990. Despite importing billions of dollars of raw materials to feed its hungry industrial manufacturing sectors, China maintains an overall trade surplus. This is in stark contrast to the USA which, despite being the largest trading nation in the world, is in deficit. China’s economy has been growing at an extraordinary rate, and trade plays a vital role in the country’s economic liberalization and modernization. Between 2003 and 2007, exports – almost all of which are manufactured commodities – nearly trebled. Although European traders have progressively increased their share of China’s markets, the overwhelming bulk of China’s trade, and its fastest-growing partnerships, are with its Asian neighbors. However, China’s development strategies in Africa, Latin America and the Oceanic island nations suggest that these regions are increasingly providing China with markets as well as raw materials.
see also page 105
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TRADE
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Foreign direct investment in China continues to grow and is significantly greater than that in its Asian neighbors. Overseas companies are tempted by the large pool of available labor, the 8 percent annual rate of growth over several years, and the maturing, although still youthful, stock market. China’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001 has enabled foreign firms to enter into partnerships with Chinese companies. Manufacturing has been dominant, although the growth of the services sector has seen foreign entries in real estate, hospitality, retail and communications. The leading sources of investment are from North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. Overseas Chinese, even those living in relatively small and island economies, choose to invest in China’s future. Not all entrepreneurial ventures run smoothly. The regulatory framework around quality controls is uneven in theory and practice, which can cause problems for co-partners in certain enterprises. Piracy and copyright remain a problem for some forms of investment. China’s own direct investment overseas is of huge importance to the global economy, but has political implications, not only in Africa, but in the USA and Australia.
see also page 105
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INVESTMENT
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China’s regular armed forces number 2.1 million, and comprise 9 percent of the world’s total. In addition, there is a reserve force of 800,000, and a military police force of 1.5 million. An army of this size is impressive on paper, and reasonably cheap to run, but in modern warfare it is high-tech weaponry that counts, and China’s military expenditure is a long way behind that of the USA and the total for the rest of NATO. China does have a nuclear capacity, however. While minuscule in comparison with that of Russia or the USA, it is significant in terms of China’s military power within Asia and South-East Asia. China’s unannounced testing of an anti-satellite missile on an ageing weather satellite in January 2007 is also significant. Military specialists noted that it involved the successful interception of an object travelling on a similar trajectory, and at a comparable speed to that of an inter-continental ballistic missile. China has become increasingly keen to play a part on the world stage, with around 2,000 troops, engineers and medical staff involved in peacekeeping missions around the world during 2008, including UN and African Union missions in Sudan. It has also, however, been criticized for its sale of arms to developing countries, in particular to the Sudanese government.
see also page 106
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MILITARY POWER
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China’s government manages the country’s international relations both through its alliances and negotiated positions with overseas powers, and by taking into account its people’s far-reaching ambitions and