China will promote the development of the social credit system in line with the law and regulations to prevent the abuse of the credit mechanism, said an official from China's top economic planner on Friday.
The Chinese equestrian team won the qualifier for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games after finishing second at the Olympic Group G qualifier in Valkenswaard, the Netherlands, on Tuesday.
High-speed passenger shipbuilding is being revived in Russia. Many large hydrofoil vessels are already being built and operated, for example, the seagoing craft Kometa-120M and the river craft Valdai-45R.
The Xiongan New Area, set up by China's central government as an exemplary model city, 100 km south of Beijing, will be connected directly with Hong Kong Special Administrative Region by high-speed train starting from Wednesday, chinanews.com reported.
The US government has "basic misunderstanding of how tariffs work", said Stephen Roach, former Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia branch.
China's President Xi Jinping and United States President Donald Trump agreed to meet at the upcoming G20 Summit in Osaka during a phone call on Tuesday. They also agreed to have the trade teams from both countries continue to keep in contact in order to work towards resolving the dispute.
Among the multitude of rankings in the business world, the most prestigious are the Fortune 500 Global and the BrandZ Top 100 Most Valuable Global Brands lists.
On Sunday, presidential elections will be held, a year ahead of schedule, in Kazakhstan.
China's Ministry of Commerce released a report on Thursday that lays out the benefits the United States has obtained from its trade with China.
When U.S. President Donald Trump first started to act on his trade policies against China, EU, Japan, and now Mexico, many manufacturers and companies were behind him, enduring the rising cost because they believed it could just be a negotiation strategy. But it seems like the pain is getting more real with the prolonged trade stand-off as the effects of Trump's massive tax cuts policy on the wane.
China's President Xi Jinping has arrived in Russia for a state visit. This year marks the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between China and Russia, and both sides have noted many times that their bilateral relationship is the best it has ever been. President Xi's visit at this historic juncture will further strengthen ties between the two countries and generate new opportunities for development.
The annual and quarterly reports of listed finance companies are like a mirror that reflects industrial development, the changes of financial services and the trend of macro economy.
Lately, the U.S. has shocked the whole world with a series of tricks aimed at forcing Chinese companies out of the U.S. market.
The US administration always blames other countries for "violating rules" as long as its "America first" strategy malfunctions or its hegemony fails to work.
Policies based on manufactured facts seldom, if at all, turn out according to the perpetrators' expectations. U.S. foreign policies concerning China are a classic example, accusing the country of being "aggressive" in the South China Sea to garner public support to stifle or contain its rise. However, the attempts failed miserably.
A recent commentary on Fox Business Network - which is part of the No. 1 news channel in America and the most influential cheerleader of White House policies -unsurprisingly embraced the U.S. government's "economic war" with China.
The whole world is concerned and blames Washington for imposing additional tariffs on Chinese exports to the U.S. People of insight both in the U.S. and international community believe that China-US consultation and cooperation as well as mutually beneficial, win-win outcomes not only benefit economic development of China and the U.S., but also contribute to global economic stability and people's wellbeing in the world, while trade tit-for-tat between the two countries only brings harm.
The United States recently raised the tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods from 10 percent to 25 percent, while targeting another $300 billion worth of Chinese imports for potential punitive tariffs. As was to be expected, the yuan depreciated from 6.7 toward 6.9 against the US dollar, mainly on renewed trade tensions.