It’s innovative, it’s economical, it’s got quality, and it’s made in China. From electrical appliances to bags, toys, dresses, even foodstuffs, made in China products are part of our everyday life.
Before returning home to the US this summer, people warned me I might experience "reverse culture shock". After living in China for a year there were things about home that surprised me.
A recent post that went viral on Chinese social media outlet, WeChat, stated that America is at fault for the recent downfall of the Chinese stock market.
What are some of the issues food agribusiness researchers and executives are talking about right now? To address this question, I had a chance to participate in the recent World Food and Agribusiness Congress.
I've heard people generalize so often about Chinese and Westerners that I feel like I should write about it. What am I talking about?
I've never claimed to be the know-all and end-all of China and Chinese culture, and I never will. To wit: even five years on, little tidbits of facts previously unknown to me still have the power to rock me.
As I have been in England for the last few weeks I was interested and dismayed to see another example of British television programme called "The Bohunt experiment".
Recently, you may have viewed Part 1 of a BBC documentary series about an experiment that was conducted at the private Bohunt School.
Much is said about what we expats are exposed to at the hands of our Chinese neighbors: the stares, the inane questions – I was once asked if I brush my teeth!
Escalators bring great convenience to people’s lives. If we take subways, shop in malls or work in high-rise offices, we can’t seem to do without them.
Marriage, by definition, is the union of two or more complementary elements: pork and peppers, peanut butter and jelly, jazz and blues, human and human.
The focus of the world is still on China and it will remain so for a long time to come. Compiled below are five reasons why you should come to China in case you’re in doubt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|