Xu Guihua, the executive deputy director of the Chinese Association on Tobacco Control, said she was very happy when the State Council published the draft of a national law to control tobacco use.
Zhang Xuewen, 28, a white-collar worker in Beijing, has been smoking for three years.
"In bars, you drink, and with alcohol, you smoke," said Mohamad Kheer Ferekh, 27, from Syria, in a crowded bar in Sanlitun, one of the capital's most popular bar areas.
It is about 2:30 in the afternoon, and Wang Xiaohong, the smoking-cessation therapist with Peking University Third Hospital, is talking with a husband and wife about ways for him to quit his habit.
Land sales in Shanghai have ended the year on a high, highlighting a growing appetite by developers for plots in first-tier cities as oversupply risks continue in smaller cities.
Graduates born after 1990 may become a generation of renters because many prefer to spend their money on things besides home ownership, according to a report by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
The United States lobster trade with China is growing rapidly, especially for a species called the spiny lobster that is harvested in the Florida Keys.
WeChat, the mobile text and voice messaging service owned by Shenzhen-based Tencent Holdings Ltd-China's largest and most used Internet service portal that claimed to have had 468 million monthly active users in the third quarter of this year - is now becoming so much more than just away for people to communicate.
Chinese investment banks have awarded pay rises to their staff for the first time since the 2008/09 global financial crisis, buoyed by a surge in China-related deals, but salaries and bonuses still trail far behind those paid by Western banks, according to research published by a global professional services firm.
China's western and border regions have enjoyed a surge in infrastructure investment this year, including railways, and will continue to enjoy high levels of spending next year, officials said.
Energy use per unit of GDP - a measure of the energy efficiency of a nation's economy - is expected to decline by up to 4.7 percent in China iin 2014, according to a leading official at the country's top economic planner, signaling changes in the structure of the world's second-largest economy and the impact of slower economic growth.
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