China's market, the largest in the world for many consumer brands, is obviously strategically important to multinationals. For many years, leading global companies, including Volvo Group, have benefited by developing their operations through investment and cooperation with local partners.
Fears that China is heading for an economic recession have been overstated. After last week's global market mayhem, concerns from Western analysts and economists surfaced again.
The recent decision to depreciate the yuan by the People's Bank of China, or central bank, caught many people by surprise. This triggered speculation that all was not well with China's economy.
Despite the golden sunshine and the allure of world-renowned research institutes, Winnie Lun did not want to stay on in California. After spending 30 years in the United States, Lun decided to return to Hong Kong, her home city, lured by the abundant government grants that would help fast track the growth of her biotech company.
"Government funding is always part of the seed money that innovators need to start their R&D, and it encourages and attracts funding and investment from the private sector."
The letters "DJI" stir both pride and regret among Hong Kong's technology community.
Ken Hu, global rotating chief executive of Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, one of the world's major telecom equipment providers, attributed the company's growing presence in the global market to its consistent investment in research and development over the years.
A few years ago, they were not as big as telecom-equipment provider Huawei Technologies Co and Internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd, which had already helped build Shenzhen into a global player driven by innovation.
Ye Dagang has his own definitions of starting up a business - one is to establish a company with real business, the other is to invest in startup companies through equity-based crowd-funding.
We are in a theater in downtown Beijing packed to the rafters with an audience whose members are transfixed by what is going on before them.
Think of her as a young elegant lady and him as an older, intellectual gentleman. The woman in question is Hangzhou, in Zhejiang province, and the man is Nanjing, in Jiangsu.
Images four times as clear and sharp as those found in homes in the US
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