For the last decade or so, China's economy has been on something of a roller-coaster ride. As 2018 begins, is the country approaching a new ascent, a steep drop, or something in between?
Editor's note: A rising number of media reports say a new Western coalition may be in the making to counter China's rise and its increasing "sharp power". Is it true? What are the causes of the increasing conflicts between China and some major Western countries? Three experts share their views on the issue with China Daily's Pan Yixuan. Experts follow:
It would not be an overstatement to say Japan's New Year begins with the Hakone Ekiden, as an iconic long-distance road relay race is known. The 217.8-kilometer relay marathon sees male runners from more than two dozen college teams in the Tokyo area run from the center of the Japanese capital to the hot-spring resort of Hakone in Kanagawa prefecture in the Fuji foothills on Jan 2. They run all the way back to downtown Tokyo on Jan 3.
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the country's information technology regulator, on Friday urged the country's top technology firms to streamline their customer data collection processes amid a string of online privacy rows.
Chinese consumers and government entities will spend more money on information services than products for the first time in 2018, according to the report released on Friday by the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology.
China is moving to improve its model for managing investment in village and township banks, with the aim of enhancing these banks' ability to operate sustainably, protect against risks and support agro-related businesses and small companies.
China-made Volkswagen cars will soon be exported to Southeast Asian markets, with a pilot shipment to the Philippines to be made this month, according to Volkswagen Group China.
Kweichow Moutai Co Ltd, China's signature high-end spirit maker, said on Friday that it expects online sales to account for 60 percent of its total sales in the future compared with 30 percent now.
German semiconductor company Infineon Technologies AG says it aims to achieve double-digit growth this year in China - a country that's playing an increasingly important role in its business as a whole.
The world may be full of uncertainties, but there is one thing of which we can be certain: There will be no letup on the central leadership's resolve to ensure no place is out of bounds, no ground left unturned, and no tolerance shown in the fight against corruption.
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