The Chinese people are such fanatics about educating their offspring that the Chinese government felt it needed to step in and give the kids a break by liming their exposure to both formal education (amount of homework) and informal education (after-school tutoring).
Tutoring was a growth industry in China until the reforms curtailed it. It had already expanded outside mainland China and now the push is on to expand it further to make up for the market lost in China. It serves not only Chinese living abroad but other Asian, Asians in general tending to be obsessed with education in comparison with Western interest in it.
Education and health are key components of a nation's infrastructure. Infrastructure provides both a tangible foundation for national progress and also an intangible one in terms of the quality of human resources assessed on the basis of the ability to apply knowledge and skills and to grow. This constitutes labor as a factor of production versus capital and land.
If you are interested in education or China, this is an interesting article that takes only a couple of minutes to read.
Sixth ToneChinese Tutoring Giants Set Sights on Overseas Expansion
Who is cutting ties with whom? Russia and the Bologna education system
Anna Kolotova, PhD in International Relations in Jilin University, China, postdoctoral fellow in Global Engagement Academy, Shandong University (Weihai), China
The Swedish for-profit ‘free school’ scandal
Lars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
Khan Academy Joins with OpenAI
Alex Tabarrok | Bartley J. Madden Chair in Economics at the Mercatus Center and Professor of Economics at George Mason University, and a research fellow with the Mercatus Center
China needs more art degrees...
ReplyDeleteThere were tons of Chinese instructors in my STEM discipline at a Land Grant but they were all Taiwan and Hong Kong Chinese… many Indians too…
ReplyDeleteidk if this ever changed to actual CCP Chinese being invited over here it sounds like that eventually happened based on reports NIH working with the Wuhan lab to develop the COVID-19 protein…
Thing is now if we cut them off (not a done deal imo… Russia is a done deal) will they sustain? Be able to take the baton?
Remains to be seen…
Same with USD zombies trying to do without USD…
Trade between the two empires remains healthy. Decoupling is off to a slow start...
ReplyDeleteTrade between the two empires remains healthy. Decoupling is off to a slow start...
ReplyDeleteThis is what China and most of the non-West are trying to tell the US and rest of ita allies, vassals, and colonies. The US and rest of West embrace "my-way-or-the-highway thinking that is the basis of unipolarism (Western neoliberalism, neo-imperialism and neocolonialism). But at the same time, they don't want to lose these markets by pushing too hard.
But probing they are. China is digging in and signaling that if the West wants to fight over this, so be it. This presents a dilemma for the West, which has already picked a fight with Russia.
They realize that Russia and China together would be extremely costly to challenge militarily and they might lose the tussle. Or it could go nuclear, triggering MAD, and everyone would lose. So all parties are gaming this out and preparing contingency plans.
Until the numbers change, 'decoupling' is political theater.
ReplyDeleteAs I've said before, it is possible to have a cold war with China and maintain trade.