East Asia

Must Read

SIPRI: China's Energy and Security Relations with Russia

Authors: Linda Jakobson, Paul Holtom, Dean Knox, and Jingchao Peng

This report illuminates the current status of China’s security and energy relations with Russia. The authors describe a relationship that is complex and at times fraught with distrust, and which, although potentially promising, is increasingly marred by uncertainties.

See more in Russian Fed., China

Must Read

RAND: China and India, 2025: A Comparative Assessment

Authors: Jr. Charles Wolf, Siddhartha Dalal, Julie DaVanzo, Eric V. Larson, Harun Dogo, Alisher Akhmedjonov, Meilinda Huang, and Silvia Montoya

RAND provides a comparative assessment between the progress China and India are likely to make by 2025 in the domains of demography, macroeconomics, science and technology, and defense spending and procurement.

See more in China, India

Must Read

The Diplomat: China's S-Shaped Threat

Authors: Andrew S. Erickson and Gabe Collins

Andrew S. Erickson and Gabe Collins suggest the oft-cited threats to America's preeminence—issues from pension costs, to healthcare dilemmas, to military expenditures—may also hinder China's ability to avoid an “S-shaped growth slowdown.”

See more in China, Economics

Op-Ed

China's Great Rebalancing Act

Author: Evan A. Feigenbaum
Business Standard

Evan A. Feigenbaum argues that China's capital-intensive, export-oriented approach is delivering diminishing returns and threatens to become a major political vulnerability for the Chinese government.

See more in China, Trade

Analysis Brief Author: Jayshree Bajoria

As Vice President Joseph Biden begins a visit to China, analysts say both the United States and China will have to restructure their economies to lessen global imbalances and strengthen recovery.

See more in China, Economics

Article

China's Great Rebalancing Act

Authors: Nicholas Consonery, Evan A. Feigenbaum, Damien Ma, Michal Meidan, and Henry Hoyle
Eurasia Group

Nicholas Consonery, Evan A. Feigenbaum, Damien Ma, Michael Meidan, and Henry Hoyle argue that China's capital-intensive, export-oriented growth model is delivering diminishing returns and threatens to become a major political vulnerability for the government, and China's leaders must overcome political restraints to implement a comprehensive and ambitious rebalancing agenda.

See more in China, Economic Development, Trade