1 to 10 of about 257

As China seeks a more balanced diplomatic approach after decades of enhanced exchanges with Western powers, it should pay more attention to its Asian neighbors.

China’s radical economic reforms could bring new prosperity to hundreds of millions—if Xi Jinping can successfully navigate the bumps ahead.

Patrick Cronin of the Center for New American Security talks with Carnegie-Tsinghua’s Paul Haenle about U.S. security objectives in Asia and the importance of a strong and stable U.S.-China relationship.

The year ahead will be volatile for Asia. Can countries in the region continue to prosper and keep disputes in check while China vigorously reforms and North Korea provokes its neighbors?

China’s decision to supply Pakistan with further power reactors has raised concerns that Beijing is breaching nuclear trade rules.

A steep but orderly reduction in GDP growth is likely to be the best evidence that Beijing is forcefully implementing reforms, and that China is preparing itself over the decade to regain growth on a healthier long-term basis.

Carnegie–Tsinghua’s Paul Haenle and Peking University’s leading North Korea expert, Zhu Feng, discuss the recent purge of Jang Song-taek and its implications for Chinese-North Korean relations.

In countries with financial repression, like China, monetary policy has a muted impact on consumers and a dramatic impact on producers, leading to unsustainable patterns of investment and consumption.

China wants the benefits of a charm offensive with its neighbors, but it also wants to guard its far-flung territorial claims. It cannot do both.

Public and elite attitudes in the United States and especially China are exerting a growing influence on the bilateral security relationship.