Outward direct investment is a key component of China’s national strategy to support its rapid industrialization, bolster domestic industry, and deepen cooperation with other countries.
- Lin Shi,
- Yuhan Zhang
Outward direct investment is a key component of China’s national strategy to support its rapid industrialization, bolster domestic industry, and deepen cooperation with other countries.
The nature of the climate challenge in the immediate future will be determined by China and the world’s largest carbon emitters—not U.N. summits.
As China becomes an increasingly motorized country, Beijing must enact new policies to address the challenges presented by congestion, pollution, and fuel dependence.
China has become a driving force in global motorization, but future harmonious growth will depend on equitable and efficient measures that minimize the energy and environmental effects of China’s burgeoning transportation sector.
Fair clean-energy trade between the United States and China would offer economic, employment, and carbon-reduction benefits for both countries.