Excellent broadcast. So refreshing to hear from a knowledgeable and objective speaker who is on the ground in China where the rubber meets the road. His views are pragmatic and void of political bias. No hype, no hyperboles. He’s telling it like it is. I would rather listen to this type of real experts than those so-called experts and academia from this think-tank and that think-tank from the west. More power to the BRI initiative. A real contribution to humanity and developing countries. It ain’t perfect but we’ll take that over wars and destruction anytime. Thank you very much for the broadcast.
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed the show. I truly wish we could have more Chinese guests on the show. It's something we strive for and work very hard to achieve but unfortunately it is very difficult to do. It used to be much easier as we enjoyed regular appearances from Chinese scholars and diplomats. But not anymore. We are very proud that this show is a platform where a guest from China can spend an hour to talk about critical issues, something very rare in international media today. - Eric
@@chinaglobalsouth Do you have contacts/connections with CGTN/China Daily to get referrals for speakers? China Academy of Social Sciences? Reach out to Tian Wei and Lu Xin who can give advice.
This is one of the best China IR podcasts on TH-cam and you don't have the subscriber count you deserve. Please do interviews on other China channels to get more viewers.
This is the first video I watched from this channel and I enjoyed this video and will be looking in your backlog as well as watching more content you make in the future.
Another wonderful show. Thank you. I have a Bachelor's degree in International Development and Globalization. It is quite interesting to note that around 20 years ago when I enrolled in the program it was all about the, innumerable benefits of The Globalized Economic World. Albeit we did delve into the negative impacts but it was deemed overall that Globalization was a plus for the world. Especially capable of diminishing inter State conflicts though trade and lifting billions out of poverty. Fast forward to today and it dawn on me, today during you discussion that Globalization was great as long as it disproportionately benefited Western Multinationals but it is becoming a scourge because China is fast becoming an extreme beneficiary of Globalization. Go figure!
yeap, still remembered all those ooh and ahh about multinationlism and how wonderful it will be. Of course that was when the western companies were on a migration outward where they will reap all the benefit.
A superb interview and discussion. Learned a lot alongside you guys in this one. The Chinese and their partners in my opinion would benefit enormously from being more open about their processes. And as Lui Kanyi eloquently illustrates, it is explainable. They could avoid so much drama and headaches from misunderstandings and misinformation. This continued gap in knowledge and literacy continues to be an unnecessary problem. Great episode guys.
Excellent. Look the problem in Africa is not a question of competence as the west would have you readily believe. The have many frankly racist and antiquated views on Africa as a whole. The main issue from a policy and financial perspective is simple the global financial architecture. It is designed to favor developed and former colonial entities. So then instead of judging a project based on quantitative merits. They are added layers like gay sex????When put in such a crude manner. One begins to see the ridiculous nature of the financing problems Africa faces. When the Kenyan president said we need a renegotiation of the global financial architecture. The west freaked out because of how manifestly unfair and ridiculous it is. Alot of our policy makers have cut their teeth in the very best of institutions. So it is never a question of competence. Without easy access to revolving credit lines at cheap prices. Infrastructure in Africa remain mostly unviable.
Excellent broadcast. So refreshing to hear from a knowledgeable and objective speaker who is on the ground in China where the rubber meets the road.
His views are pragmatic and void of political bias. No hype, no hyperboles. He’s telling it like it is. I would rather listen to this type of real experts than those so-called experts and academia from this think-tank and that think-tank from the west.
More power to the BRI initiative. A real contribution to humanity and developing countries. It ain’t perfect but we’ll take that over wars and destruction anytime.
Thank you very much for the broadcast.
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed the show. I truly wish we could have more Chinese guests on the show. It's something we strive for and work very hard to achieve but unfortunately it is very difficult to do. It used to be much easier as we enjoyed regular appearances from Chinese scholars and diplomats. But not anymore. We are very proud that this show is a platform where a guest from China can spend an hour to talk about critical issues, something very rare in international media today. - Eric
@@chinaglobalsouth Do you have contacts/connections with CGTN/China Daily to get referrals for speakers? China Academy of Social Sciences? Reach out to Tian Wei and Lu Xin who can give advice.
This is one of the best China IR podcasts on TH-cam and you don't have the subscriber count you deserve. Please do interviews on other China channels to get more viewers.
This is the first video I watched from this channel and I enjoyed this video and will be looking in your backlog as well as watching more content you make in the future.
Another wonderful show. Thank you. I have a Bachelor's degree in International Development and Globalization. It is quite interesting to note that around 20 years ago when I enrolled in the program it was all about the, innumerable benefits of The Globalized Economic World. Albeit we did delve into the negative impacts but it was deemed overall that Globalization was a plus for the world. Especially capable of diminishing inter State conflicts though trade and lifting billions out of poverty. Fast forward to today and it dawn on me, today during you discussion that Globalization was great as long as it disproportionately benefited Western Multinationals but it is becoming a scourge because China is fast becoming an extreme beneficiary of Globalization. Go figure!
yeap, still remembered all those ooh and ahh about multinationlism and how wonderful it will be. Of course that was when the western companies were on a migration outward where they will reap all the benefit.
A superb interview and discussion. Learned a lot alongside you guys in this one. The Chinese and their partners in my opinion would benefit enormously from being more open about their processes. And as Lui Kanyi eloquently illustrates, it is explainable. They could avoid so much drama and headaches from misunderstandings and misinformation. This continued gap in knowledge and literacy continues to be an unnecessary problem.
Great episode guys.
Interesting conversation, thank you gentlemen !👍
VPN is so common in China. Thus assess to global news is not an issue
people in US supposedly had all the access in the world but still dumb as a rock.
👍👍
Excellent. Look the problem in Africa is not a question of competence as the west would have you readily believe. The have many frankly racist and antiquated views on Africa as a whole. The main issue from a policy and financial perspective is simple the global financial architecture. It is designed to favor developed and former colonial entities. So then instead of judging a project based on quantitative merits. They are added layers like gay sex????When put in such a crude manner. One begins to see the ridiculous nature of the financing problems Africa faces. When the Kenyan president said we need a renegotiation of the global financial architecture. The west freaked out because of how manifestly unfair and ridiculous it is. Alot of our policy makers have cut their teeth in the very best of institutions. So it is never a question of competence. Without easy access to revolving credit lines at cheap prices. Infrastructure in Africa remain mostly unviable.