Since its establishment, CCG has paid close attention to international relations and China's foreign affairs, tracking the development and changes of China's bilateral economic and trade relations with the United States, Canada, Europe, Asia, Africa, Latin America, Australia, the Middle East and other countries and regions, and has been devoted to research on China-US-Europe cooperation, the Belt and Road Initiative, WTO reform, CPTPP and other multilateral topics, as well as providing recommendations for policymaking.
The annual flagship forums held by CCG for successive years have contributed to discussion on China-U.S. relations and China-EU cooperation, promoted international exchange, and given full play to the role of think tanks in track II diplomacy. CCG regularly conducts research and exchanges in multiple countries, and published a series of Chinese and English research reports on China-U.S. economy and trade relations.
The think tank hosts a series of roundtable seminars all year round, and invites think tank experts and scholars, political leaders, business elites and diplomats from the United States, Canada, Britain, Australia, Japan, Germany, Egypt and other countries to discuss and exchange views on international relations and multilateral cooperation.
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Laurence Brahm: ‘Decoupling’ means one planet, two worlds
Twenty years ago, the ritzy five-star hotels of Beijing were hosting conferences every week on globalization, holding out a promise it could bring us all together and that barriers on trade and investment would be coming down. Businessmen, accountants, investment bankers and lawyers crowded during coffee breaks, and we all felt the buzz of something bigger than us that would somehow make the world more integrated and whole.
August 11 , 2020 -
CCG Releases New Book: The Globalization of Chinese Enterprises
Recently, the Center for China and Globalization (CCG) released its new book The Globalization of Chinese Enterprises: Trends and Characteristics, written by CCG President Dr. Wang Huiyao and CCG Secretary-General Dr. Miao Lu. This book was published by Springer and draws on nearly 3000 data samples, using both quantitative and qualitative research methods. This book investigates challenges confronted by Chinese enterprises when doing business in foreign countries, presents unique insights into the features and patterns of Chinese enterprises’ globalization, and provides a useful reference for enterprises that have already gone global and those that plan to.
July 14 , 2020 -
CCG releases 2020 Bluebook Report on Chinese Enterprise Globalization
Recently, the Center for China and Globalization (CCG) released the 2020 Bluebook Report on Chinese Enterprise Globalization. Co-authored by CCG and the Development Research Institute of Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, this report was edited by Wang Huiyao, CCG president and dean of the Development Research Institute of Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, as well as Miao Lu, CCG secretary-general, and published by the Social Sciences Academic Press of the Chinese Academy of Social Science.
July 08 , 2020 -
Wang Jisi: Uphold three bottom lines for China-US relations
Since the novel coronavirus raged, China-US relations have continued to decline. The successive China-related policies and bills introduced by the US government and the US Congress have seriously damaged bilateral relations. The US officials are also increasingly vocal in their attacks on China. Some commentators in both the US and China noted that bilateral relations are in "free fall." World public opinion is worried that once China-US relations get out of control, it will be more difficult for the global economy to recover in the post-COVID-19 era. Arms races and geopolitical conflicts will surely intensify, the world order will become more chaotic, and some unexpected disasters will be on the way. This is by no means alarmist.
June 05 , 2020 -
He Yafei: Major Power Competition and Cooperation
Why did Sino-U.S. relations take a nosedive in the last few years, to the point of falling into the Thucydides trap — if not already fallen? The gulf between the U.S. and China in their domestic development models, as well as in their views of the future world, is widening.
January 03 , 2020