News China Jan. 14.Cdr

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

News China Jan. 14.Cdr VOL. XXVI No. 1 January 2014 Rs. 20.00 2014 is the Year of Horse in Chinese Zodiac Signs. Chinese Foreign Minister Mr.Wang Yi meets with Dr. S. Mr. Zhang Kunsheng, the Chinese Assistant Foreign Jaishankar, the outgoing Indian Ambassador to China Minister and Director-General of the Protocol Department and appreciates his contribution to promote China-India accepts the copy of credentials of Mr. Ashok K Kantha, relations on Dec.9, 2013 in Beijing. the new Indian Ambassador to China, on Jan.6, 2014 in Beijing. Mr. Wei Wei, the Chinese Ambassador to India, addresses Chinese Ambassador Mr. Wei Wei talks with in the inauguration of “Haat of India” held in Bhopal, the representatives of Chinese enterprises during the “Haat capital of Madhya Pradesh on Dec. 21,2013. Over 150 of India”. The Trade Fair provided many conveniences for representatives of various Chinese enterprises attended Chinese exhibitors, including complimentary booths, the three-day’s Trade Fair. free room and translation. The First Joint Study Group Meeting of Bangladesh- Customers and shop owners of China and India talk China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor was held in happily at Renqinggang market in Yadong County of Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province of China from southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region. With the Dec.18 to 19, 2013. Officials, experts, scholars and booming of China-India border trade the market posted a representatives of the four countries and international 23.3 percent rise in the year of 2013. organizations attended the meeting. Welcome to Yiwu An International Commodity Circulation Center! Crowned as ‘a sea of commodities and a has been a converging place of more than 4,000 paradise for shoppers’, Yiwu of China, which is distributing centers and general agents of located in Zhejiang province, boasts an famous enterprises from home and abroad, aggregate market floor area of 2.6 million including enterprises and merchants from square meters with 53,000 booths and 160,000 more than 40 countries such as USA, Japan, persons engaging in business. The market Australia, Korea, etc. There are also more than gathers 320,000 varieties of goods of 1,502 220 foreign business institutions in Yiwu with categories from 34 trades. As you should know are more than 5,000 permanent foreign that there are 500,000 varieties of goods in the businesspeople. There are over 800 TEUs of whole world as released by the UN! Yiwu has goods exported to more than 188 countries and also cultivated a group of predominant regions everyday. Exports to Southeast Asia, industries, scale enterprises and famous the Middle East and the Occident are products of socks, ornaments, zippers, prominent, which accounts for no less than 50% cosmetics, shirts, cultural articles, pen-making, of the annual total turnover. Among its exports, toys, etc, formed industrial developing products from dominant trades represent over structure of small commodity, large industry, 70% of all trades’ aggregate. More than 60% of small enterprise, and large colonization., booths in the market have supplied goods for manufacturing center, R&D center and foreign customers. shopping center. The local government carries out five- With the ever-increasing economic action simultaneous development strategy of internationalization of the Yiwu market, Yiwu foreign trade drawing, trade and industry January 2014 NEWS FROM CHINA 1 linkage, famous brand driving, mass impelling, for daily use/Home furniture/Case and bag government motivating, endeavoring to construct Handicraft Decorations Yiwu into International Commodity Circulation G i f t s a n d p r e s e n t s / C h r i s t m a s Center with the lowest cost, best credit and best products/Articles for happy events/Resinic service. So, Welcome to Yiwu! crafts/ Gifts packing/Traditional crafts/Tourism crafts/Home decoration/ Picture and photo Yiwu: 2014 International Consumer Goods Fair frame/Simulation crafts/Crystal glass/Pottery Date Apr.20-22,2014 and porcelain crafts/ Metal crafts/Ornaments and Venue Yiwu International Expo Centre accessories Medical Health Care/Beauty Care Scale Products/Hairwork Exhibition Area: 10,000 square meters Yi Wu-Hong Kong Hong Kong-Yi Wu Flight No. : CZ649 Flight No. : CZ650 Date of Flight : 1, 3, 5, 7 Date of Flight : 1, 3, 5, 7 Type of Aircraft : B738 Type of Aircraft : B738 Departure Point : Yi Wu Airport Destination : Hong Kong Takeoff Time : 08:30 International Airport Destination: Hong Kong Takeoff Time : 11:30 International Airport Destination : Yi Wu Airport Arrival Time : 10:30 Arrival Time : 13:30 Profile of Exhibits Household Textiles Direct Flight From Yiwu to Hong Kong Bedclothes/Garments/Cloth art/Cloth Hotline accessories/Underclothing/Socks/Scarves/ 0086-579-85665205 Gloves/Ties/Hats/Shoes/Zippers/Threads and Inquiry Office of Yiwu Administration of Civil Ribbons/Ethnic costumes for festivals Aviation Household Commodities 0086-579-85456786 Plastic commodities/Bamboo or paper International Section of the Ticket Office of commodities/Sanitary commodities/ Maternal Yiwu Civil Airline and infant supplies/Pet products/Washing For more information please visit products/ Personal care products/Accessories http://www.yiwusourcingfair.com/ Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in the Republic of India In Association with India China Economic and Cultural Council Cordially invite you to CHINESE NEW YEAR FESTIVAL 2014 At 6:30 PM on 13th February 2014 Venue: Siri Fort Auditorium, 1, Asian Games Village Complex, New Delhi Join us as we celebrate the Chinese New Year Festival through a special Acrobatic Show from China Note: 1 Since we have limited no. of seats, kindly confirm your participation at the earliest at below given details: Vinny Sachdeva (Tel: 011-46550348, 41017185/86/87, Email: [email protected]) 2 Entry will be on first come first serve basis. Gates will be open at 6 PM & will be closed as soon as the Hall is fully occupied. 2 January 2014 NEWS FROM CHINA CONTENTS CHINESE PRESIDENT'S NEW YEAR ADDRESS 1. President Xi Confident of New Year Reforms 4 CHINA-INDIA RELATIONS 1. Open Up a New Chapter for China-India Relations 6 2. Central Indian State Opens China Trade Fair to Lure Investment 8 3. China-India Border Trade Booms 9 EXTERNAL AFFAIRS 1. Chinese President Meets GCC Delegation 10 2. China, Gulf states outline 2014-2017 cooperation 11 3. China, Bulgaria Announce All-round Friendly Partnership 13 4. Chinese Premier Meets Science Editor-in-chief 14 5. 2013: A Fruitful Year in Chinese Diplomacy 15 6. Diplomacy to Focus on Neighborhood 16 7. Remarks by Yang Jiechi on Abe's Visit to the Yasukuni Shrine 18 8. Statement from Chinese Side 19 9. Work for a Better World 20 10. Peace, Stability and Development Have to be Firmly Safeguarded 22 11. History of Japanese Militarism and Circumstances Concerning the Issue of Yasukuni Shrine 24 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS 1. Communist Party of China Promises Harsher Anti-corruption Drive 31 2. China to Deepen Rural Reforms 34 3. New Year, New Direction 35 4. A New Trend 38 5. Reducing Reliance on Resources 41 SILK ROAD ECONOMIC BELT 1. China Approves New Zones on the "Silk Road Economic Belt" 44 2. The Silk Road Economic Belt Are Expected to Deepen China's Cooperation with Its Neighbors 45 CULTURE AND LIFE 1. History & Legend of Spring Festival 46 2. 2013 in Review, 8 Subcultures in China 48 3. Eating Frozen Food in Winter 53 4. A Popular Game in China---Mahjong Solitaire 55 5. Chinese Cheng Yu--- If You Wish Good Advice, Consult an Old Man 56 TIBET TODAY 1. Zhu Weiqun Talks to Swiss Reporter About Contact and Talks with Dalai Lama 57 2. Tibet Passes Four Measures to Protect Environment 61 3. Tibet Receives 2.76 Million Air Passengers in 2013 61 4. Tibetan Monastery Repair Work Half-completed 62 5. Tibetan New Year 62 INSTRUCTIONS FOR CHINESE VISA APPLICATION 65 FLIGHTS BETWEEN CHINA AND INDIA 74 BOOKS REVIEW 76 January 2014 NEWS FROM CHINA 3 Chinese President’s New Year Address CHINESE PRESIDENT’S NEW YEAR ADDRESS President Xi Confident of New Year Reforms Chinese President Xi Jinping delivers his New Year message via state broadcasters in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 31, 2013. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang) Beijing, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) — President development,” Xi said in the address via Xi Jinping expressed his confidence in state broadcasters. China’s reform and extended good “In 2014, we will make new strides wishes to all Chinese in his New Year along the path of reform.” address Tuesday. The fundamental purpose of the “In 2013, we made an overall reform is to make the country rich and arrangement on comprehensively strong, the society fair and just and deepening reform, drawing a grand people’s lives better, he said. blueprint for the country’s future Addressing domestic and overseas 4 January 2014 NEWS FROM CHINA Chinese President’s New Year Address audiences, Xi called on the people to the Chinese people jointly overcame fight hard together for this great cause. various difficulties and challenges and “We have numerous glories in the won prominent achievements. name of the great cause of reform and “These precious achievements opening-up. I firmly believe that new contained people’s sweat and blood, and glories are awaiting the Chinese I thank you from the bottom of my people,” he said. heart,” Xi said. “We welcome a 2014 that is full of Xi said that more than 7 billion people hope,” Xi said, extending his New Year live together on the planet, and they greetings to compatriots in Hong Kong should help each other and work and Macao, compatriots from Taiwan, together to weather hardships and seek overseas Chinese and friends from common development. various countries and regions across the Xi said that the Chinese people are world.
Recommended publications
  • Performing Masculinity in Peri-Urban China: Duty, Family, Society
    The London School of Economics and Political Science Performing Masculinity in Peri-Urban China: Duty, Family, Society Magdalena Wong A thesis submitted to the Department of Anthropology of the London School of Economics for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, London December 2016 1 DECLARATION I certify that the thesis I have presented for examination for the MPhil/ PhD degree of the London School of Economics and Political Science is solely my own work other than where I have clearly indicated that it is the work of others (in which case the extent of any work carried out jointly by me and any other person is clearly identified in it). The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. Quotation from it is permitted, provided that full acknowledgement is made. This thesis may not be reproduced without my prior written consent. I warrant that this authorisation does not, to the best of my belief, infringe the rights of any third party. I declare that my thesis consists of 97,927 words. Statement of use of third party for editorial help I confirm that different sections of my thesis were copy edited by Tiffany Wong, Emma Holland and Eona Bell for conventions of language, spelling and grammar. 2 ABSTRACT This thesis examines how a hegemonic ideal that I refer to as the ‘able-responsible man' dominates the discourse and performance of masculinity in the city of Nanchong in Southwest China. This ideal, which is at the core of the modern folk theory of masculinity in Nanchong, centres on notions of men's ability (nengli) and responsibility (zeren).
    [Show full text]
  • Women's Development in Guangdong; Unequal Opportunities and Limited Development in a Market Economy
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Dissertations and Theses City College of New York 2012 Women's Development in Guangdong; Unequal Opportunities and Limited Development in a Market Economy Ying Hua Yue CUNY City College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cc_etds_theses/169 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Running head: WOMEN’S DEVELOPMENT IN GUANGDONG 1 Women’s Development in Guangdong: Unequal Opportunities and Limited Development in a Market Economy Yinghua Yue The City College of New York In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Sociology Fall 2012 WOMEN’ S DEVELOPMENT IN GUANGDONG 2 ABSTRACT In the context of China’s three-decade market-oriented economic reform, in which economic development has long been prioritized, women’s development, as one of the social undertakings peripheral to economic development, has relatively lagged behind. This research is an attempt to unfold the current situation of women’s development within such context by studying the case of Guangdong -- the province as forerunner of China’s economic reform and opening-up -- drawing on current primary resources. First, this study reveals mixed results for women’s development in Guangdong: achievements have been made in education, employment and political participation in terms of “rates” and “numbers,” and small “breakthroughs” have taken place in legislation and women’s awareness of their equal rights and interests; however, limitations and challenges, like disparities between different women groups in addition to gender disparity, continue to exist.
    [Show full text]
  • Download E-Copy
    China Yearbook 2012 Editor Rukmani Gupta Copyright © Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, 2013 Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses No.1, Development Enclave, Rao Tula Ram Marg, Delhi Cantt., New Delhi - 110 010 Tel. (91-11) 2671-7983 Fax.(91-11) 2615 4191 E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://www.idsa.in ISBN: 978-93-82512-03-5 First Published: October 2013 The covers shows delegates at the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, 2012. Photograph courtesy: Wikimedia Commons, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/18th_National_Congress_of_ the_Communist_Party_of_China Disclaimer: The views expressed in this Report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute or the Government of India. Published by: Magnum Books Pvt Ltd Registered Office: C-27-B, Gangotri Enclave Alaknanda, New Delhi-110 019 Tel.: +91-11-42143062, +91-9811097054 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.magnumbooks.org All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, sorted in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo-copying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA). Contents Introduction 5 Section I: Internal Issues 9 1. Politics in China in 2012: Systemic Incrementalism and Beyond 11 Avinash Godbole 2. State and Society in 2012 – Protesting for Responsive Governance Structures 17 Rukmani Gupta 3. China’s Economy in 2012 – A Review 23 G. Balachandran 4. The Chinese Military in 2012 29 Mandip Singh Section II: External Relations 41 5. Sino-Indian Jostling in South Asia 43 Rup Narayan Das 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Human Rights and Tibet: Leading a Government-In- Exile
    Human Rights and Tibet: Leading a Government-in- Exile CAMILO SANCHEZ: Good morning. Thank you all for being here. And welcome to a new year of human rights programming at UVA. And now, I know what you're thinking. February is almost over. Spring break is around the corner. And there is this guy still throwing out Happy New Year's wishes. Fair point, but you might not know that this weekend, this very weekend, the Tibetan community is celebrating Losar, a festival that marks the first day of the lunisolar Tibetan calendar. So in spirit of embracing multiculturalism, the UVA human rights program is kicking off its year ignoring the Gregorian calendar and partially the academic calendar. So Dr. Sangay, I apologize for the last minute request, but you will have to tell us more about the Losar celebrations. Our human rights program at the University of Virginia School of Law is proud of its mission to intentionally bridge the worlds of research, policy, and human rights practice, while maintaining a focus on rigorous and scholarly inquiry. At the top of our interests is to increase our knowledge on how scholars, activists, governments, movements, and other actors understand, conceptualize, advocate for, critique, or even reject or ignore human rights. We want to expose our community to the tensions, contradictions, contingencies, roads not taken, and dilemmas that lie at the heart of the human rights enterprise. That's why we seek to bring to campus people that from different perspectives and backgrounds reflect not only on philosophical questions, such as what are human rights? What should they be? But also on other questions shaped by human rights practice, such as what do human rights do? Why do people use human rights? Why do communities use them instead of using other political or moral frameworks? And what are the effects, implications, and drawbacks of relying on human rights in political struggles? And we couldn't think of a better person to speak to these questions than our distinguished keynote speaker, Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • The Multiple Forces Behind Chinese Students' Self-Segregation and How We May Counter Them Vicki Jingjing Zhang University of Toronto
    Forces Behind Chinese Student’s Self-segregation August, 2018 The Multiple Forces Behind Chinese Students' Self-segregation and How We May Counter Them Vicki Jingjing Zhang University of Toronto Author's Contact Information Vicki Jingjing Zhang, Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream University of Toronto 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada Phone: 647-402-9355 Email: [email protected] Abstract: With the internationalization of Higher Education in Canada, universities have been striving to provide a welcoming and inclusive environment for international students. However, sometimes their efforts fall short due to a lack of deep understanding of the international student body. This study focuses on one particular international student group – students from mainland China - and aims to uncover some of the crucial reasons behind the widely reported self-segregation of Chinese students (Cheng & Erben, 2011). It sets to understand why many students from mainland China feel offended and turned off by cross-national communications with students from the host nation (Dewan, 2008). I employed various frameworks to understand the findings from the study, including host nation hostipitality, social psychology and group identity, and the impact of colonial mentality and Chinese nationalism. The goal of the study is to shed light on strategies educators may employ to help mitigate the self-segregation pattern among Chinese international students and encourage more inclusive learning environments and communities. Key Words: Chinese international students, cross-national communication, self-segregation, internationalization of higher education, inclusive learning community. Introduction In the Fall of 2004 I left China to pursue graduate studies in the United States. I was at the tail end of a generation of mainland Chinese students who had toiled through the high-pressure, borderline-draconian education system in China, and jostled for the few spots at reputable graduate schools in the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • The Arts of Making Do and Working out in Beijing, China
    What are friends for?: The arts of making do and working out in Beijing, China Michelle Yang Zhang Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2020 © 2020 Michelle Yang Zhang All Rights Reserved Abstract What are friends for?: The arts of making do and working out in Beijing, China Michelle Yang Zhang Through a second look at the now twenty-five-year-old literature on guanxi, a form of reciprocal relationship making and using in China, I examine how the kinds of opportunities and challenges possible for young people intersect with who they know and how this has changed (with its own set of reflections on and consequences for a still-rapidly changing China) since China’s rural to urban transition. My dissertation project examines how young people in contemporary urban China form and produce guanxi ties (resource-full relationships) through the theoretical lens of practice and possibility, inspired by de Certeau’s conceptualization of practice, productive consumption, and strategies versus tactics (1984). Drawing on qualitative data gathered through participant observation and unstructured interviews, I sought to both describe and analyze when, where, and how social networks became consequential. Central to my methodology is an emphasis on people and their practices rather than the common sense categories used to describe them. The people in my field research were predominantly aged 18- 30 and came from a range of ethnic, professional, and education backgrounds. In so doing, I was able to examine the moments and contexts within which some people have opportunities and others do not, as well as when some are vulnerable while others are less so.
    [Show full text]
  • Charles Zhang
    In a little over 35 years China’s economy has been transformed Week in China from an inefficient backwater to the second largest in the world. If you want to understand how that happened, you need to understand the people who helped reshape the Chinese business landscape. china’s tycoons China’s Tycoons is a book about highly successful Chinese profiles of entrepreneurs. In 150 easy-to- digest profiles, we tell their stories: where they came from, how they started, the big break that earned them their first millions, and why they came to dominate their industries and make billions. These are tales of entrepreneurship, risk-taking and hard work that differ greatly from anything you’ll top business have read before. 150 leaders fourth Edition Week in China “THIS IS STILL THE ASIAN CENTURY AND CHINA IS STILL THE KEY PLAYER.” Peter Wong – Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, Asia-Pacific, HSBC Does your bank really understand China Growth? With over 150 years of on-the-ground experience, HSBC has the depth of knowledge and expertise to help your business realise the opportunity. Tap into China’s potential at www.hsbc.com/rmb Issued by HSBC Holdings plc. Cyan 611469_6006571 HSBC 280.00 x 170.00 mm Magenta Yellow HSBC RMB Press Ads 280.00 x 170.00 mm Black xpath_unresolved Tom Fryer 16/06/2016 18:41 [email protected] ${Market} ${Revision Number} 0 Title Page.qxp_Layout 1 13/9/16 6:36 pm Page 1 china’s tycoons profiles of 150top business leaders fourth Edition Week in China 0 Welcome Note.FIN.qxp_Layout 1 13/9/16 3:10 pm Page 2 Week in China China’s Tycoons Foreword By Stuart Gulliver, Group Chief Executive, HSBC Holdings alking around the streets of Chengdu on a balmy evening in the mid-1980s, it quickly became apparent that the people of this city had an energy and drive Wthat jarred with the West’s perception of work and life in China.
    [Show full text]
  • The Chinese Communists Find Religion the Struggle for the Selection of the Next Dalai Lama
    Policy Forum The Chinese Communists Find Religion The Struggle for the Selection of the Next Dalai Lama Anne Thurston Lhamo Thondup was just two years old when he was recognized as the reincarnation of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama. The Great Thirteenth, as he is popularly known, had died in Lhasa in 1933 at the age of fifty-eight. The team charged with finding his new incarnation was composed of leading lamas from monasteries in Tibet, and some were eminent reincarnations themselves. Clues and omens unique to Tibetan Buddhism— some provided by the Thirteenth Dalai Lama himself—guided their search. The Dalai Lama had intimated that his reincarnation would be found in the east. Thus, when the head of the embalmed Great Thirteenth was discovered to have turned overnight from facing south to pointing northeast, the search team was certain which direction their journey should take. When the regent in charge of the search visited the sacred Lhamo Lhatso Lake and gazed into its deep blue waters, the characters for “Ah,” “Ka,” and “Ma” appeared, and he saw a hilltop monastery with a golden roof and an ordinary farmer’s house with strangely configured gutters. The “Ah” led the search team to the Amdo region of eastern Tibet, then governed by the Hui (Muslim) warlord Ma Bufang as Qinghai, as the region is known in Chinese. The “Ka” and the vision of a monastery led them to Amdo’s Kumbum monastery, one of Tibetan Buddhism’s leading seats of religious learning, built by the founder of the Gelugpa, or Yellow Hat, school of Buddhism to which all Dalai Lamas have belonged.
    [Show full text]
  • N Ational C Ommittee Onu Nited S Tates
    2002 A NNUAL R EPORT N ATIONAL C OMMITTEE ON U NITED S TATES- C HINA R ELATIONS B OARD OF D IRECTORS * Chair Carla A. Hills Vice Chairmen William M. Daley Lee H. Hamilton William R. Rhodes J. Stapleton Roy James R. Sasser Ezra F. Vogel Treasurer Herbert J. Hansell Secretary Kathryn D. Christopherson Michael H. Armacost William E. Frenzel Elizabeth S. MacMillan Nancy Kassebaum Baker Peter F. Geithner Richard H. Matzke Julia Chang Bloch Sam Gibbons Kathryn Mohrman Mary Brown Bullock Bates Gill Douglas P.Murray Gareth C. C. Chang Thomas M. Gorrie Elizabeth J. Perry Thomas J. Christensen Harry Harding Thomas R. Pickering Edward T. Cloonan Jamie P.Horsley Joseph W. Prueher Jerome A. Cohen David A. Jones, Jr. Henry P.Sailer Ken W. Cole John T. Kamm Matt Salmon Barber B. Conable, Jr. Virginia Kamsky Nicholas V. Scheele Charles J. Conroy Thomas H. Kean James R. Schlesinger Ralph A. Cossa Geraldine S. Kunstadter David K. Y. Tang Douglas N. Daft David M. Lampton Nancy Bernkopf Tucker Gary Dirks Nicholas R. Lardy I. Peter Wolff Martin S. Feldstein Kenneth Lieberthal Madeleine Zelin Barbara H. Franklin Henry Luce III Chairmen Emeriti Directors Emeriti A. Doak Barnett (d.) Caroline L. Ahmanson W. Michael Blumenthal Robert O. Anderson Barber B. Conable, Jr. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C. Alexander Eckstein (d.) Carl F. Stover Lucian W. Pye Robert A. Scalapino Raymond P.Shafer Charles W. Yost (d.) *Effective December 6, 2001 – December 5, 2002 N ATIONAL C OMMITTEE ON U NITED S TATES- he National Committee on C HINA United States-China Relations T is a nonprofit educational R ELATIONS organization that encourages understanding of China and the United States among citizens of both countries.
    [Show full text]
  • Commodifying Luxury Assets by Alex Gentry
    ALEX GENTRY COMMODIFYING LUXURY ASSETS DECEMBER 2016 Commodifying Luxury Assets By Alex Gentry A. GENTRYGENTRY Table of Contents Introduction 4-5 What Makes Us 6-21 Acquire Things? Ethnographic Effects 22-39 on Consumption Providing Millennials 40-42 Access to Luxury Assets Art Basel 2016 43-44 Advising + Interviews 45-51 Moving Forward 52-53 Bibliography 54-62 Introduction Karl Marx wrote that the idea of commodity fetishism transforms the subjective, abstract aspects of economic value into objective, real things that people believe have intrinsic value. (Lewis, 2008) Commodities are defined as goods which can be acquired, with the intention of trade or consumption. I will be focusing on luxury assets which are not traditionally considered commodities by the average consumer, due to scarcity and cost. 4 COMMODIFYING LUXURY ASSETS INTRODUCTION In this research book, I will dive deep into what drives our perception of value and how to commodify luxury assets for investors outside of the 1%. On a macro level, I seek to learn more about what drives the consumer’s perception of what something is worth and why. This includes ethnographic, psychological, and behavioral effects on consumption. I will also conduct interviews with some of the leading specialists in the luxury asset realm including Sotheby’s Ex Chief Financial Oficer Patrick McClymont, CEO and founder of Arthena, Madelaine D’Angelo, and my personal thesis advisor Carolyn Trabuco, Co-Founder and Board Member at Azul Airlines. 5 What Makes Us Acquire Things? Scarcity as a Tactic Need
    [Show full text]
  • An Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria an Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria
    An Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria An Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria Illustration 1: Sikyong Dr.Lobsang Sangay, (Photo Credit: The Tibet Post International, www.thetibetpost.com) An Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria Front Page Photo Courtesy: Tibet Post International www.thetibetpost.com/ An Interview with Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria This is an exclusive interview of Dr.Lobsang Sangay by Arnav Anjaria. Dr. Lobsang Sangay is the democratically elected Sikyong (Prime Minister) of the Tibetan Government in Exile, officially known as the Central Tibetan Administration. Elections received massive support of the large Tibetan Diaspora spread across South Asia, North America, South East Asia and Europe. Tibetan Government in Exile was established in 1959 by the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. Thus with the announcement of the Dalai lama to appoint his political successor, Dr.Lobsang Sangay was democratically elected as the Sikyong of the Central Tibetan Administration. He is the Sixth Sikyong of the Central Tibetan Administration, earlier Sikyong was known as the Kalon Tripa. The interview was conducted in his office in Dharamsala in June 2011 by Arnav Anjaria. Q.) How do you see the Tibetan issue? Dr.Sangay.) There is one country two system in China and in Hong Kong. Then Why not Tibet? That’s the question. Because Hong Kong and Macau people are Han Chinese. But then the Chinese argument has been that Hong Kong has had a different business or commercial system under the British hence you recognize the difference. And gave them a different system.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief Biography of Sikyong Dr Lobsang Sangay
    BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF SIKYONG DR LOBSANG SANGAY Dr Lobsang Sangay was born and grew up in a Tibetan settlement near Darjeeling, where he attended the Central School for Tibetans. He completed his B.A. (Honors) and LLB degrees from Delhi University. In 1992, he was elected as the youngest executive member of the Tibetan Youth Congress. In 1996, as a Fulbright Scholar, he obtained a Master’s Degree and in 2004, Doctor of Juridical Science from Harvard Law School and his dissertation, Democracy in Distress: Is Exile Polity a Remedy? A Case Study of Tibet's Government-in-exile was awarded the Yong K. Kim’ 95 Prize. In 2005, he was appointed as a research fellow and promoted to senior fellow until early 2011. Dr Sangay is an expert on International Human Rights Law, Democratic Constitutionalism, and Conflict Resolution. He has spoken in hundreds of seminars around the world. He organised seven major conferences among Chinese, Tibetan, Indian and Western scholars including two unprecedented meeting between His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Chinese scholars in 2003 and 2009 at Harvard University. In 2007, he was selected as one of the twenty-four “Young Leaders of Asia” by the Asia Society and a delegate to the World Justice Forum in Vienna, Austria, where top legal experts and judges from around the world congregated. Since 2011, Dr Sangay has served as the Sikyong or the political leader of the Tibetan people. Academic publications: Tibet: Exiles' Journey, Journal of Democracy – Volume 14, Number 3, July 2003, pp. 119– 130 Lobsang Sangay, China in Tibet: Forty Years of Liberation or Occupation?, Harvard Asia Quarterly, Volume III, No.
    [Show full text]