Friday, January 15, 2016

China Shakes the World


China Shakes the World


In addition to being skilled in the Military art

Napoleon --that is,  of course, Bonaparte--

warned all who might be missing Her,

centuries  ago in that era rather dark,

for the world its tranquility to keep,

it was better to let China sleep.


But his aptly prescient remark 

was ignored by Nixon and Kissinger.


Now the roused Genie wishes America to throttle

but it's far too late to put Her back in the bottle,

and Her latest sally

will threaten Silicon Valley

with progress to make us shudder

claims  the CEO of Uber. 



Yet, with hostility now overt,  no longer   latent,

China still   steals and infringes every patent 

and if this is not enough of a vice,

then competes unfairly on price,

while  manufacturing  in torrents, She 

simultaneously devalues  currency.


But  this ferocious economic rigging is weird 

with  ultimate consequences  to be feared.

How many of us may drown in the South China Sea

along with a plunging Renminbi?



HzL
1/15/16
.



    “Let China Sleep, for when she wakesshe will shake the world,” (Napoleon Bonaparte). The French Emperor's warning, uttered some 200 years ago, rang hollow for most of that time, as China suffered through the wars, social upheavals and revolutions of the 20th century.Jul 19, 2004

    China Wakes Up as the World Watches - Insurance Journal

    www.insurancejournal.com/magazines/.

    Uber CEO Says China to Soon Surpass Silicon Valley in Innovation


    Travis Kalanick
    Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber, in Beijing on Monday.
    Photographer: Wang Zhao/AFP/Getty Images


    • Kalanick says Uber needs a Chinese CEO for its Chinese arm
    • Uber's Chinese unit now valued at $8 billion as money flows in

    Watch out, Silicon Valley. China’s out to eat your lunch.
    So says Travis Kalanick, the Silicon Valley pioneer who steered Uber Technologies Inc. to a larger valuation than four-fifths of the companies on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. He’s now setting his sights on China: the ride-hailing company’s domestic unit is now valued at more than $8 billion, Kalanick told reporters in Beijing Friday.
    The Uber Chief Executive, who’s personally overseeing Uber’s come-from-behind battle against Didi Kuaidi, argued the country’s growing cohort of entrepreneurs will eventually eclipse those that have made the Bay Area a cradle of global technology innovation.
    “In the next five years, there will be more innovation, more invention, more entrepreneurship happening in China, happening in Beijing than in Silicon Valley,” Kalanick said at the “Geekpark” conference in Beijing Friday. That will in turn spur Chinese corporations to begin to go global and open up to entrepreneurs from without. “We gotta play our A-game in order to compete with the best.”

    Jarring View

    Kalanick’s view may not sit well with those who deem the countrya violator of intellectual property rights, home to copycat ripoffs and subject to rigorous content restrictions. Just last week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, U.S. federal marshals raided and confiscated the wares of a Chinese company making one-wheeled skateboards for alleged patent infringements.
    Yet the country has birthed some of Asia’s largest and most well-regarded technology corporations, from social media and gaming giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. to e-commerce leader Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. Along with search-engine operator Baidu Inc., they have invested in and helped foster a plethora of startups and online services -- from mobile payments and messaging to online finance --- whose scope and scale outstrip those available in the U.S.
    Investors are beginning to take note. Investments in China and India, where most of the biggest deals are taking place, more than tripled to $16.9 billion in the third quarter, just under the $17.5 billion invested in North America as of Oct. 1, according to Preqin Ltd., a London-based consultancy. Venture investors closed 1,016 deals in China up to the third quarter of 2015 -- more than in all of 2014.
    Some of that money went to Uber. The company raised a little under $2 billion from Chinese investors last year, much of which went to Uber China. Kalanick told reporters in a group interview Friday he needs to have a CEO there who’s Chinese.
    “I’m really attached to the job now. It’s where all the action is,” he said. “I’m holding the bar at highest level,” he added. “Until we find that perfect person, I will be serving as Uber China CEO.”

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