Re: Looking for partners in US




"J. Carroll" <nohow@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:neTPh.12710$Um6.3189@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Leo wrote:
"J. Carroll" <n...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

Leo wrote:
"J. Carroll" <n...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

One thing that gets lost in the Chinese manufacturing discussions
I've seen is that much of what is made in China, most probably,
isn't exported at all. 50 years from now, if the Chinese can keep
their country together without civil war erupting, the Chinese
economy will dwarf that of North America. That's a huge "if" by the
way. China is already a lot closer to a new farmers rebellion than
anything else. The last numbers I have say that at a minimum, China
experience 70,000 incidents of civil disorder in a single year.
Entire villages have been wiped out in some instances. That number
is thought to be low.

Where your info come from?

Many sources, including family members in your courts, one is a
judge.

Well, my mother from GuangXi, my father from GuangDong, I have travel
every where of the tow provinces, in this point "Entire villages have
been wiped out in some instances", I can make sure it is more than
100% nonsense, but in other province, maybe quite different, let me
suppose that communist government kill many information in secret, OK,
ShenZhen is a new city, my friends from every inch of country, I just
could not remember even one time which my friends mention that his
hometown is in so hot water, your info even confuse me, am I something
wrong? Just don't know, shrug.

I can provide as much documentation as you would like.


Why don't you tell me about the job Fair riots?

If I understand correct, you are mentioning that some riots about the
job. OK, it is true, in my city, I have seen it three times by my
eyes, every time is because the factory go to bankrupt, the boss
disappear, the workers could not get theri salary, the vendor could
not get their payment, just lead to riot. most the case is happen like
that, some case is other reason... not so frequent as I know. I don't
think China government own guilty in these case, they also try to
drive some big boss to build labor union in theri factory, strongly
against from these company, many from democrocy country, especially
Wal-mart.

China isn't matching it's educational output to its needs.
See Below:

Students Grow Desperate Over China's Tight Job Market; Tensions Erupt at
Employment Fair; Bleak Prospects Seen for Many 2007 Grads

Edward Cody
Washington Post Foreign Service
The Washington Post
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved
A tide of more than 30,000 students with polished resumes and high hopes
surged into a job fair here so eager to meet with employers that they
shattered four glass doors and splayed the side walls of an escalator in
what became a near riot.

As the crowd of youths swelled out of control, students and security guards
said, police tried to beat back the throng but to no avail. Pushing,
screaming and climbing over one another, the students charged on, heading
for the booths inside the Zhongyuan International Exhibition Center, where
company recruiters waited with the keys to China's new economy.

"You didn't even need to walk in the main hall, because people were sweeping
you along all the time," said Hou Shuangshuang, 23, an e-commerce major with
long hair who was among the students who overflowed the job fair when it
opened Sunday. "At some points, your feet couldn't even touch the ground."

Hou and her classmates from Zhengzhou University, along with students from
other schools in this Henan province city about 500 miles south of Beijing,
provided a dramatic example of rising anxiety over employment among millions
of Chinese students. After years in which graduates were ensured of a good
job in the fast-growing economy, the number of degree-holders has
outstripped the number of jobs, and the guarantees have evaporated.

"I don't think we have a very bright future," said Yu Honghua, 23, another
e-commerce major at Zhengzhou University who shoved her way into the fair.
"I saw only one company that needed students who majored in e-commerce, and
they just needed one person."

The disappointment voiced by Yu and others in her situation has become a
major worry for the Chinese Communist Party. An open-ended rise in living
standards, particularly for the educated middle class, has been part of an
unspoken pact under which the party retains a monopoly on political power
despite the country's turn away from socialism.

So far, the party has delivered on its part of the bargain: The economy has
grown by more than 9 percent a year recently, and the main beneficiaries
have been educated urbanites. Content to claim their share in the
prosperity, most students have shown little interest in politics since the
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.

But a large pool of unemployed or underemployed university graduates, some
analysts have suggested, could become a new breeding ground for opposition.
An educated opposition, they said, would have far more organizational and
ideological ability -- and present a greater threat to the government --
than the left-behind farmers who have been the main source of unrest in
recent years.

The Labor and Social Security Ministry estimated recently that as many as
4.9 million youths will graduate from universities by the end of 2007, up by
nearly 20 percent over 2006. Another 49.5 million will graduate from high
school, also a 20 percent increase. The sharp climb in graduation rates
represents a dramatic improvement in the lives of many Chinese, made
possible by the economic transformation that has taken place here over the
past quarter-century.

But indications have emerged that, booming as it is, the economy may not be
able to absorb that many degree-holders into the jobs for which they are
being trained. "The fact is that it's very hard for college students to get
the right job these days," said Zhang Xuxin, a Zhengzhou student with
close-cropped hair and plastic-rimmed glasses who plans to pursue
postgraduate studies next year. "You may have a job, but it's very hard to
have an ideal one."

A waitress in a German restaurant near Beijing's Ritan Park, for instance,
said she has been looking for work in the computer industry since graduating
last summer, but in the meantime, she has to serve sausages and beer to pay
the rent because nothing is available in her field.


Well in that case maybe I should move to China to seek my graduate
study in applied sciences because I can't afford to go to here and I
owe thousands from the previous education, federal loans and such.
I am standing at my mental peak right now and I really would like
to go back to study some undergrad stuff then graduate.

I'm have deep mental interest in materials technology for military
applications.. it applies to their quantum states.

John


.



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