Big bucks for catching spies in Beijing

Top China news for April 11, 2017. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.


Earn up to $73,000 if you act now to catch a spy!

The Beijing Municipal National Security Bureau has announced incentives for citizens in the capital who report espionage activity. State media is promoting the scheme with a new video that uses the tone of a late night infomercial to urge citizens to inform on spies, in exchange for cash rewards of 10,000 to 500,000 yuan ($1,500 to $73,000). Weโ€™ve made an abridged version of the video with English subtitles, or you can watch the entire original broadcast in Chinese here.

On the social media platform Weibo, many commentersย (in Chinese)ย donโ€™t seem to be taking the reward system entirely seriously. Some users complained that a system for reporting on corrupt Chinese officials is more important, while others joked that any spy they could catch would not be much of a spy. One person sarcastically wrote, โ€œOh mama how cool, now Iโ€™m on the road to riches!โ€

For more information, Reutersย has a good summary of the initiative, China Law Translate has a readout in English of the announcementย for the rewards system,ย and you can find the original Chinese textย on the website of the Beijing Daily, a Party newspaper.

How do Chinese millennials afford to buy their own homes?

The bank HSBC has published a reportย on home ownership among millennials based on a survey of 9,000 people in nine countries. In contrast to the U.S., Australia, Canada, and Britain, where 28 to 35 percent of millennials own a home, 70 percent of Chinese millennials are homeowners. A South China Morning Postย article on the report says,ย โ€œthe high rate of home ownership among younger Chinese could be due to the cultural value placed on owning property, relatively high incomes for young people, and the one-child policy allowing parents to devote resources to one offspring.โ€

The article does not, however, point out two important factors. First, the employed and urban parents of many of Chinaโ€™s millennials are fanatic savers who often have surprisingly large amounts of money in the bank. Secondly, many urban Chinese families came into property, often several apartments, when the commercial real estate market took off in the 1990s and state-owned work units subsidized or gave away housing forย their staff.

More on the screenplay-writing insurance regulator being investigated for corruption

Yesterday we notedย the investigation on suspicion of corruption of one of the more colorful characters in Chinaโ€™s political and financial circles: Xiang Junbo ้กนไฟŠๆณข, former PLA soldier, writer of anti-corruption TV serials, banker, and โ€” until he was detained on the weekend โ€” head of the China Insurance Regulatory Commission. Today, Caixinย has published a featureย on Xiang, and the possible fallout from his detention for Chinaโ€™s insurance sector.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, Jia Guo, and Jiayun Feng. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

A primer on Chinaโ€™s booming bike-sharing industry

Caixinย has published a review of the Chinese bike-sharing industry. Itโ€™s not a news story, but a careful look, with numbers and details of business models, at a sector that is growing exponentially. On The China Projectย weโ€™ve covered bike-sharing in very positive terms, as China is the only country where companies have scaled up a model for renting bikes that really works, largely because customers can use their smartphones to easily unlock bikes that can be picked up and left anywhere. But there are plenty of problems: the possibility of restrictive government regulations, bikes left haphazardly clogging up sidewalks, and over-investment in the sector leading to worries of a bubble. Another aspect of the bike share boom is that it has revitalized Chinaโ€™s bicycle manufacturing industry. However, some commentators warn that bicycle and bike-parts manufacturers who have expanded their plants risk running into trouble when the bike-share investment fever abates.



POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

Chinese think tanker on Japanese motives in South China Sea

Chen Xiangmiao ้™ˆ็›ธ็ง’ is an assistant research fellow at the China National Institute for South China Sea Studiesย ไธญๅ›ฝๅ—ๆตท็ ”็ฉถ้™ข, a government-funded think tank that โ€œspecializes in research on issues of the South China Sea,โ€ and issues policy guidance papers. He has published an articleย on China-U.S. Focusย that explains one Chinese view in policy-making circles about Japanโ€™s interests in the South China Sea.

Although Chinaโ€™s territorial disagreements with Japan are in the East China Sea โ€” most famously over whether an island group in waters between the two countries is the Japanese Senkakus ๅฐ–้–ฃ่ซธๅณถ or the Chinese Diaoyu ้’“้ฑผๅฒ› โ€” Japan also has interests in the South China Sea.

Chen writes that Japanโ€™s top concerns in the South China Sea are, in abbreviated form:

The sea is an important piece in Japanโ€™s strategic game to contain China.
The sea is Japanโ€™s โ€œmaritime lifelineโ€ for resources and energy security.
The sea is a vital geopolitical arena for Japan in its pursuit of strategic expansion.

Chenโ€™s analysis concludes that these concerns mean that โ€œJapanโ€™s interference in the South China Sea is likely to heat up in the foreseeable future,โ€ and that โ€œChina and the ASEANย countries should watch out for Tokyoโ€™s actions in the South China Sea and take anticipatory measures to protect the hard-earned dรฉtente in the region.โ€



SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

United passenger removal video goes viral in China

The hashtag โ€œUnited Airlines forcibly removes passenger from airplaneโ€ (#็พŽ่”่ˆชๅผบๅˆถไน˜ๅฎขไธ‹ๆœบ#ย mฤ›i liรกnhรกng qiรกngzhรฌ chรฉngkรจ xiร jฤซ) became the top trending topic on Chinese social media platform Weibo on Tuesday, with 480 million views and 223,000 comments as we finalize this newsletter. Video and photographs of the man being removed Monday from an overbooked flight by security officers at the Chicago Oโ€™Hare Airport were widely circulated. When news emerged that he was Chinese or Vietnamese, the online reaction in both China and Vietnamย was swift.

On Weibo, one of the top threads was started by Chinese-born comedian Joe Wong, whose postย saysย (in Chinese) that โ€œmany Chinese feel they are subject to discrimination but donโ€™t speak out about it in order to save face, and this leads to the Western media and the public not taking discrimination against Asians seriously.โ€

Some found humor in the news: one sarcastic commenter wrote: โ€œLet me tell you a joke: The U.S. is the worldโ€™s best country for human rights!โ€ Another said, โ€œYou still havenโ€™t settled the Ding Yizhen ไธไน‰่ฏŠ affair, and now you do this!โ€ The reference is to a scene from the hit anti-corruption TV show In the Name of the Peopleย in which the character Ding Yizhen, a corrupt mayor, boards a United flight to escape to the U.S. and orders champagne to โ€œcelebrate freedom.โ€ A meme circulatingย now shows him celebrating simply for โ€œnot getting kicked off the plane.โ€