The U.S. and China are at a critical turning point. We reached out to U.S. experts in trade, technology, and investments to ask: Where should the next president go from here?
This year, more than ever before, the question of how the U.S. should deal with China is on the ballot. China’s handling of the Covid-19 outbreak represents the culmination of long-building tensions between the two countries over national security, global leadership and, perhaps most pressingly for American voters, the economy.
The past year has brought an escalating U.S.-China trade war, the Trump administration's move to decouple from Chinese technology companies like TikTok and Wechat,
Exclusive longform investigative journalism, Q&As, news and analysis, and data on Chinese business elites and corporations. We publish China scoops you won't find anywhere else.
A weekly curated reading list on China from David Barboza, Pulitzer Prize-winning former Shanghai correspondent for The New York Times.
A daily roundup of China finance, business and economics headlines.
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Bob Fu's relationship with China has gone through phases. First, he thought money would solve his problems there; then he joined protesters at Tiananmen Square, thinking the politics could change. In the end, he determined, only God could save China, and he's been fighting for religious freedom in China ever since he resettled in Texas. With his nonprofit, ChinaAid, prospering like never before, he says the U.S. is finally catching on.