Chinese Economics Thread

Blackstone

Brigadier
China Railways Safety Record: A Comparative Study


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Nice study, and the footnoted data lend support for China's rail system as one of the safest in the world. The item I take issue with is comparing railways to air travel and highways. On balance, it's a nice article and I bookmarked it as a resource.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
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If you think about it, Obama can claim everything coming out of China is subsidized. I posted a while ago about how Obama was looking to file a WTO complaint on China's domestic airliner industry being government subsidized when no aircraft have even started production and mostly will be bought mainly by Chinese airline companies. So how is that unfair competition? Since China is the largest market for new passenger airliners, China producing its own aircraft makes it unfair for Boeing and Airbus. So forcing China to eliminate "subsidies" prices their own airliner out of competition at home is the goal. Harkens back to the Opium Wars and the unequal treaties.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
And remember he's a liberal Democrat. And you see no public Democrats other than Asian ethnic ones saying a word about it. Ed Schultz on MSNBC has said similar things except the racial slurs which BTW to me is the far greater offense feeding on the racist belief every Chinese immigrant is a potential agent for China.
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
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Do they have any manners anymore?

Slurs are sensitive things, and individuals have their own tolerance levels. That said, I'm not offended by Beckel's "Chinaman" remark, and I'd like for the whole thing to die down. Had he said "chink" in reference to Chinese people, then I might be offended (some people aren't worth the time to be offended). Frankly, I object more to Beckel's left-wing politics and his lack of tact in using controversial words than him saying "Chinaman."
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Slurs are sensitive things, and individuals have their own tolerance levels. That said, I'm not offended by Beckel's "Chinaman" remark, and I'd like for the whole thing to die down. Had he said "chink" in reference to Chinese people, then I might be offended (some people aren't worth the time to be offended). Frankly, I object more to Beckel's left-wing politics and his lack of tact in using controversial words than him saying "Chinaman."

Yeah but he's using the tone of language to appeal to a certain crowd of the mainstream audience. That's why he felt safe saying it with little or no repercussion from the Chinese and Chinese-American community because he knew our small population and political power has little relevance to threaten his career.
 
Just shows how globalized the food supply business is.

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BY ADAM JOURDAN
SHANGHAI Tue Jul 22, 2014 12:30pm EDT
(Reuters) - The latest food scandal in China is spreading fast, dragging in U.S. coffee chain Starbucks, Burger King Worldwide Inc and others, as well as McDonald's products as far away as Japan.

McDonald's Corp and KFC's parent Yum Brands Inc apologized to Chinese customers on Monday after it emerged that Shanghai Husi Food Co Ltd, a unit of U.S.-based OSI Group LLC, had supplied expired meat to the two chains.

On Tuesday, Starbucks said some of its cafes previously sold products containing chicken originally sourced from Shanghai Husi, a firm that was shut down on Sunday by local regulators after a TV report showed staff using expired meat and picking up meat from the floor to add to the mix.

A Tokyo-based spokesman at McDonald's Holdings Co (Japan) Ltd said the company had sourced about a fifth of its Chicken McNuggets from Shanghai Husi and had halted sales of the product on Monday. Alternative supplies of chicken have been found in Thailand and China, he added. The company's shares briefly fell as much as 1.4 percent to a 15-month low before closing down 0.4 percent.

China's food watchdog said it ordered regional offices to carry out spot checks on all firms which had used Shanghai Husi products, and would inspect all of parent OSI's sites around China to see if enough has been done to ensure food safety. It said the case could be handed over to the police.

The regulator's Shanghai branch said in a statement on Tuesday it had demanded production, quality control and sales records from OSI. It added it already ordered McDonald's to seal over 4,500 boxes of suspected meat products and Yum's Pizza Hut to seal over 500 boxes of beef.

Fast-food chain Burger King and Dicos, China's third-ranked fast food chain owned by Ting Hsin International, said they would remove Shanghai Husi food products from their outlets. Pizza chain Papa John's International Inc said on its Weibo blog that it had taken down all meat products supplied by Shanghai Husi and cut ties with the supplier.

FOOD SAFETY CONCERNS

Food safety is one of the top issues for Chinese consumers after a scandal in 2008 where dairy products tainted with the industrial chemical melamine led to the deaths of six infants and made many thousands sick. Other food scandals have hit the meat and dairy industries in recent years, and many Chinese look to foreign brands as offering higher safety standards.

China is McDonald's third-biggest market by number of restaurants and Yum's top market by revenue. McDonald's is due to report quarterly earnings later on Tuesday.

The scare has stirred local consumers and become one of the most discussed topics online among the country's influential 'netizens', with some users spreading long lists of firms thought to be tarnished.

The incident highlights the difficulty in ensuring quality and safety along the supply chain in China. Wal-Mart Stores Inc came under the spotlight early this year after a supplier's donkey meat product was found to contain fox meat. It also came under fire for selling expired duck meat in 2011.

Starbucks said on its Chinese microblog site that it had no direct business relationship with Shanghai Husi, but that some of its chicken acquired from another supplier had originally come from Husi for its "Chicken Apple Sauce Panini" products. This had been sold in 13 different provinces and major cities. The company added that all the products had already been removed from its shelves.

Burger King said in a Weibo statement posted late on Monday that it had taken off its shelves all meat products supplied by Shanghai Husi Food and had launched an investigation.

Dicos said it pulled all ham products supplied by Shanghai Husi, and would stop serving its ham sandwich product for breakfast. "We will continue to carry out a probe into Shanghai Husi Food and its related firms, to understand whether or not it followed national regulations," Dicos said in a statement.

Swedish furniture firm IKEA [IKEA.UL], which has in-store food outlets, said on Weibo that Shanghai Husi had previously been a supplier, but had not provided the firm with products since September last year. Domino's Pizza Inc and Doctor's Associates Inc's Subway brand, which were named in online reports as being supplied meat from Shanghai Husi, said their outlets in China did not use meat products from the firm.

Yoshinoya-parent Hop Hing Group Holdings Ltd, Japanese convenience store FamilyMart Co Ltd and Chinese chain Wallace urged diners not to worry, and said they did not currently use any products from Shanghai Husi.

(Additional reporting by Pete Sweeney, Shanghai Newsroom and Teppei Kasai in TOKYO,; Editing by Kazunori Takada and Ian Geoghegan)
 

Julie1925

Just Hatched
Registered Member
before the food security problem in Mcdonald's and KFC in Shanghai, my friends had told me do not drink Cola in these two shops in that they use insanitary water to make ice cubes.

WELL, why don't they sell Cola without ice-cube?
 

Bernard

Junior Member
before the food security problem in Mcdonald's and KFC in Shanghai, my friends had told me do not drink Cola in these two shops in that they use insanitary water to make ice cubes.

WELL, why don't they sell Cola without ice-cube?

I am pretty sure that is what they do in Mexico.
 
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