Recommended Weekend Reads

20 Trends to Watch in 2025 and 9 U.S. Political Issues that Bit the Dust in 2024, What Do Chinese Citizens Think of the Communist Party? And The U.S. Assessment of China’s Military

December 27 - 29, 2024

Please find below our recommended reads from reports and articles we read in the last week.  We hope you find these useful and that you have a relaxing weekend.   And let us know if you or someone you know wants to be added to our distribution list.

 We hope you have a wonderful New Year and our warmest best wishes for a joyful and prosperous 2025!

 

Global Trends& Events to Watch in 2025

  • 20 Gallup Trends to Watch in 2025   Gallup

    Next month’s transfer of power in the U.S. could reshape American views on politics, the economy and societal issues. Generational shifts and technology are also driving change. Gallup lays out 20 trends they are tracking 2025 to see how Americans react to the new political landscape and how society continues to evolve.

  • The Real Stakes of the AI Race: What America, China, and Middle East Powers Stand to Gain and Lose   Reva Goujon/Foreign Affairs

    A sense that global technology competition is becoming a zero-sum game, and that the remainder of the twenty-first century will be made in the winner’s image, pervades in Washington, Beijing, and boardrooms worldwide. This angst feeds ambitious industrial policies, precautionary regulations, and multibillion-dollar investments. Yet even as governments and private industry race for supremacy in artificial intelligence, none of them possess a clear vision of what “winning” looks like or what geopolitical returns their investments will yield.

  • Global Summits to Watch in 2025: Priorities for a Splintering World   Council of Councils

    Global summits give leaders an opportunity to come together to advance solutions and prepare responses, but can they keep up with the pace at which the world’s most urgent problems are intensifying?  Here is a list of the most anticipated summits set for 2025, where newly elected leaders, increased participation from the Global South and emerging powers, and reframed conversations could help answer that question.

  • 9 Political Issues That Bit the Dust This Year   Politico Magazine

    The end-of-year obituary packages are publishing — remembering the people who shaped our world in ways large and small.  Politico decided to do something a little bit different. This year, we asked POLITICO reporters to tell us: What are the trends in politics that died in 2024 — or that are at least heading into obsolescence?


    China

  • Do Chinese Citizens Conceal Opposition to the CCP in Surveys?  Evidence from Two Experiments  The China Quarterly/Cambridge University Press

    There has been a number of questions about the support among average Chinese citizens for the ruling Chinese Communist Party.  In this research paper, it is noted that most public opinion research in China uses direct questions to measure support for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and government policies. These direct-question surveys routinely find that over 90 percent of Chinese citizens support the government. From this, scholars conclude that the CCP enjoys genuine legitimacy.  However, the researchers who conducted this study found from two survey experiments in contemporary China that make clear that citizens conceal their opposition to the CCP for fear of repression. When respondents are asked in the form of list experiments, which confer a greater sense of anonymity, CCP support hovers between 50 percent and 70 percent. This represents an upper bound, however, since list experiments may not fully mitigate incentives for preference falsification. The list experiments also suggest that fear of government repression discourages some 40 percent of Chinese citizens from participating in anti-regime protests. Most broadly, this paper suggests that scholars should stop using direct question surveys to measure political opinions in China.

  • Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2024  U.S. Department of Defense Annual Report to Congress

    The Defense Department’s annual report charts the course of the PRC’s national, economic, and military strategy and offers insight into the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) strategy, current capabilities, and activities, as well as its future modernization goals.  In 2023, the PRC continued its efforts to form the PLA into an increasingly capable instrument of national power. Throughout the year, the PLA adopted more coercive actions in the Indo-Pacific region while accelerating its development of capabilities and concepts to strengthen the PRC’s ability to “fight and win wars” against a “strong enemy,” counter an intervention by a third party in a conflict along the PRC’s periphery, and project power globally. Working-level and senior-level military-to-military channels of communication resumed following President Biden and PRC leader Xi Jinping meeting in November 2023. This report illustrates the importance of meeting the pacing challenge presented by the PRC’s increasingly capable military.

  • China Ousts Two Military Lawmakers as Xi’s Defense Purge Widens   Bloomberg

    China abruptly ousted two military lawmakers from its national parliament without explanation, as a purge of key personnel in the upper echelons of the nation’s defense establishment shows no sign of easing. Xi, China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, has been intensifying his grip on the military. He ordered a reorganization of the armed forces this year, replacing the Strategic Support Force created in 2015 with three new branches. He also held the first military-political work conference since 2014, a conclave he previously used to assert his authority over the PLA. 

     

  • The China-Russia relationship and threats to vital US interests  Brookings Institution

    This piece is part of a series titled “The future of U.S.-China policy: Recommendations for the incoming administration” from Brookings’ John L. Thornton China Center. Four leading scholars of Chinese and Russian foreign policy look at the growing alignment between the People’s Republic of China and the Russian Federation – an alliance that has significant implications for vital U.S. interests and the interests of U.S. allies and partners. Animated by shared grievances against the configuration of the international order and mutual concerns about perceived external threats, principally from the United States, the Sino-Russian partnership has deepened over the last decade across the military, economic, and diplomatic domains. Beijing and Moscow’s strategic alignment will pose a significant test for the incoming Trump administration.

Americas

  • A Journey Through The World’s Newest Narco-State: Drugs Transformed Ecuador from a Latin American Success Story into a War Zone  1843 Magazine

    Over the past ten years, cocaine has transformed Ecuador from one of South America’s most stable nations – with safer streets and higher living standards than many of its neighbors – into the most dangerous country on the continent. More than 8,000 murders were recorded last year. Victims are wide-ranging: ten volleyball players, nine shrimp fishermen, six mayors, five tourists, two state prosecutors, a presidential candidate and the leader of a political party are among those shot or assassinated since 2023. The industrial city of Durán – where much of the governing apparatus has been hijacked by mobsters – has a good claim to being the murder capital of the world; on average, someone is killed there every 19 hours.

 

Europe

  • Offensive Strategy: the EU’s Economic Security  Carl Bildt/European Council on Foreign Relations

    ‘Economic security’ has become a Brussels buzzword in recent years, shaped by a blend of pressure from Washington and Brussels’ own protectionist instincts. In sports, playing defense rarely wins championships. The economic security agenda is defensive; it might slow the decline, but it will not reverse it. What Europe needs is a bold, offensive strategy.

Podcast Recommendation of the Week

  • China Considered  Hosted by Elizabeth Economy, the Hoover Institution

    Elizabeth Economy is arguably one of the finest China scholars out there.  She now hosts a podcast sponsored by the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. that features in-depth conversations with leading political figures, scholars, and activists from around the world. The series explores the ideas, events, and forces shaping China’s future and its global relationships, offering high-level expertise, clear-eyed analysis, and valuable insights to demystify China’s evolving dynamics and what they may mean for ordinary citizens and key decision-makers across societies, governments, and the private sector.

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