The Times has a nice article about the problems with using GDP as a measure of success. This has always been the case in China, which is why city officials in Guangzhou encouraged the purchase of private automobiles to improve/increase production in Guangdong Province, even though Guangzhou is highly polluted and has one of the world’s best subway systems. In addition to economic measures, the Chinese government is finally beginning to use environmental quality measures (e.g., air quality) to evaluate local officials.
China
July 27, 2010
Meauring Economic and Environmental Success
Posted by Jason J. Czarnezki under China, EnvironmentLeave a Comment
July 20, 2010
China = World’s Top Energy User
Posted by Jason J. Czarnezki under China, Climate Change, Energy, Environment, Fulbright1 Comment
The Wall Street Journal reports that China has become the world’s top enery user, surpassing the United States. China has already passed the U.S. in overall greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time China is reluctant to accept its status as a economic and polluting powerhouse.
Let me start out by stating that the United States has failed in its leadership to develop international climate change policy. And the Chinese government and Chinese scholars often point this out. At the same time, China, in some sense, has not been willing to accept its role as a global leader. At a Roundtable discusion in China that I participated in with Chinese scholars, it was clear that, for strategic purposes, China wants to be seen as the leader of the developing world (i.e., the king of the BASIC countries-Brazil, South Africa, India, China), but, at least on the environmental front, does not want to have the same level of responsibility as the developed world especially the U.S. The problem is that on other accounts China deeply desires to a be superpower–see, e.g., Olympics, World Expo, UN Security Council. The question is whether China’s dramatic rise comes with more responsiblity. This concern might be why my Chinese colleagues and students often downplayed or denied that China is overtaking Japan as world’s second largest economy.
(Note: There is a large cultural aspect to this as well in terms of comfort level with accepting and announcing one’s own success, and choosing to impose one’s value systems on others. Chinese and U.S. citizens and foreign policy are culturally different in this way.)
July 19, 2010
China, Milwaukee, & Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer
Posted by Jason J. Czarnezki under China, FoodLeave a Comment
Since I just spent a year in China as a Fulbright Scholar and I grew up in Milwaukee, I found this “Letter from China” in The New Yorker, entitled “Pardon Me, Would You Have Any Pabst Blue Ribbon,” quite amusing.
I noticed a lot of PBR while in China, but I did not know it was going classy. But I’m not surprised. For example, Pizza Hut in China has fancy table service and is quite expensive. Minivans, like the Honda Odyssey, are also considered very high end, especially by young men.
(Note: Despite its label and founding in Milwaukee, PBR is no longer brewed in Wisconsin.)
Hat Tip: Carl Yirka
July 12, 2010
Another Vermont Law School Professor to China as a Fulbright Scholar
Posted by Jason J. Czarnezki under China, Environment, Fulbright, Vermont Law SchoolLeave a Comment
My friend and Vermont Law School Professor David Mears has been awarded a Fulbright Scholar grant to teach and to assist the environmental law clinics at Sun Yat-sen University and the Center for Legal Assistance to Pollution Victims at the China University of Political Science and Law during the 2010-2011 academic year. He also intends to reach out to other universities across China that are interested in establishing environmental law clinics.
Read the full press release here.
David actually lives down the road from me in Montpelier, and will be living in the same apartment building in Guangzhou where I lived last year while on my Fulbright.


