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Sunday, 23 March 2025

Getting it right

 

US-china trade needs to improve as much as their bilateral relationship deserves much better, but not at the present rate.

Auto ambition: With limited competition abroad but hypercompetition at home, China’s EV industry has powered ahead. — AFP

T

HE constant stream of major global events can be disorienting, particularly when their consequences spin off to produce secondary effects.

Worse, self-interested politics enters as a disabling narrative to make factual understanding more difficult. How to make sense of all this?

One way is to identify the root causes and critically analyse how they develop and proceed. Factual accuracy in descriptions and definitions always helps, while imprecision makes everything more difficult.

Much relates to a rising China and the state of US-China relations. With the world’s biggest economies, theirs is the most critical bilateral relationship for the world and also the most politically fraught. 

In 2004 China displaced the US as Japan’s main trade partner. The following year it displaced the US as the world’s biggest consumer market.

In 2006 the EU became China’s biggest trade partner while China became the EU’s second-biggest. In 2009 China displaced the US as Africa’s main trade partner, and in 2010 it beat Japan as the world’s second-largest economy.

China’s external trade covered a wide range of goods and services as its productive forces gained critical mass. In the process, industrial clout came not simply from resources and scale but also strong production ecosystems and supply chains, including a skilled workforce.

China quickly developed as the “world’s factory” with the Global North’s industries choosing to relocate production there. They flocked to establish factories in China offering the best returns on investment.

But while foreign companies retained older technology like internal combustion engines (ICE), China prioritised electric vehicles (EVs) to cut air pollution and dependence on imported oil. There was no domestic oil lobby to derail EV development, only government encouragement instead.

With limited competition abroad but hypercompetition at home, China’s EV industry powered ahead. That meant a quick and considerable lead in technology and marketing overseas.

In 2009 China surpassed the US as the world’s largest automobile market. This spanned both ICE vehicles and EVs, with a muted but growing market for the latter.

In 2020 China displaced the US as the EU’s top trading partner. That same year it acquired the world’s largest foreign exchange reserves, developed the finest fintech, and had the most companies listed in the Fortune Global 500.

China’s auto production was booming, exploding into a global market hungry for sophisticated yet affordable vehicles. China fulfilled that need better than any other country.

In 2021 Chinese auto exports surpassed South Korea’s, and the following year it displaced Germany as the world’s second-biggest exporter. Within months China beat Japan as the world’s top auto exporter.

Much the same is happening with other sectors, if at different growth rates. China continues rising through the rapid development of multiple industries, particularly when several foreign markets remain unexplored or under-served.

Western automobile manufacturers in China felt a need to work more with Chinese companies, particularly on EVs and hybrids. They prefer joint ventures to discriminatory tariffs or sanctions on Chinese vehicles from their governments.

Yet last April US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen visited China to complain about “excess capacity” and “overproduction”. It was more a political point than an economic argument.

Excess capacity is surplus productive capability over and above what is needed or appropriate. Overproduction is the additional goods produced and left idle because of insufficient demand.

As the world’s factory with regional markets still untapped, China has no excess capacity or overproduction. High Western tariffs to stifle demand may create a semblance of either, but artificially inducing a situation to accuse Chinese industry of it is dishonest.

Sometimes dumping happens with a specific commodity temporarily, typically for an intermediate or upstream item. But that is different.

After Joe Biden’s administration acted against Chinese EVs, batteries and solar panels, they shifted to markets in Russia, Latin America, Central Asia, Africa and South-East Asia. China is a global producer, and since there is no global overcapacity or overproduction, it is not engaging in either.

Chinese industry’s ultra-competitiveness seriously challenges US industry, notably in the latter’s obsolete business models. Regaining US global competitiveness requires extensive retooling, not distorted narratives.

From 2011, China has consistently been the world’s top patent applicant country. Each year it graduates more STEM students than the US population has in total, having produced the most STEM PhDs every year since 2007.

In 2021 China beat the US in its national share of published high-impact AI papers. In the same year it also displaced the US with the highest national net worth.

Such data from established Western sources also noted in 2023 that China had seven of the world’s top 10 universities conducting leading scientific research. Last year China had six of the world’s top 10 STEM institutions.

The US is now denying students from China study visas. America would be greater in training more American students without restraining others who pay to be there.

By Bunn Nagar,  Director and Senior Fellow of the BRI Caucus (Asia-Pacific), and Honorary Fellow at the Perak Academy. The views expressed here are solely the writer’s own.

Saturday, 22 March 2025

Heart ailments affect young ones too

Protecting heart health requires regular monitoring, specialised care and awareness for adults with congenital heart disease.-123rf.com

 PETALING JAYA: Having been born with a congenital heart defect, Sheena has battled a life and death situation twice in her lifetime.

“I was born with heart disease and had to undergo open-heart surgery when I was six,” says the 28-year-old executive.

“I had another episode at 26 when I collapsed and my colleagues rushed me to hospital. I was hospitalised for a week.”

Sheena, who was diagnosed with heart disease as a child, said she was robbed of a normal childhood.

“I had to be extra careful with my diet and I could not participate in physical activities. I often felt left out,” she said.

Even as an adult, she remains mindful of participating in physical activities, her diet, and she goes for regular check-ups.

ALSO READ: Don’t ignore that rhythm in your heart

Dr Wong Teck Wee, a consultant interventional cardiologist and physician at the iHEAL Medical Centre in Kuala Lumpur, said ischaemic heart disease is no longer a condition confined to older adults.

He said ischaemic heart disease happens when vessels supplying blood to the heart become narrowed or blocked, mostly due to fatty deposit build-up.

“We are seeing heart disease among younger people, even in their 30s and 40s, and in some cases, even earlier,” he added.

Dr Wong attributed the rising number of cases to poor diet, lack of exercise, stress, heavy smoking, and rising rates of obesity, high cholesterol, and diabetes among the younger population.

He said having a balanced diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and low fats can help lower the risk of heart disease.

Dr Wong said the most common and tricky part of ischaemic heart disease is that early on blockages at less than 70% can be silent.

“Some people may feel fine until it’s quite advanced,” he said, adding that such conditions can be detected through routine health screenings, electrocardiograms, stress tests or coronary computerised axial tomography (CT) scans.

ALSO READ: 100,986 heart disease patients admitted at MOH hospitals in 2023

Consultant cardiologist and electrophysiologist Dr Sathvinder Singh Gian Singh said early heart disease signs include chest pain or discomfort upon exertion.

This can be accompanied with sweating or pain radiating to the left arm, back and jaw.

Other signs are shortness of breath on mild exertion and swelling on the legs, needing to sleep with the pillow at higher angles, waking up at night while gasping for air or experiencing fainting episodes and palpitations.

“These are early signs that you might have a pending heart attack,” said Dr Sathvinder, who is attached to Hospital Sultan Idris Shah, Serdang.

Early signs of a heart attack, he added, include sudden pain or pressing on the front of the chest that does not go away or gets worse.

“This can happen with or without accompanying signs of sweating or pain going to the left arm, back or jaw. The patient should be rushed immediately to the nearest health care facility,” he added.

He said if the person is not responsive, an automated external defibrillator (AED) can be used to assess his heart rhythm and he might need an electrical cardioversion if necessary.

Consultant sports medicine physician Dr Arvin Raj Goona­segaran advised sedentary individuals to get pre-clearance from sports physicians if they want to take part in physical activities.

“This will be helpful in excluding cardiac conditions, allowing physicians to give recommendations on how to go about exercising. Start slowly and progressively increase difficulty and duration of exercise as you adapt to it.”

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Rm9bil lost to scams in 10 years

 

Over 200,000 online cases recorded with figures rising


Portal Semak Mule 2.0 bantu rakyat kesan identiti syarikat ..

Semak Mule - PDRM   

KUALA LUMPUR: More than 200,000 online scam cases have been recorded in the last 10 years, resulting in almost Rm9bil in losses.

And there could be many more cases that go unreported.

The number of cases has also been increasing every year. In 2014, there were 6,309 cases but last year, the number rose to 35,368, according to Bukit Aman Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) statistics.

“More and more victims are being duped by a myriad number of scams used by syndicates. This year alone, we have already recorded 10,218 cases as of March 16,” the police said.

In terms of losses, the amount was Rm8.53bil since 2014, with the highest losses recorded in 2023 (Rm1.21bil) and 2024 (Rm1.57bil).

This year, as of March 16, Rm490mil in losses had already been recorded.

Investment scams have been the most prevalent in the last 10 years, accumulating significant losses, especially in the last two years.

In 2014, the losses in such scams were Rm53.4mil, rising to Rm245.05mil in 2021 and Rm219.83mil in 2022.

In 2023 and 2024, though, losses spiked to Rm472.15mil and Rm848.62mil respectively.

“This year, Rm301.8mil has been lost to investment scams, the highest number compared with other scams. However, in terms of the number of cases, telecommunication scams were the highest this year, with 4,509 cases.

“Others are online purchase scams (2,118 cases), investment scams (1,652) and loan scams (1,159),” the police said.

The public is advised to make use of the Semakmule 2.0 portal.

The portal has received 33.4 million visitors since it was established in 2020 and the people are encouraged to use the facility to check the list of mule bank accounts, telephone numbers and shell firms used by scammers.

“Initially, the police set out to list phone numbers and mule bank accounts, but have since improved the portal to include the names of shell companies.

“Visitors to the site are able to do searches on companies that might be used in commercial crimes, including investment scams. The portal has listed more than 107 companies so far,” the police said.

As of Jan 21, a total of 238,006 bank accounts and 191,960 phone numbers have been listed on Semakmule.

Another avenue that can be used is the National Scam Response Centre (NSRC).

The public can report scams by calling the 997 hotline and make enquiries too.

- by By FARIK ZOLKEPLI farik@thestar.com.my 22 Mar 2025

Semak Mule 2.0 portal to help identify the identity of ...




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