Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

China

China’s leaders head for the beach

China's President Xi Jinping

China's President Xi Jinping

Elite-level politics in China almost always remains hidden, but the Communist Party’s annual summer gathering at the seaside resort at Beidaihe, 175 miles east of Beijing, is so secretive it’s hard to know even when the event begins and ends. In the past, it has been billed as an opportunity for China’s leaders to hear the ideas of retired officials and experts in various fields.

If the conversation is free-flowing – or as close to that as the party leadership gets – they’ll have plenty to talk about. China’s post-COVID economy is still stumbling. Its relations with Russia, Europe, and the United States have only become more complicated since last year’s meeting. (Xi is dispatching a special envoy to this weekend’s Ukraine war summit in Saudi Arabia.) A rumored scandal appears to have forced Xi to fire his handpicked foreign minister. He also recently replaced the leaders of the military’s nuclear missile force, a rare and unexplained move. And a typhoon, which created China’s heaviest rainfall in 140 years, has created a flood emergency across much of the country’s north. Tens of thousands near Beidaihe have been evacuated, but the resort itself appears unaffected.

But when discussing these recent events and problems, will President Xi welcome a free exchange of views? This is a leader who has amassed power on a scale China hasn’t seen in half a century. Publicly, any reported news from Beidaihe will be limited to assurances of confidence and unity from the top of China’s pyramid. Any private differences of opinion are almost certain to remain a secret.

More For You

​A Chinese clerk counts RMB (renminbi) yuan banknotes at a bank in Lianyungang city, east China's Jiangsu province, on Aug. 11, 2015.

A Chinese clerk counts RMB (renminbi) yuan banknotes at a bank in Lianyungang city, east China's Jiangsu province, on Aug. 11, 2015.

Oriental Image via Reuters Connect
On Saturday, Chinese President Xi Jinping made it public: he wants the renminbi, China’s currency, to become a “powerful currency” that ultimately replaces the dollar as the global reserve currency – that is, the one most held by central banks worldwide.The remarks, shared in the Communist Party’s flagship journal, were originally part of a speech [...]
How Singapore navigates a fragmented world
- YouTube
Singapore is a small country at a crossroads. With close ties to both the US and China, it’s become a hub for finance, trade and technology. Singapore’s president Tharman Shanmugaratnam sits down with Ian Bremmer to talk about the island’s role in a shifting global order. The world is facing “radical uncertainty” and transactionalism, but the [...]
Photo of Singapore President Tharman Shanmugaratnam with the GZERO World podcast logo superimposed on top.
How does a small country like Singapore, strategically positioned between the US and China, navigate a world of growing uncertainty? On the GZERO World Podcast, Ian Bremmer sits down with Singapore’s President Tharman Shanmugaratnam to unpack a global order in flux. For a small country at a global crossroads, managing the current geopolitical [...]
Singapore thrived on globalization. Now what?
- YouTube
Singapore is obsessed with order. From steep finds for littering to harsh punishments for vandalism, cleanliness and discipline are treated as civic duties, not personal choices. On Ian Explains, Ian Bremmer breaks down how that impulse for control reflects a deeper national instinct—one that over the last century has helped Singapore turn itself [...]