Small World, Big Stakes
(5 of 5)
That is why the most important figure for China's future and in many ways for the Sino-U.S. relationship is not Hu--nor Rice, Rumsfeld or any other U.S. leader. It is someone like Liu. If her life continues to get better, the extraordinary challenges facing China's leadership will be ameliorated. The best news possible for high policymakers in Washington is that a 20-year-old girl in Kaiping is happy. Between bonuses and overtime, Liu makes as much as $120 a month, nearly twice what she says she would have made if she had stayed closer to home, and she saves more than half of it. It's a tough life, but Liu and her friends in the factory talk about their "coming out" from the villages as their chance to see the world. She shares a room with five other women, and at night in the dorm she and her friends test the freedoms of life away from their parents: wet towels snap, clusters of card players shriek and giggle. Liu doesn't expect to sew seams forever. In two years she hopes to save enough to study for a better job and move on. "Who knows," she says, gazing at a Timberland vest, "someday maybe I'll meet someone who wears one of these." If that ever happens, perhaps they will be friends. --Reported by Hannah Beech/Shanghai, Chaim Estulin/Hong Kong, Matthew Forney/Beijing, Susan Jakes/ Kaiping and Elaine Shannon/Washington
China’s New Heights
CHINA BY THE NUMBERS
•Mobile-phone text messages sent last year: 218 billion
• Percentage of the world’s ice cream consumed: 20%
• Percentage of Chinese with a positive view of U.S.-China relations: 63%
• Communist Party officials disciplined for corruption last year: 170,850
• Percentage of counterfeit goods seized at U.S. borders that come from China: 66%
• World ranking in automobile deaths: 1
• Percentage of urban Chinese with a college education: 5.6%; Rural: 0.2%
• Estimated rural Chinese who have never brushed their teeth: 500 million
• Estimated ballistic missiles pointed at Taiwan: 700
• Smokers: 350 million
LIVING LARGE
China has more than four times the population of the U.S., nearly all of it concentrated in the eastern half of the country
China - 1.3 billion
U.S. - 295 million
Sources: Access Asia, TIME research; map data from LandScan/UT-Battelle
$859 > Annual disposable income of a resident of Lanzhou. A Shanghai resident has more than twice that: $2,010
63,900 > Number of retail outlets opened in Chongqing, 1998-2004
1.3 million > Number of private cars in Beijing, up 140% since 1997
300+ > Number of skyscrapers in Shanghai. In 1985 there was just one
620% > Shenzhen’s population growth since 1990, from 1.67 million to 12 million
- « PREV PAGE
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
Most Popular »
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- How a Bank Robber Became an Antihero in France
- World Leaders Put Off a Climate Change Treaty
- China Investigates Deaths After Swine Flu Shot
- Good and Bad News for Boxing: Only One Pacquiao
- Five Things the U.S. and China Actually Agree On
- Happiness Paradox: Why Are Americans So Cheery?
- Box Office Weekend: 2012 Masters Disaster
- The Meaning and Mythos of Manny Pacquiao
- Handshakes and Vetted Questions: Obama's Chinese Town Hall
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- China Investigates Deaths After Swine Flu Shot
- Happiness Paradox: Why Are Americans So Cheery?
- Good and Bad News for Boxing: Only One Pacquiao
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Five Things the U.S. and China Actually Agree On
- Shanghai: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- How a Bank Robber Became an Antihero in France
- Dubai: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Beijing: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours







RSS