The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1

32 China The EconomistJuly 21 st 2018


2 to increase in the next five years. Jean-
Claude Juncker president of the European
Commission the EU’s executive arm not-
ed in Beijing that European direct invest-
ment into China had hit a low of € 6 bn
($ 7 bn) in 2017 compared with € 30 bn in-
vested by China in the EU. The green light
given to BMW proves that China “knows
how to open up” when it wants to Mr
Junckeradded waspishly.

Chinese interest in the EU hit a peak in
2003 at a moment when it looked as if the
union was getting a constitution a foreign
ministerand a full-time president and was
defying America over the invasion of Iraq.
That honeymoon ended a few years later
as Europe proved unwilling to challenge
American hegemony. At a policy confer-
ence in Sweden in 2009 a Chinese partici-
pant captured the mood when he called

America a strong man and China a teen-
ager but Europe a decadent “rich old guy”.
China spent years pressing the EUto lift
an arms embargo imposed after the crush-
ing of the Tiananmen Square protests in
1989 to keep quiet about Chinese garrison-
buildingin the South China Sea and to sup-
port China’s claim to “market-economy
status” at the WTO which would make it
harder for Europe to accuse China of
dumping. Chinese envoys unblushingly
told EU diplomats to grant these conces-
sions because “we should be given this.”
Disputes over the South China Sea trade
and market-economy status meant that
EU-China summits in 2016 and 2017 ended
testilywithout joint statements.
Yet at this year’s summit China did not
mention the market-economy topic. The
once-burning issue of the arms embargo
has also been largelyshelved. In the words
of François Godemont of the European
Council on Foreign Relations a think-tank
China’s urgent concern is propping up a
profitable status quo in the global trading
system: “What they have they want to
keep. That’s the ‘bigask’.”
Keeping the status quo China now
sees involves defending the rules-based
order. Still differences lurk. China may
now accept that the WTO needs fixing but
its motives are not Europe’s. In talks this
week between Liu He Mr Xi’s economic
adviser and Jyrki Katainen a vice-presi-
dent of the European Commission Mr Liu
appeared to view stronger trade rules as
mainly a way to restrain America. The EU
wants to shore up the global trading sys-
tem to bear China’s fast-growingweight.
WangYiwei ofRenmin University who
worked at China’s mission to the EU in
Brussels pinpoints perhaps the most im-
portant point of difference. China sees Mr
Trump asa herald ofAmerica’sfuture as an
angry deindustrialised power he says. But
Europeans hope that Mr Trump is an aber-
ration: “They are waiting for the mid-
terms or anotherpresident.”
That leaves China quietly testing West-
ern unity where it can. Days before the EU
summit Mr Li the prime minister was in
Bulgaria fora meetingofthe “ 16 + 1 ” group of
formercommunistcountries from eastand
central Europe. Eleven of its members be-
long to the EU. Founded at China’s urging
in 2012 the group saves China the bother
ofcourtingsome ofEurope’s smaller coun-
tries separatelyand offers those tiddlers an
annual meetingwith China’s prime minis-
ter. The group increasingly frustrates its
larger members notably Poland which
onlysenta deputyprime ministerto the re-
cent meeting. Officials in Brussels and Ber-
lin view “ 16 + 1 ” as a bid to divide Europe
and thus the West. That is not impossible.
For now though a united Europe has its
uses. China is impatient for great-power
status. Rules-free conflict with the West
will not help it get there. 7

Cinema

Mark-up madness


“I


CAN’Tbelieve the censors let this
one slide” remarks an online com-
mentator on Zhihu a question-and-
answerforum. He was referringto “Dy-
ingto Survive” a darkcomedy released
on July 5 th which is on trackto become
one ofChina’s highest-grossingproduc-
tions ofall time. The film which raked in
a record $ 200 m in its openingweekend
on a budget ofjust $ 1 5m isbased on the
true story of Lu Yong. Mr Luwas arrested
in 2013 for peddlingknock-off cancer
drugs imported illegallyfrom India (the
actor playinghim is pictured wearing
sunglasses alongwith two others in
roles as smugglers-cum-patients).
This month will also be noted in
Chinese cinematic history for a different
reason. On July 15 th “Asura” the most
expensive film ever made in China at
$ 113 m was pulled from cinemas just three
days afterits launch owingto dismal
box-office takings. The fantasy film had
collected a humiliating$ 7 m.
The contrastingpopularity ofthe two
films should worryChina’s cultural
commissars. “Dyingto Survive” has been
a huge success despite beinga radical
departure from China’s film policy
which is to encourage the production of
upliftingfare that presents the govern-
ment in a good light. Chinese-made films
hardly ever touch on sensitive social
issues. “Dyingto Survive” however

confronts the problem ofunaffordable
drugprices head-on. Astudy in 2012
found that a fifth ofcommonlyused
Western medicines were more expensive
in China than anywhere else.
The film has clearlytouched a raw
nerve amongviewers. Perhaps to stave
off criticism the medical-insurance
administration announced last weekthat
it had invited ten foreign and eight do-
mesticdrugcompanies for “negotia-
tions” in a bid to drive down prices. On
July 10 th the food and drugauthoritysaid
it would speed up approval offoreign
drugs. Bruce LiuofFudanin a health-care
consultancyin Shanghai predicts that
cinema-goers’ spirited reaction will
prompt the government to include more
drugs on its public-reimbursement
scheme. Government censors mayhave
come to regret givingthe film the green
light. Theyhave reportedlyasked pro-
moters to tone down the marketing.
The spectacularflop of “Asura” which
glorifies Tibetan mythology suggests that
tryingto engineera Hollywood-scale
blockbusterbyadding special effects to a
politically correct script is unlikely to
work. China for all its grand ambitions
has yet to find a winningformula. If the
past month is any guide it is the more
freewheelingfilms that are likelier to be
box-office hits. For the government that
is not good news.

Ablockbusterfilm prompts the government to cut drug prices
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