‘Change agent’ China keeps Davos guessing 
By Mark Landler The New York Times 
Monday, January 31, 2005

 
DAVOS, Switzerland In almost every panel discussion at
the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum here,
there comes a moment when somebody mentions China. A
hush typically ensues, as panelists draw their breath,
gather their thoughts and struggle to put the
bewildering vastness of the topic into a few words.

"China is going to be the change agent for the next 20
years," said Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft,
when asked about the country's future on a panel led
by the American television interview host Charlie
Rose.

China's staggering potential, coupled with the steep
language barrier and cultural discomfort of many
Chinese who come to this conference, has made it
Davos's annual enigma. But after three days of
outsiders' dissecting its motives and prospects, China
finally took the stage on Saturday, with a speech by
its vice prime minister, Huang Ju.

"China's development will by no means pose a threat to
other countries," Huang declared cheerfully, as if to
soothe people here who spent the week fretting about
China's lengthening shadow. 

Huang, however, said little on the two issues of
overriding importance to the investors and business
executives gathered here: whether China would allow
its currency to rise against the dollar, and whether
the Chinese would crack down on the rampant theft of
intellectual property.

"We have to maintain the exchange rate at a reasonable
level," said Huang, who directs China's finance policy
and who was billed by organizers here as Beijing's
chief operating officer.

Some here interpreted that comment as a signal that
China would not allow its currency, the yuan, to rise
against the dollar this year, as some Europeans and
Americans have demanded.

But Michael Dell, the chairman of Dell, who had
breakfast with Huang, said he had not drawn any
conclusions.

Huang also did little to ease investors' concerns
about China's regard for intellectual property rights,
saying only that through new laws and tougher
enforcement China was trying to achieve in a dozen
years what it had taken the Western world a century to
do.

At a dinner with the theme of investing in China,
several foreign executives said they discerned little
progress on the issue. The only way to avoid having
their proprietary technology pilfered by Chinese
competitors, they said, was to keep most research and
development activities at home, and to use China for
simple manufacturing.

For the Chinese who trek to this Alpine ski resort,
the problem is less a legal matter than a cultural
question. Except for a handful of fluent English
speakers with long experience with foreigners, most
keep to themselves - shying away from the high-octane
networking that is the fuel of Davos.

"Davos's history is as a European and American
conference," said Chen Feng, the chairman of Hainan
Airlines. "People come here to relax and ski. China's
culture is not about skiing."

Chen, an irrepressible entrepreneur who worked the
hallways like a Davos regular, is one of only four
chief executives of major Chinese companies at this
year's conference. He said at previous meetings his
peers had found the experience uncomfortable.

Zhao Jianfei, an editor at The Observer, a
Shanghai-based magazine, said, "In China, the basic
idea is to watch Davos, not take part in it." People
have other theories for why the Chinese do not turn
out in droves. "China is not exactly soliciting
investment," said Stephan Newhouse, the president of
Morgan Stanley. "They're turning it away."

Huang dramatized China's potential with forecasts. 

Its economic output will grow to $4 trillion by 2020,
from $1.6 trillion today, he said, and its output per
capita would triple, to $3,000 per person.

For its part, the World Economic Forum says the
Chinese turnout this year has been noteworthy, mostly
because of the attendance of Huang, a member of the
Politburo's powerful standing committee. The deputy
governor of the People's Bank of China also came.

The conference organizers have gone to considerable
lengths to make this a congenial place for China.
There are no sessions on Taiwan - a topic sure to
drive away Chinese officials. Huang did not take
questions from the audience.

"It's understood that some things about China don't
come up in polite conversation at Davos," said Orville
Schell, the dean of the Graduate School of Journalism
at the University of California, Berkeley.

Politesse did break down occasionally. At a lunch held
by Schell, several non-Chinese participants confronted
the handful of Chinese guests about how Beijing could
justify not allowing the Taiwanese people to vote on
whether they wanted to be an independent nation. After
an awkward silence, a few Chinese spoke about the
passionate feelings in China regarding Taiwan's
status. Yuan Ming, the director of the Institute of
American Studies at Beijing University, alluded to the
frustration that outsiders might have in seeking to
understand China.



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