China Malaysua economics


http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/geopolitics/article/2145797/
134-billion-reasons-mahathir-not-rethink-chinese-investment

Anti-China?        Despite his criticism of Chinese investment, Mahathir
has said he is not anti-China.



https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-
robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction



Inside Shanghai's robot bank: China opens world's first human-free branch

‘Little Dragon’ can chat to customers, accept bank cards and check
accounts. She joins a growing army of robot workers in China’s cities


Inside Shanghai's robot bank: China opens world's first human-free branch

‘Little Dragon’ can chat to customers, accept bank cards and check
accounts. She joins a growing army of robot workers in China’s cities

Cities is supported by

[image: Rockefeller Foundation]
<http://www.100resilientcities.org/?source=100RC_Guardian_Banner_9.22&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=100RC_Guardian_Banner_9.22>About
this content <https://www.theguardian.com/info/2016/jan/25/content-funding>

Helen Roxburgh <https://www.theguardian.com/profile/helen-roxburgh> in
Shanghai

Mon 14 May 2018 07.30 BST Last modified on Mon 14 May 2018 07.31 BST

o Long, the latest employee at the Jiujiang Road branch of the China
Construction Bank is never late for work. “Welcome to China
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/china> Construction Bank,” she chirps to
customers arriving at the Shanghai branch, flashing her white teeth. “What
can I help you with today?”

Xiao Long, or “Little Dragon”, is not your typical employee – she’s a robot
at China’s first fully automated, human-free bank branch.

As guardian of the bank, she talks to customers, takes bank cards and
checks accounts (she comes complete with a PIN pad) and can answer basic
questions. After a quick initial chat with Xiao Long, customers pass
through electronic gates where their faces and ID cards are scanned. On
future visits, facial recognition alone is enough to open the gates and
call up customer information.

Inside, automated teller machines help with services such as account
opening, money transfer and foreign exchange. A second robot waits inside
the barriers, and there is a VR room and video-link should customers want
to talk to a mortal.

<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-2>[image:
A police patrol robot at Zhengzhou East railway station.]
<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-2>

A police patrol robot at Zhengzhou East railway station. Photograph: VCG
via Getty Images

There is also a staggering number of security cameras. I counted eight in
the lobby alone, and loitering for too long or pulling out a camera quickly
produces a human security guard who has been hiding out of sight.

The bank is rather low on customers, who in the main appear rather
ambivalent. One man in his 30s shrugs that he does most of his banking
online anyway, and avoids coming into branches – though at least he didn’t
have to queue.
Robot waiters, robot guards

Robots are handling more and more aspects of everyday life in Chinese
cities. They have been deployed in train stations for security purposes; robot
security guards
<https://www.eteknix.com/robot-security-guards-patrol-chinas-rail-station/>at
Zhengzhou East railway station are programmed to scan travellers’ faces and
respond to common questions.

The chief executive of Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com recently predicted
that robots will eventually replace human workers in the retail industry
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-jd-com-retail/robots-will-replace-humans-in-retail-says-chinas-jd-com-idUSKBN1HO1NJ>,
with China’s unmanned retail sector expected to triple in size to 65bn yuan
(£7.5bn) by 2020, according to iResearch.

<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-3>[image:
A robot waiter in Sanmenxia, Henan province.]
<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-3>

A robot waiter in Sanmenxia, Henan province. Photograph: VCG via Getty
Images

Robots are being used to cook – both in restaurants and industrial kitchens
– and a video
<http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2107544/inside-chinese-dumpling-factory-where-robots-do-all-work>
 of an entirely automated dumpling factory went viral on Chinese social
media last year.

Robot waiters have been a fad
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/in-china-a-robots-place-is-in-the-kitchen-1469393604>
 for a number of years, with restaurants keen to draw customers with novel
experiences, as well as saving on staff costs. Robotic waiters can be
frustratingly slow for hungry diners though. Most move along pre-programmed
tracks, and for some restaurants they have proved more trouble than they’re
worth
<http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/1933954/no-artificial-intelligence-chinese-restaurants-robots-prove-very>
..

But the rise of China’s robot industry is a core part of Beijing’s economic
ambitions. Beijing’s Robotics Industry Development Plan is a five-year
programme that targets the production of at least 100,000 industrial robots
a year by 2020, partly to reboot the country’s ailing manufacturing sector.

“In AI and robotics, China clearly is interested in emerging as a global
leader,” says Professor Yu Zhou at the department of earth science and
geography at Vassar College <https://www.vassar.edu/faculty/yuzhou/>.
“Moving up the value chain is what is really behind China’s move into
robots. Working wages have been increasing and there have been shortages of
low-level labour.

“You have to replace this labour, and automation and robots became a
natural area to look into. Robots
<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/robots> are really seen as an
upgrade – better products, more efficient and cheaper.”

The Cityscape: get the best of Guardian Cities delivered to you every week,
with just-released data, features and on-the-ground reports from all over
the world

According to figures from the International Federation of Robots, China is
already the biggest shareholder of the robotic global market at a net worth
of $30bn (£22bn). Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn has cut tens of thousands
of employees by replacing them with machine labour, reportedly deploying
more than 40,000 factory robots, and has said it aims to achieve 30%
automation by 2020.

<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-4>[image:
Novelty value … a couple of AI waiters, Little Blue and Little Peach, at a
robot-themed restaurant in Yiwu.]
<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-4>

Novelty value … a couple of AI waiters, Little Blue and Little Peach, at a
robot-themed restaurant in Yiwu. Photograph: VCG via Getty Images

The rise of the robots also ties in with heavy public and private
investment in facial recognition and AI. In Shenzhen, Shanghai and Beijing,
local authorities have been using facial recognition to target jaywalkers.
Those caught crossing the road illegally have their photos taken, and after
being identified can be publicly named and shamed on large screens by the
roadside – and even sent fines automatically
<http://www.scmp.com/tech/china-tech/article/2138960/jaywalkers-under-surveillance-shenzhen-soon-be-punished-text>
 via instant messaging.

Police at Qingdao beer festival used a network of cameras and facial
recognition technology to scan the faces of the 2.3 million attendees.
Those identified from the national police database as having a history of
drug addiction were tested. As a result, 19 were arrested for drug use
<http://www.sixthtone.com/news/1000773/face-recognition-spots-wanted-suspects-at-qingdao-beer-festival>
..

Meanwhile, customers in the Hangzhou branch of KFC can pay for orders using
only their faces, and retailers including Tencent have been experimenting
with cashier-less stores.

<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-5>[image:
Can be frustratingly slow … a robot waiter makes her rounds in Kunshan in
2016.]
<https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/may/14/shanghai-robot-bank-china-worlds-first-human-free-branch-construction#img-5>

Can be frustratingly slow … a robot waiter makes her rounds in Kunshan in
2016. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

The frenetic growth of the industry is giving some cause for concern,
though.

[image:
https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/a6d354e578fb1f6e9601f04ea9025ab55cc686db/0_461_6830_4098/master/6830.jpg?w=460&q=55&auto=format&usm=12&fit=max&s=b07ce6347bc29c61e43ae45497989563]
'It's like a robot playground': the cities welcoming self-driving delivery
droids

Read more

“There is a risk that you sacrifice quality for quantity,” says Jeffrey
Ding, researcher at the Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University,
adding that there are concerns about how AI and robotics could exacerbate a
growing social and wealth divide. “There’s also an emerging pushback in
China against violations of privacy,” he says. “A national survey, called
the China Economic Life Survey, found nearly 80% of Chinese consumers said
they felt the development of AI would present a serious threat to their
privacy.”

Back at the China Construction Bank in Shanghai, Xiao Long is not burdened
by any of these mortal problems. “If you have any questions, just ask me!”
When probed on her future career prospects, she just smiles and blinks.

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