online pharmacy buy synthroid with best prices today in the USA
This makes the MagLev not as popular as airport links elsewhere. I am sure they will never recover their investment in this little toy, but that’s probably the last thing the Chinese government worries about given the amounts of loose cash it has in hand. So, they do things fast and they do impressive things. But that is not always the same as doing things well.In any case, I am skeptical about all knowing bureaucrats, however elite the civil service is and however well they are rewarded. I am highly impressed by how much they have achieved since Deng Xiao Ping executed the 180 degree turn. I did not get a chance to visit the Middle Kingdom in the bad old days, but I did have opportunity to interact with large numbers of functionaries sent on study tours of the US and the first wave of Chinese graduate students coming to the US. More than the buildings and the things they seem to possess in great quantities, I am impressed by the change in the people. The self-confidence is palpable and the monotonous uniformity of dress and demeanor is no more. I am sure the quality of the bureaucracy has also improved. But they do make mistakes. The massive investments being made in all sectors have masked their errors (possibly the MagLev is a mistake too; why has it not been extended if not?). One mistake I am familiar with is their effort to impose by fiat a Chinese technology standard for 3G mobile telephony. No one adopted it, so China Mobile, the largest operator was mandated to use it. Its performance was sub-optimal and China Mobile lost market share.
online pharmacy buy prednisone with best prices today in the USA
Now 3G is being gradually and quietly phased out and replaced by less nationalistic 4G standards. In the process, they wasted not only the Chinese people’s money but also those of the foreign manufacturers who were compelled to follow that standard. This brings me to another aspect of the Chinese model that several Asian countries, including India and Indonesia, are trying to emulate these days. This is the imposition of national manufacturing requirements. It is a fact that much of the inputs for China’s telecom networks are manufactured in China which has a trade surplus in telecom equipment, unlike many Asian countries. It is also a fact that China’s government has for years imposed national manufacturing requirements. What is debatable is whether the latter was the cause of the former. Because of its early emphasis on attracting foreign investment in manufacturing, an enormous amount of telecom equipment manufacturing occurs in China. It would take significant effort to source telecom equipment that is not made in China. And this is not about companies such as Huawei and ZTE. Much of the American network equipment company Cisco’s manufacturing is done in China. While China used quotas in the past, it has now forsworn manufacturing quotas as part of its commitments under the WTO. And yet, others are trying to emulate its past policies.Pity. There are many things we can learn from China. But we need to study what they are doing in depth, not based our actions on surface observations. Rohan Samarajiva heads LirneAsia, a regional think tank. He was also a former telecoms regulator in Sri Lanka. To read previous columns go to LBOs main navigation panel and click on the 'Choices' category.