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Xi’s China cracking down on economy reporting. Caixin lost status, investors like Alibaba

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China also asked top social media platforms such as WeChat, Weibo, Douyin and Kuaishou to control the ‘illegal release of financial news’.

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Xi Jinping walks around the Monument to the People's Heroes in Beijing | Photo: Zhai Jianlan | Xinhua/Getty Images via Bloomberg


he decision to remove Caixin from the approved list of news sources is the latest attempt by Beijing to reign in China’s remaining independent press.

Xi Jinping’s plan to reshape China’s economy and the Evergrande debt crisis started intense debates. Unlike political and social issues, reporting on economy has received minimal censorship in recent years. But that’s changing.

Cyberspace Administration Affairs of China (CAC) published a new list of approved news sources on 20 October. The list was posted on the WeChat and Weibo accounts of CAC. It was the first time since 2016 that the list of trusted news sources was updated, and included 1,300 news platforms and social media accounts.

The other publications removed from the approved list are Economic Observer, Caijing Magazine and the 21st Century Business Herald. All the publications removed from the list devote a significant share of their reporting to economic issues. Economic Observer was established in April 2001 and modelled on the Financial Times. Like Caixin, the publication has an English language website.

The removal from the approved sources means that Caixin’s news stories now can’t be distributed on various Chinese news media and social media platforms.

Crackdown on Caixin
Though the Communist Party controls the ownership of news media outlets, there are a few independent ventures like Caixin. The independent news outlet self-censor their stories to align with the agenda of the party.

Until recently, publications like Caixin could report on China’s economic issues without oversight by China’s propaganda machinery. The crackdown on Caixin marks a pattern to control the reporting and data on economy-related news. China has tried to control personal commentary about the economy on social media.

The campaign against Caixin isn’t entirely new. In 2016, the media outlet reported on the deleting of its articles by the CAC and tried to expose the practice by the government. It also reported rigorously on the Evergrande debt crisis, which may partly explain the latest crackdown on it.

“Evergrande contagion may trigger wave of defaults for developers,” said one of the headlines of a story by Caixin on 9 October. “Evergrande Real Estate’s sales continue to fall, and price has reached the lowest value in recent years,” said another headline of an article on 15 September.

A vast majority of Caixin’s content, both in Chinese and English, is behind a paywall. Its stories were circulated widely by republishing the content on other Chinese platforms. The crackdown appears to be targeted at who can forward information and via which medium.

“It doesn’t say to me that they’ve been told not to write those stories. It just says they don’t want those stories broadly distributed,” said Ross Settles, an adjunct professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Journalism and Media Studies Centre.

The founder of Caixin, Hu Shuli had posted an image about how to cook a pig’s head, before Caixin was removed from the list. Some have speculated the message was for Xi Jinping. The post and the image were later deleted.

New rules, goodbye investors
In a similar action, CAC recently asked top social media platforms such as WeChat, Weibo, Douyin and Kuaishou to control the “illegal release of financial news” by “self-media”. Beijing is finding it difficult to control the sharing of financial data and speculation about the financial markets.

On 8 October, a draft document by National Development and Reform Commission reiterated that private businesses couldn’t invest in the news media business. Some commentators have claimed there is nothing new in the restrictions. But others disagree.

“While many of the items banned in 2020 remain banned in 2021, there have been many important additions on the 2021 list, including banning non-public capital from engaging in news reporting & editing, public account, importing foreign news, holding news summits or prize awards,” said Henry Gao, a law professor specialising in Chinese trade and economy.

The announcement suggests that Beijing may completely force private investors to divest from media-related businesses in the coming months.

Earlier in March, the Chinese government had asked Jack Ma’s Alibaba Group to dispose of its media assets. Jack Ma’s businesses seem to have started complying.

On 23 September, Chinese state media reported that Jack Ma’s Ant Group had disappeared from the list of Caixin investors. Chinese State media later reported that Ant Group had sold its shares of Caixin.

Tencent had also invested in Caixin, and the company’s investment doesn’t appear on the list of investments any more.

Alibaba still has a share in the news outlet Quzhou News – another independent outlet. Alibaba and Ant Group are planning to divest shares of some other platforms they own, but the ownership of South China Morning Post remains with the group.

Beijing’s strategy may be to slowly starve publications like Caixin of private investment and reduce their capacity to report on critical topics.

“The goal is to ensure that the growing universe of digital media products is politically disciplined when it comes to sourcing news and discussion of current affairs,” said Chinese media expert David Bandurski.

For now, Caixin is safe since the company relies on subscription revenue for a significant portion of its operations.

Xi writes an essay
Within China, there are deep-rooted questions about the direction of the country’s economy. Xi’s common prosperity campaign and upcoming property tax have unnerved many. Even Xi himself had to write an essay to explain the common prosperity campaign. That should have been the job of Chinese State media and other pliant media outlets.

The Wall Street Journal reported high-level opposition to Xi’s proposed property tax. The tax is said to be unpopular among the elite residents of cities such as Beijing and Shanghai. SCMP reported that the tax would be rolled out under a pilot project first.

The distribution ban is unlikely to stop Caixin from publishing on these matters, but the removal is a message to stop critical reporting on economic issues. Beijing may want to ensure that it has tight control over public opinion ahead of the national party congress next year.

The author is a columnist and a freelance journalist. He was previously a China media journalist at the BBC World Service. He tweets @aadilbrar. Views are personal.

(Edited by Neera Majumdar)


CCP is a joke, but it's good that China is doing this, thanks Winnie the Poo.
 
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Though the Communist Party controls the ownership of news media outlets, there are a few independent ventures like Caixin. The independent news outlet self-censor their stories to align with the agenda of the party.

How close to Orwell's 1984 can they get? It's like Orwell was Nostradamus.
 
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Indian disinfo network echoing U.S. disinfo network meltdown over the loss one of their most favourite fake "Chinese news source" agencies spouting disinformation and blatant fakenews scripts provided straight from Washington D.C. or from D.C. through Hong Kong for years. 😂

We have at least two years backlog just on this forum of Chinese member calling out frauds at Caixin carrying water for the U.S. regime, but that wont be something the typically brainwashed American will ever hear about in his censored disinfo bubble telling him crockodile tearjerking lies about the shutdown of their regimes dirty and mallicious operations to terrorize other people and countries. But these jokers still try to drop this BS written for consumption by brainwashed ignorants on us.
 
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How close to Orwell's 1984 can they get? It's like Orwell was Nostradamus.
Orwell was incredibly prescient. Some of the CCPs policies are almost straight out of 1984 such as Newspeak.

The concept of double think is frequently displayed by party officials, and by extention most of the CCPs sycophantic posters on PDF. 'China has an open market economy' is one such example of double think, stated by a party official as being truthful whilst knowing it not to be true. Censoring financial information for example as cited by the article above is contrary to an efficient market/market economy. The dysfunction in double think results in the party member (or PDF poster) believing both the truth and the lie.
 
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Orwell was incredibly prescient. Some of the CCPs policies are almost straight out of 1984 such as Newspeak.

The concept of double think is frequently displayed by party officials, and by extention most of the CCPs sycophantic posters on PDF.

It's unreal. He had that book written before the Chinese Communists took over and he has called it play by play. Just scary in what he predicted correctly.
 
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It's unreal. He had that book written before the Chinese Communists took over and he has called it play by play. Just scary in what he predicted correctly.
Have to wonder how many party officials have actually read 1984, and how deeply it has influenced them. The concept in 1984 of perpetual war as a means of controlling the populace is almost becoming evident today, the CCP is already brainwashing their citizens into the state of constant struggle (with those evil foreigners) which defines their daily existance. The war has arguably already begun on the borders with India and in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.
 
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China is a "big government" country. I personally believe it is right path for most countries. Because I believe, unlike what west liberalism thinks, poeple can not spontaneously govern themselves and their countries.

People can supervise government but should avoid excessively engaging in political issues. Which will hurts your country and in turn yourself. Let the politcians deal with politics.

I don't worry too much about China's bureaucracy and politicians because China has a very mature and sophisticated governors or officials selection system. There is government orgnization called "组织部”. Which is responsible for evaluating country wide officials' ability and deciding who will get promoted. This system is much much more reasonable than one-person-one-vote system.
 
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China is a "big government" country. I personally believe it is right path for most countries. Because I believe, unlike what west liberalism thinks, poeple can not spontaneously govern themselves and their countries.

People can supervise government but should avoid excessively engaging in political issues. Which will hurts your country and in turn yourself. Let the politcians deal with politics.

I don't worry too much about China's bureaucracy and politicians because China has a very mature and sophisticated governors or officials selection system. There is government orgnization called "组织部”. Which is responsible for evaluating country wide officials' ability and deciding who will get promoted. This system is much much more reasonable than one-person-one-vote system.

They face the mirror and laugh at the people in the mirror. Why do you interrupt their orgasm.
 
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Excellent. Hope the CPC shuts down the CIA-controlled Caixin permanently. It’s a disinformation outlet that has no place in China. When your enemies are complaining, CPC is doing a fantastic job.
China is on the right path poised to become the biggest economy and take 700M out of poverty, China is doing it right. But of course, all this progress is quite a bit of takleef for many for obvious reasons.
 
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Excellent. Hope the CPC shuts down the CIA-controlled Caixin permanently. It’s a disinformation outlet that has no place in China. When your enemies are complaining, CPC is doing a fantastic job.

I love hearing stories about how the white man snaps his fingers and entire Chinese companies turn into mindless zombies. Just primitive children easily manipulated i guess.
 
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China is on the right path poised to become the biggest economy and take 700M out of poverty, China is doing it right. But of course, all this progress is quite a bit of takleef for many for obvious reasons.
It's economy is tanking and has a number of insurmountable obstacles to growth; A property market bubble starting to burst which has driven 30% of Chinas GDP growth, the associated debt bomb and overleveraging, 60-80 million empty apartments, a demographic bomb creating a shrinking and aging population, an energy crisis, a water crisis in the north, pollution, corruption, central government stifling enterprise, over-reliance on foreign technology, trade wars and foreign companies leaving for cheaper manufacturing nations. What are the drivers of future growth in China going to be?
 
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