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41. Dell's Deal in China
After four years in China's mainland, Dell has created a unique and unbeatable business modelFor Dell, a U.S.-based global computer company, China is an attractive moneymaker. The company's
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 38 PDF HTML
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42. Gift of Life
It took four years to draft China's first organ donation legislationForty million people are waiting for organ donation in China, but most are doomed to never find one. A new regulation in Shenzhen,
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 39 PDF HTML
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43. Education For Sale
Random fees have made the country's educational system too expensive for some, threatening the idea of equal education for allSeptember I this year meant totally different things for Wang Nan, a
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 39 PDF HTML
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44. A Plague Of Fees
Illegal educational charging began in China at the end of the 1980s. Before that, education in the country was free, with the Central Government bearing all expenses.In 1985, the Decision of the
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 39 PDF HTML
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45. Building A Solid Base for Property
Beijing releases a new policy paper on the property business - to support its continuous growth while cleaning up illegal land dealsOn August 12, 2003, the State Council issued a circular on the
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 40 PDF HTML
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46. National Economy: Hot or Not?
Economists debate over whether the national economy is growing too fastThe rapid growth of GDP, investment, exports, loans and real estate prices in the first half of this year was beyond
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 41 PDF HTML
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47. Top 10 List for Best Real Estate Bets
A recently published list ranking China's cities in terms of real estate development potential will guide domestic and foreign developers as they vie for space in the nation's burgeoning marketA list
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 43 PDF HTML
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48. Keeping China Green With Trees
The Chinese Government has just issued a three-step program to protect and expand the country's forests, hoping to bring about environment friendly changes to the lumber industry"Cut-grow-cut"-that's
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 46 PDF HTML
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49. Monopolies Make Way For Competition
The world leader in water services (in terms of revenue) has its eye firmly set on a large slice of the Chinese water market. Veolia Water, the Paris-based water division of Veolia Environment, which
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 46 PDF HTML
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50. Clean Flowing Profit
Veolia Water Group, a renowned French water service provider, is targeting domestic water treatment construction-but it wants to do it independently, without a Chinese partnerThere are usually two
Author: LAN XINZHEN Year 2003 Issue 46 PDF HTML