Assessing the impact of China on global governance in the age of power diffusion

Global China

Assessing the impact of China on global governance in the age of power diffusion

China in the Mediterranean region: key trends and regional debates in 2022

Global China Research & Policy Papers

[IT] The ChinaMed Report 2022 discusses the main trends in the media debates in China and in seven key countries of the wider Mediterranean – France, Greece, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Saudi Arabia, and Türkiye – on China’s role in the region.

Mar 21, 2023

Formiche – 10 marzo 2023

Global China In the media

[IT] L’intervista a Enrico Fardella (ChinaMed, T.wai & John Cabot University) nell’articolo "Riforme interne e politica estera in Cina" su Formiche.

Mar 10, 2023

China and the United States in the Middle East: Policy Continuity Amid Changing Competition

Global China Research & Policy Papers

There is often the tendency to imagine the United States and China involved in a strategic back-and-forth, launching new initiatives and implementing new approaches to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). However, the substance of the two countries’ behavior in the region and toward each other is unlikely to…

Jan 11, 2023

Continuity and Change in Italy-China Relations: From Economic Pragmatism to Selective Followership and Back

Global China Research & Policy Papers

This chapter focuses on Italy’s domestic politics to argue that Rome used the BRI MoU as a tool to strike a tactical entente with the PRC to leverage Beijing’s resulting goodwill in order to extract the economic concessions that had long eluded Italian policy-makers.

Jan 9, 2023

Formiche – 8 gennaio 2023

Global China In the media

[IT] L'intervista a Enrico Fardella (ChinaMed, T.wai& John Cabot University) nell'articolo "Quali opportunità per il dialogo tra Usa e Cina" su Formiche.

Jan 9, 2023
  • Global China Events

    Global China in the Media

    • Head of Project

      18 May 2025

      Il problema non è la guerra commerciale, ma il modello economico della Cina. La radice degli squilibri globali non sta nella guerra commerciale in sé, ma nelle dinamiche interne all’economia cinese. Pechino continua a produrre più di quanto consumi o investa, e questo la spinge inevitabilmente a esportare in eccesso.

      Anche se l’accordo di Ginevra prevede la riduzione di alcuni dazi e la rimozione di barriere non tariffarie, si tratta di misure insufficienti a riequilibrare un sistema che resta asimmetrico alla radice. Il vero nodo è la debolezza della domanda interna cinese, che non permette un riequilibrio spontaneo del commercio.”

      READ MORE

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