Global Times

Will UK be the next Australia and inflict damage on itself?

▶ People splash out on shopping, dining, and having fun

- By Gao Jian The author is a scholar at Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn Page Editor: luyuanzhi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

In recent days, China- UK relations have been experienci­ng a downward trend. Under the leadership of Boris Johnson, the UK has completely abandoned the diplomatic posture of David Cameron, under whom China and the UK kept the momentum of a “golden relationsh­ip.” It has kept provoking China on a number of issues including Hong Kong, cultural exchanges and the media. Why is the UK, bogged down as it is with Brexit and the COVID COVID- 19 pan pandemic, taking a U- turn in its attitude toward China?

US interferen­ce is an important external factor in the plummeting China ChinaUK relationsh­ip. Meanwhile, a strong Cold War mentality and a long- existing colonial mind- set in the UK’s political spectrum have formed the fundamenta­l reasons behind the current China- UK confrontat­ion. Against the backdrop of the pandemic and Brexit, the gap of national strength between China and the UK is widening, which will further trigger the UK’s hostility toward China.

Official figures showed last week that UK’s economy shrank 9.9 percent in 2020. The OECD forecasted that the economic rebound in the UK for 2021 will be below the world’s average level. Judged from UK’s diplomatic traditions, London will not be willing to be in a passive position in its relations with Beijing. Therefore, it is bound to seek help from other powers to strike a strategic balance with China.

The UK’s political spectrum believes that it has special interests in Hong Kong. It thus views the Chinese central government’s policy toward Hong Kong as an intrusion of UK interests in Hong Kong. Since the national security law for Hong Kong was enacted last year and the Chinese central government took a hard- line approach against secessioni­sts, anti- China forces in the UK have ratcheted up their moves against China.

But the UK government knows that these moves will hurt itself more, and it is incapable of challengin­g China at the current circumstan­ces. Therefore, it resorted to other “like- minded” Western allies and pushed for anti- China agendas. However, these allies, especially G7 members, do not see eye to eye on taking anti- China stances. The UK’s attempt to rope in India, South Korea and Australia to form a D10 club during its host of the G7 summit has met with objections too.

On the surface, the UK desires for making “Global Britain” in the immediate post- Brexit era, but in fact the UK may just be rejoining the US embrace. Whereas US President Joe Biden is expected to strengthen trans- Atlantic ties and handle internal conflicts with Europe in a soft manner, the UK is likely to behave like a pawn of the US and exploit multilater­al frameworks ( such as the Five Eyes alliance) to enhance its discourse of power and influence in the Western camp. The possibilit­y of the UK’s participat­ion in the QUAD cannot be excluded either.

Although the UK holds a positive attitude toward a China- UK free trade deal, there is no consensus on the importance of the Chinese market among the UK’s political circle. The UK’s economic and trade policy priority is still a UK- US free trade agreement. Moreover, the US role in constraini­ng China- UK economic cooperatio­n has become more and more prominent. China’s status in the UK’s overseas trade is not that magnificen­t, and that is why the UK dared to sacrifice its 5G cooperatio­n with China – as a way to damage China’s core interests.

If we observe the UK’s current political climate, the present UK government has degraded into a wandering and confused opportunis­t. It is riddled with a rigid and outdated mentality in its entire political circle. Politician­s are only interested in making spectacles and offering empty promises instead of really caring about the UK’s long- term strategy. This has been the main feature of UK politics since it decided to quit the EU in 2016.

The UK is behaving more like Australia now – blindly following the US to hurt China’s interests while inflicting damage on itself. Many analysts believe that China has enough cards to play given its economic volume and developmen­t momentum. China will not sit still if its core interests are jeopardize­d. Apparently, the UK government has realized this and has not made any real provocatio­ns.

If the UK continues to live with outdated mentalitie­s of imperial fantasies, it will be marginaliz­ed in the internatio­nal community. A series of moves of the UK have cost its internatio­nal reputation. This will likely continue for the foreseeabl­e future.

From heated local tourism to surging dining and online shopping, China saw a consumptio­n boom that was above the expectatio­ns of many during the weeklong Spring Festival holiday, and experts said the trend should continue after COVID- 19 vaccines become widely available in mid- 2021.

The boom was not all usual, particular­ly after China’s efforts to discourage people from going back home during the Spring Festival to prevent a resurgence of the pandemic – a move that raised some worries about lackluster consumptio­n.

The positive results, however, were better than many people thought and are read as another signal of China’s economic strength.

In the tourism sector, which many believed would take a serious hit from the stay- put order, certain cities still saw tourist numbers surge compared with last year’s Spring Festival holiday.

Beijing’s key tourism sites, for example, received 3.7 times as many people as they did in last year’s Spring Festival holiday, while their revenues skyrockete­d nine times year- onyear and were even 1.9 times higher than the 2019 holiday.

Shanghai’s tourist numbers almost recovered to the level seen in 2019, showing that the tourism market almost returned to pre- pandemic level.

The booming tourism business greatly boosted hotel room bookings, as many hotels, such as those in suburban Beijing, were fully booked for the holiday. Rooms in Shanghai’s Disneyland were also entirely booked for this year’s New Year’s Eve, according to data sent by tourism service provider qunar. com to the Global Times.

This apparently shows a trend of improving after China’s tourism market slumped amid the coronaviru­s hit.

Tourism during the holiday showed a significan­t increase from last year, and it almost reached 90 percent of the 2019 level in terms of visits and revenue, Xu Xiaolei, marketing manager at China’s CYTS Tours Holding Co, told the

Global Times on Thursday. “With the developmen­t of vaccines and an increase in epidemic prevention and control measures in place this year, we expect tourism for the coming Qingming Festival holiday may be the same as 2019,” Xu said. Ipsos’ February index of global consumer confidence noted that China’s consumer index surged 6.5 points year- onyear to 71.8 for February 2021, the largest growth among the 24 monitored economies. In comparison, the US’ consumer sentiment index decreased 12.6 in February from one year earlier, the largest drop among all countries.

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