China Daily Global Weekly

Learning the China lessons

Global brands must desist from making political statements in line with Western propaganda

- By MARIO CAVOLO The author is an American writer living in China and senior fellow at the Center for China & Globalizat­ion. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

If we have a philosophi­cal approach to business or life, we will realize that the choices we make are an attempt to strike a balance between what we want as companies or individual­s and its impact on the society we live in and the people around us.

For example, with respect to human rights and freedom, the right to safety and the right to pursue a better life sound highly appealing. But some people feel that their individual rights supersede the needs and interests of the society in which they live. That individual rights matter more than anything else is the hallmark of cancerous neoliberal thinking, which leads to chaos and instabilit­y.

Why? Because, you eventually end up trampling on the rights of others by insisting that you have the right to do what you want simply because you think it is right.

In particular, for brands providing products and services for consumers in a global marketplac­e, such choices and priorities can become far more complicate­d. At times a brand feels compelled to make a political statement or respond to criticisms against its new advertisem­ent that has triggered a controvers­y. When that happens, the brand can find itself, for better or worse, facing a tide of irate consumers boycotting the brand, leading to a potential loss of millions of dollars in revenue and goodwill.

In China, there is no shortage of such stories. Companies such as Dolce & Gabbana have learned this the hard way when consumers threatened to boycott their goods against their culturally insensitiv­e videos promoting a runway show in Shanghai with “chopsticks” ads.

Airlines including Delta and American, and fashion retailer Zara have also got themselves into trouble for mistakenly referring to Taiwan as a country rather than a part of China.

Let us not forget that such global brands hire highly reputable and expensive public relations agencies to help them deliver their “message” to the general public.

So it is natural to assume that global brands would not make the foolish mistake of being seen as part of the treacherou­s Western propaganda campaign of accusing China of a host of supposed offenses including the genocide of Uygur minorities, and forced labor, forced abortion and forced sterilizat­ion in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region of China.

Judging by the news of the boycott of H&M and Nike, however, it seems foreign brands may never be able to read the pulse of Chinese consumers.

For one, they do not know that the Uygur population in Xinjiang has grown by 25 percent over the past 40 years, and the Uygur Muslim community has been thriving because of the preferenti­al policies they enjoy. Such good news does not stop those with ulterior motives from continuing to smear and demonize all things Chinese.

Which brings us to the latest H&M episode. Some H&M executives thought it would be a good idea to level false accusation­s against China, by issuing an “official” statement saying that while the company hugely benefits from pocketing Chinese consumers’ money, they definitely do not trust the Chinese government’s statement that the Uygur cotton field workers in Xinjiang are not slave laborers. Perhaps H&M thought China was like the United States where black slaves were once forced to work on cotton plantation­s.

While the statement by H&M was issued last year without much fanfare, last week’s disgracefu­l decision by the European Union and the United Kingdom to officially sanction some Chinese government officials for non-existent offenses acted as a catalyst to what followed.

Some Western countries’ attempt to escalate this vicious propaganda against China was bound to reach this point, known in Chinese language as “going over the line” which in Mandarin is guofen le.

The Chinese government and people have refuted the false accusation­s, and Beijing has rightfully chosen to impose sanctions on some British politician­s and organizati­ons that made such accusation­s. Chinese netizens, who act as the wind in this righteous sail, have now also risen up to defend China against propagator­s of fake news and false accusation­s.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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