China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Envoy to US explains the buzz on China

- By angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

From “people first” and “heroes in harm’s way” to “involution”, Chinese Ambassador to the United States Qin Gang shared popular buzzwords to explain to people in the US the profound changes in China as he encouraged them to visit the country once the pandemic is over.

Speaking online during the “USChina Regional Dialogue Series: Hospitalit­y, Tourism and Cultural Exchange”, Qin said that tourism, hospitalit­y and cultural exchanges between China and the US are the foundation­s of mutual understand­ing and help people from the two countries correctly perceive each other.

As many US people haven’t been to China for a long time due to the COVID-19 pandemic, recent buzzwords in China may help them understand what is happening in the country and what people are thinking, he said.

The phrase, “people first, life first” came from China’s fight against the pandemic, a massive nationwide effort that meant no place was left behind and no life was given up on.

“From a 30-hour-old baby to senior citizens over 100 years old, no cost was spared to save a life, and all the treatment was free,” the envoy said. “Now the pandemic has been put under effective control in China, and sporadic or cluster cases in a few regions were all curbed very quickly.”

Also made popular during China’s efforts to control the pandemic was the saying nixingzhe, or “heroes in harm’s way”, which refers to everyday heroes such as medical profession­als, military personnel and firefighte­rs who put their duty before their lives and made sacrifices to fight the pandemic.

Another buzzword, tangping, or “lie flat”, describes Chinese youngsters who have little ambition and do the bare minimum to get by. It turns out that the “lie-flatters” are from well-off families, born with a silver spoon in their mouths, or believe that whatever happens to them, they have basic medical insurance, pension and unemployme­nt subsidies to fall back on, Qin said.

“This is totally different from previous generation­s, who didn’t have the luxury to ‘lie flat’, because they had to tighten their belts and work hard to earn a living,” he said, adding that younger people are facing greater pressure than older generation­s when it comes to employment.

Qin said more people don’t approve of the “lie-flatters”, who they believe are self-centered, and have greater respect for the “heroes in harm’s way”.

The ambassador told a personal story to illustrate why the government unveiled a policy to address

neijuan, or “involution”, a buzzword meaning irrational or involuntar­y competitio­n, which makes people feel burned out.

“I still remember over 10 years ago, my weekends were spent rushing my kid from one training school to another, and the courses he took ranged from math to physics,” he said.

After a whole day of classes, a tutor came to the family home in the evening. When the tutoring session finished, Qin had to help his son with his compositio­n homework.

That’s why most parents felt a burden had been lifted when education authoritie­s rolled out wwn, or double reduction. The policy reduced the excessive homework load and after-school tutoring hours for students, giving them more time for sports, play and hobbies.

The ambassador also shared some other buzzwords that he said “reflect the changing and unchanging elements in our values” as China experience­s rapid economic growth and profound social transforma­tion.

“We need to keep fine traditiona­l values, uphold fairness and justice and not get lost in a market economy,” he said.

Speaking in Las Vegas, Nevada, where the US-China regional dialogue was held, US Congresswo­man Dina Titus, a Democrat from Nevada, said internatio­nal tourism directly employs about 1.5 million people across the US.

The two-day event, sponsored by the US-Asia Institute and the Las Vegas Sands Corp, focused on commercial opportunit­ies, peopleto-people exchanges and education. It followed a dialogue on China-US agricultur­al trade in May. In 2022, the dialogue series will focus on the environmen­t, energy and sustainabi­lity.

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Qin Gang

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