Vancouver Sun

CONVERSATI­ONS THAT MATTER

- STUART MCNISH

In 1970, Canada led the Western world by recognizin­g China.

According to Paul Evans in his book, Engaging China, prime minister Pierre Trudeau “believed that many of the world's major issues `will not be resolved completely or in any lasting way unless and until an accommodat­ion has been reached with the Chinese nation.'”

Over the course of the next 50 years, the Chinese economy and its clout grew from 1.7 per cent of global GDP to more than 17.3 per cent. China went from one of the poorest countries on Earth to one of the most powerful economies. Through that growth, China invested heavily in Canadian energy and technology companies.

Then at the start of this century, the relationsh­ip between Canada and China started shifting. China started to flex its muscles and Canada failed to realize it was no longer the dominant member of this relationsh­ip. China grew tired of being told what and how to manage its affairs. Enter Xi Jinping, who had no patience for moralizing and virtue signalling. Canada woke up to China's influence and the influencin­g tactics at home and abroad. Over the past five years, the relationsh­ip has soured.

We invited Paul Evans, professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia, to join us for a Conversati­on That Matters on what happened between Canada and China and what is happening between us and India. See the video at vancouvers­un.com/tag/conversati­ons-that-matter. Learn More about our guest's career at careerstha­tmatter.ca.

Join us March 12 for Conversati­ons Live — Tent City Nation at conversati­onslive.ca

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Paul Evans

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