Archive for June 8th, 2007

Suzhou and Hangzhou, and Gaokao

I think you will love both Hangzhou and Suzhou. Great places to refresh and recharge, especially after being overwhelmed by the sheer size, chaos and power of Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Shanghai.

Both Hangzhou and Suzhou are historically famous for a number of reasons, one of which is that long ago in China it was a really big deal to be a government official (still is, I guess). The thought was, you needed to be smart to become one, you got to hob nob with the Emperor, and it would eventually lead to wealth, etc. But to become one, you had to study your butt off and do well on the imperial civil service examination (now, it’s be a successful party member).

To learn more on this exam and upward social mobility issue, read this post from the Eyes East blog (by Chris, an expat teaching in China) which also links to the Granite Studio blog (by Jeremiah who is a PhD student in history at UC Davis).

Then, once you served the Emperor as a government official, you retired to Hangzhou or Suzhou, to live out your remaining years in comfort. And when you arrived, particularly at Suzhou, because you were rich, you often built a beautiful garden you could lounge around in. In Suzhou we will take you to the Humble Administrator’s Garden (you will see the irony in the name when you see it) and the Lion Grove Garden. We won’t spend hours and hours at them, but you do need to see and experience them as a part of Chinese culture and history.

Ah, if only I could pass the imperial civil service exam ….

Add comment June 8th, 2007

Suzhou Industrial Park and Wal-Mart

Here are two must read WSJ articles you need to check out before we visit the Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP) and Wal-Mart:

Wal-Mart Sneezes, China Catches Cold.

China Nutures a “Clean Tech” Hub. (This is not the park we will visit, and it is not yet even really up and running; but SIP has facets of this in it.)

2 comments June 8th, 2007

Bad Food, and Corresponding PR and Legal Strategy

We have recently had some good discussion on this blog about the food safety debacle come out of China.

Here are four blog posts that are must reads which really tie this recent chain of events into your MBA studies and the business context. Free advice you don’t even have to pay for …

China Law Blog: How To Protect Your Company From Bad China Product (h/t Dan Harris for these three blog leads).

ImageTheif: China’s Food Crisis Strategy: Blame Everyone Else.

Peking Review: Why China May Be Playing the Blame Game.

China Law Blog: Selective Law Enforcement as Big Coincidence.

Professor Carr July 12, 2007 Addendum: See/read today’s related Wall Street Journal article, Lead Toxins Take a Global Round Trip, to see and better understand how we are all tied in together on these issues via the global economy and business

2 comments June 8th, 2007


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The posts, comments and/or views expressed on this trip blog, whether by a Cal Poly student or faculty or an outside guest to the blog, do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of Cal Poly, the Orfalea College of Business (OCOB), any of the OCOB's graduate programs and/or other students who participate in the trip.