A China cultural exhibit is now open at the Dakota County Northern Service Center located at 1Mendota Road West, West St. Paul, MN 55118
The musical tale of a nasty dragon at the Southern Theater, Minneapolis. more
Author " Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mom" - Minnesota Details
The San Francisco Symphony Chinese New Year Concert and Celebration in Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco more
Named one of the world's top ten parades, Chinese New Year Parade in San Francisco is the largest celebration of its kind outside of Asia. more
Northrup Auditorium, Minneapolis Details
The annual Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages. Milwaukee, WI more
University of Minnesota Field House in Minneapolis more
Asia Society and the College Board announce the 5th annual National Chinese Language Conference. Details
Now celebrating its 5th year, A Passage to China is held at Mall of America in Bloomington, MN. Details
The Festival of Nations is the largest and longest running multicultural festival in Minnesota. more
GOVERNOR MARK DAYTON will lead a trade mission to China in June to expand the state's trade relationship. more
Annual festival with Asian Pacific performance, cultural events, and authentic Dragon Boat Racing. St. Paul, MN Details
Japan's nominal gross domestic product for the second quarter totaled US$1.288 trillion, less than China's US$1.337 trillion, the Japanese Cabinet Office said [Aug. 16]. Japan remained bigger in the first half of 2010, the government agency said. Japan's annual GDP is US$5.07 trillion, while China's is more than US$4.9 trillion.
China led the world out of last year's global recession with an economy that's more than 90-times bigger than when leader Deng Xiaoping ditched hard-line Communist policies in favor of free-market reforms in 1978. The country of 1.3 billion people will overtake the U.S., where annual GDP is about US$14 trillion, as the world's largest economy by 2027, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. chief economist Jim O'Neill. [Bloomberg]
Bolstered by strong exports and a huge population, China has been growing at a staggering pace in recent quarters. In contrast, the export-oriented Japanese economy is being adversely impacted by an appreciating yen. An ageing population is also cause for concern. [The Economic Times]
The Japanese economy sputtered in the second-quarter, with GDP growing by a measly 0.1 percent quarter-over-quarter - far below expectations -- amidst fears of a strengthening yen which is hurting the key export sector and weakening domestic demand. [International Business Times]
Economic growth in Japan weakened significantly in the last financial quarter, official figures show.
Between April and June this year gross domestic product - the sum of the nation's goods and services - grew by 0.1 percent, much lower than expected. Analysts say the country's export-led recovery appears to be faltering as the value of the yen appreciates. World Bank figures show that in the first eight years of this century Japan's economy expanded by just 5 percent while China's grew by 261 percent. [BBC News]
Source: World Bank