{"id":7961,"global_id":"www.chinacenter.net?id=7961","global_id_lineage":["www.chinacenter.net?id=7961"],"author":"105","status":"publish","date":"2023-10-16 11:13:39","date_utc":"2023-10-16 15:13:39","modified":"2023-10-16 13:00:19","modified_utc":"2023-10-16 17:00:19","url":"https:\/\/www.chinacenter.net\/event\/china-breakfast-briefing-2023\/","rest_url":"https:\/\/www.chinacenter.net\/wp-json\/tribe\/events\/v1\/events\/7961","title":"China Breakfast Briefing 2023","description":"
Breakfast, networking and China updates<\/strong><\/p>\n With China sealed off during the pandemic and de-coupling and de-risking dominating discussions on recalibrating the relationship, it may be tempting to think that U.S.-China business has ground to a halt.<\/p>\n The reality is more nuanced: Despite tough talk, trade wars and a slowing economy, China remains Georgia\u2019s largest trading partner by far, and the inertia of the world\u2019s factory floor is proving formidable despite a very real rush to find supply-chain alternatives in Asia or beyond.<\/p>\n Join us at the China Breakfast Briefing to learn how local companies, entrepreneurs and civil society organizations are finding ways to work with China in the face of rising tensions and intensifying rivalry.<\/p>\n As always, we\u2019ll prioritize perspectives from recent travelers to China to give a sense for the mood on the ground, putting current headlines in perspective while addressing real hurdles to future engagement.<\/p>\n <\/p>\nMeet Our Speakers<\/h2>\n