China abraza a América Latina en la pandemia (y EU se aleja), pero la crisis ha enfriado la relación
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China restringe préstamos a países de América Latina debido a la crisis generada por el covid-19
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Despite virus, domestic firms abroad vote for talent by hiring more By ZHENG XIN | China Daily | Updated: 2021-02-05 10:57 Share CLOSE A visitor scans the QR code to learn about recruitment needs of digital economy talents during the Light of Internet Expo of the 2020 World Internet Conference (WIC) in Wuzhen, East China s Zhejiang province, on Nov 22, 2020. [Photo/Xinhua]
Chinese enterprises demand for technical, management and language skills overseas has surged in the past three years, including during the COVID-19 pandemic period, said an industry report.
Chinese enterprises with overseas operations resorted to countercyclical hiring, with 88 percent meeting demand for talent, especially in fields like manufacturing, infrastructure construction, wholesale and retail, internet and financial services, according to a white paper on Chinese companies talent development strategies and business facilitation abilities.
The U.S. and China Are Battling for Influence in Latin America, and the Pandemic Has Raised the Stakes Time 2/4/2021 Ciara Nugent/London © Carlos Jasso Reuters China’s President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan with Panama’s then President Juan Carlos Varela and First Lady Lorena Castillo in December 2018
When Alex Almeida surveys his family farm in a rural corner of landlocked Paraguay, he sees mainly fields, punctuated by small houses with sheet-metal roofs and, in the distance, native lapacho trees blooming with bright yellow flowers. But despite the isolation, there’s only one place in the world the 23-year-old feels truly cut off from. Paraguayan exports of cows and sheep, like the 130 or so Almeida raises, are locked out of the second largest economy in the world, a source of frustration for an ambitious young farmer and student of agriculture. “The cell phone I’m speaking to you on now is from China,” he tells TIME from Caaguazú, a