Chinese people like Europe and Russia more than the US or Japan, survey shows
22/2/2011
Chinese people think much more favourably about the European Union than the United States or Japan, but Russia is almost as popular, according to a scientific survey of 3,000 urban residents across six cities in China.
Despite this high score, only 42% of respondents thought that current China-EU relations were good, although a similar number, 46%, were cautiously optimistic about relations improving in the future.
Soccer, cars and fashion are the top three things about Europe that Chinese people are most interested in, according to the survey, which was carried out by scholars from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Beijing’s Renmin University, working with partners from the UK, Germany and the Netherlands on an EU research project led by the China Policy Institute of the University of Nottingham.
Just over half, 55%, said they liked European ideas about democracy, the survey showed.
When Chinese think about European historical figures, the top three that spring to mind are Napoleon Bonaparte, Adolf Hitler and Vladimir Lenin, according to the survey, with Karl Marx ranking only fourth. The survey was funded by the European Commission under its “7th Framework” research support programme.
Asked about which countries or regions they held a favourable impression, 74% said the European Union and 74% Russia, compared with 60% the US and only 38% Japan.
Nearly 78% of respondents expressed a favourable impression towards EU citizens, compared to 74% towards Russians, 72% towards Americans and only 39% towards Japanese.
When asked how friendly China’s current relationship was with various countries or regions however, China-Russia relations ranked highest, followed by China’s relations with the EU, the US and Japan.
Asked about China’s external relations, only 43% thought that the current China-EU relations were good, with another 36% holding a neutral view. But 46% of respondents were cautiously optimistic about the prospects for the China-EU relationship, and 16% very optimistic.
The survey was carried out during 2010 in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou in the South and Xian in the northwest, Chengdu in western China and Nanning in the southwest.
Relations between China and the EU reached a low point in December 2008, when China cancelled a planned EU-China summit after French President Nicholas Sarkozy met with the exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama, while holding the EU’s rotating presidency. Earlier that year pro-Tibet demonstrations in Paris and other European capitals marred China’s Olympic torch relay shortly before the Olympic Games began in Beijing. Ties have subsequently improved.
When thinking about Europe, the countries that first spring to mind among Chinese people are France, the UK and Germany in that order, according to the survey. The cities that first come to mind are Paris, London and Berlin, in the same order.
However only 2% said they were pessimistic about EU-China relations. Chinese people evaluate the EU’s role in the world highly, with 85% saying they were positive about the EU’s role in furthering scientific progress and 86% evaluating highly its role in global environmental protection. A smaller number, 70%, thought the EU played a positive role in working for world peace, 63% thought the EU played a positive role in fighting international terrorism, and 62% in fighting poverty.
While 80% admired Europe for its technological and scientific advances, only 55% said they liked European ideas about democracy, while less than half, 47%, said they liked European ways of doing business.
From a given list of 11 plus one open choice, the top 10 things that Chinese people were most interested in about Europe were soccer, cars, fashion, perfume, historical sites, music, movies, nature, technology and beer in that order.
A very high proportion of Chinese, 85%, thought it was good that European cultures were spreading in China, while nearly 81% thought it good that European fashion was spreading in China. Just over 67% said they liked European music, while 68% said they liked European movies.
Detailed knowledge of the EU however was limited among the Chinese surveyed, with only 28% correctly identifying the headquarters of the EU as being in Brussels. Only 9% knew that the EU had 27 member states.
The research team, made up of social scientists from the University of Nottingham and the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) in the UK, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Renmin University in Beijing, Leiden University of the Netherlands and Jacobs University of Bremen in Germany, surveyed 3,019 urban residents between the ages of 18 and 70.
The survey, the results of which were announced at an academic conference in London, is part of a project to disaggregate Chinese views of the EU and to explore the policy implications for the European Union, financed by a grant competitively awarded by the European Commission under its Socio-Economic and Humanities research support programme.
The project’s coordinator, Dr Zhengxu WANG, said in a paper delivered at the conference the research showed that the more knowledgeable people were about a country or region, the more positive an attitude they had towards it. This and other factors meant that the EU had an opportunity to influence China’s foreign policy through promoting greater knowledge about the EU itself, he concluded in a joint paper written with Bogdan Popescu of the University of Nottingham’s School of Politics and International Relations.
Dr Wang is acting director of the China Policy Institute, which is the research institute of Nottingham’s School of Contemporary Chinese Studies and one of the EU’s leading China think tanks.
Detailed findings of the research will be published shortly, and a series of conferences held later this year to explore the implications for the EU’s China policy.
(Questions about the project should be addressed to Dr Zhengxu Wang at the University of Nottingham, Tel: +44 115 8232117, email zhengxu.wang@nottingham.ac.uk)
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