China and Pakistan should strive to build a RMB closed-chain cycle based on capital exports and trade returns.
Lu Yang was a resident scholar at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center until June 2020.
Lu Yang was a resident scholar at Carnegie China, a research fellow at the Institute of the Belt and Road Initiative at Tsinghua University, and an associate member at the Institute of South Asia Institute at the University of Heidelberg, where she got her doctorate in political science and worked as a lecturer in the Department of Political Science. She was a post-doc fellow at the Department of International Relations at Tsinghua University from 2015 to 2018.
China and Pakistan should strive to build a RMB closed-chain cycle based on capital exports and trade returns.
The far-reaching political and economic impacts of pandemics warrant security coordination on par with that of military threats.
India manages a delicate balancing act between the United States and China, but in several key areas, the three giants could advance shared interests.
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is solidifying relations between the two nations but the project faces multiple security and political challenges.
Regional actors like China, India, and Pakistan can cooperate effectively through multilateral platforms to promote reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan.