Event Details

How will the US election on November 3 affect US-China relations? Will a Biden victory mean a return to pre-tariff trade relations, or will the Trumpian intense rivalry between the two superpowers continue to spill over into high-tech trade and investment?


Join us for an in-depth lunch discussion of the US election results and their impact on China.

Please note that this event is limited to senior-level executives and per invitation only. If you are not an existing member of The Economist Corporate Network, but would like to learn how you can attend our events, please contact us.

Agenda

12:00 PM - 12:30 PM
Registration & drinks
12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
Lunch & discussions

Speakers

  • David Rennie (Beijing bureau chief and Chaguan columnist at The Economist)

    David Rennie

    Beijing bureau chief and Chaguan columnist at The Economist

    https://mediadirectory.economist.com/people/david-rennie/

    David Rennie joined The Economist in 2007 as European Union correspondent and Charlemagne columnist, based in Brussels. From July 2010 to July 2012 he was British political editor and author of the Bagehot column, based in London. In the summer of 2012 he moved to Washington DC. He was Lexington columnist 2012-17, and Washington bureau chief 2013-2018. In May 2018 he moved to China as Beijing bureau chief and launched the Chaguan column on China in September 2018. Previously he was on the foreign staff of the Daily Telegraph, with postings in Sydney (1998), Beijing (1998 to 2002), Washington DC (2002-05) and Brussels (2005-07). From 2006 until he joined The Economist, he was also a contributing editor of the Spectator magazine. He worked for the Daily Telegraph in London (1996-98), and the Evening Standard (1992-96). He has given classes and public lectures on EU affairs at the universities of Harvard and Boston in America, Bristol University in Britain and at the business schools ESCP (Paris) and IE (Madrid). He won the 2010 UACES/Thomson Reuters “Reporting Europe” award. He is a frequent guest on radio and television news programmes.

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