Read the news article and answer the questions

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Nyrknan08

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Each assignment needs to be a 1.5-2 page write up (in paragraph format) discussing the article (single spaced, 12 point font). It should contain the following parts:

  • An executive summary (~2 sentences) about the content of the article, formatted in italics. This should be written once you are DONE with the assignment, however put it up at the top of the page.
  • In 2-3 paragraphs, summarize the article and put it in context of what we are studying in class.
    • In your write-up, make sure to highlight 3 vocabulary words from our book that we’ve learned so far, and explain their meaning within the context of the article.
    • The 3 vocabs that we learned from the book are:
    • • Market Economy: An economic system in which the interaction of supply and demand determines the quantity in which goods and services are produced. Values : Abstract ideas about what a society believes to be good, right, and desirable. Globalization of Markets :Moving away from an economic system in which national markets are distinct entities, isolated by trade barriers and barriers of distance, time, and culture, and toward a system in which national markets are merging into one global market
      • The vocabulary words must be integrated within the flow of the write-up, within the paragraphs.
      • Make sure to highlight each vocabulary word by putting it in bold and underline.
  • In 2 paragraphs, respond to the content of the article. Given what you know and what we’ve learned in class, what do you think about the news? What should the reader take away from this article?
  • In 1 paragraph, if you were an international business, how might this news affect you? What decisions might you have to make? What things might you have to be aware of?
  • In 1 paragraph, provide a conclusion that ties all the previous parts together.

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China Finds California Wine Pairs Well With a Trade War - The New Yo... 1 of 5 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/business/economy/china-wine-trad... https://nyti.ms/2q5mVgC By NATALIE KITROEFF APRIL 3, 2018 Cabernet isn’t the most obvious pawn in a trade war between the United States and China. Airplanes and their parts are the leading American export to China. Soybeans and wheat grow in Trump country. But China’s selection of wine as a target of retaliatory tariffs did not surprise Michael Honig, a winemaker in the Napa Valley, where the tariff would hit hardest. “The reason the government realizes they should penalize us is, we are branded,” said Mr. Honig, the president of Honig Vineyard and Winery. “It’s hard to go after a wheat grower, because who is a wheat grower? It’s a commodity. We are not a commodity.” The news was an unwelcome turn of events for Mr. Honig and many California winemakers, who have spent years trying to carve out a place in the hearts of wealthy Chinese consumers. That hard work has earned them a prized sliver of what is becoming one of the fastest-growing markets for wine imports. China’s imports of American wine reached $82 million last year — not including bottles entering duty-free through Hong Kong — a sevenfold increase in the last 4/4/2018 9:45 PM China Finds California Wine Pairs Well With a Trade War - The New Yo... 2 of 5 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/business/economy/china-wine-trad... decade. But growing visibility may have turned Napa wine into easy prey. “Wine is something people can relate to,” said Jim Boyce, who has been covering the industry from Beijing for a decade on his blog, the Grape Wall of China. “It’s like putting a tariff on Chinese dumplings. It’s something you can feel on an emotional and personal level.” The 15 percent tariff, announced Monday, on top of existing tariffs and taxes, is a gut punch to winemakers marketing their wares to the mushrooming legions of young, recently wealthy Chinese. It is that group, one or two levels below China’s ultrarich, that holds huge potential for California vintners. Those consumers are far more numerous than 1-percenters. And more crucially, they’re the ones driving the recent blossoming of a wine culture in China in which bottles are actually consumed rather than simply traded among elites as trophies. Mr. Honig and his business partner and wife, Stephanie, have spent a decade wooing that clientele, making a trip a year to China to pitch sommeliers in top restaurants and hotels. He has recently expanded beyond the obvious stops in Beijing and Shanghai, visiting cities like Guangzhou, in southern China. “There are people who want to spend the most, but there are also aspirational buyers,” Mr. Honig said. “You may want to buy the Rolls-Royce, but you can afford the Mercedes.” And that’s his sweet spot. His most popular cabernet goes for around $25 a bottle wholesale, and he sends more than 500 cases of it every year to a plucky Shanghai importing business started by two brothers with dual citizenship. With existing tariffs and value-added taxes mixed in, the total charge tacked on to California wine was already close to 50 percent. After the importer factors in shipping, takes its cut and passes the bottles to a hotel or retail store, which takes its cut, the Napa red ends up selling for the equivalent of around $100. An extra 15 percent charge would be brutal. “No one wants to overpay,” Mr. Honig said. “If all they’re looking at is two different bottles side by side, and we are 4/4/2018 9:45 PM China Finds California Wine Pairs Well With a Trade War - The New Yo... 3 of 5 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/business/economy/china-wine-trad... competing with Australia and Chile, that’s a big competitive disadvantage.” Chilean and New Zealand wines face no Chinese levies, thanks to free-trade agreements. Australian bottles will enter the country tariff-free next year. Larry Yang, an importer in Shanghai, said his customers liked California wines, but not enough to ignore an even higher price tag. The wine isn’t cheap as it is, he said, and if it gets pricier, he will look elsewhere. “There are so many countries producing fine wine,” he said. “I don’t have to buy relatively expensive California wine. I could choose from New Zealand, Australia, Chile and South Africa.” And Chinese drinkers have a growing array of homegrown brands to choose from. Expert winemakers have spent years harvesting cabernet sauvignon, merlot and cabernet franc varietals at the foothills of the Helan Mountains in Ningxia, a region that borders Inner Mongolia. They have started winning international awards, even beating out French favorites. Then the government began protecting its domestic players. When the European Union put tariffs on Chinese solar panels in 2013, Beijing blustered back by opening an inquiry into whether European winemakers were dumping cheap, improperly subsidized bottles onto the Chinese market. It ended the investigation a year later, after the Europeans agreed to help train Chinese winemakers. Sophisticated wine shops have sprouted up across Shanghai, the online retailer Alibaba now runs a yearly wine sale, and other sites will deliver cases to people’s doors within two days. In August, China got its first master sommelier, a distinction reserved for people who can pass a rigorous series of tests, including verbal and tasting exams. It wasn’t like this when David Pearson made his first business trip to Beijing 15 years ago, intent on selling Chinese customers on his super-premium Napa wine Opus One. The rich drank French Bordeaux if they drank wine at all. He had to make the case for his California winery, a joint venture between Robert Mondavi and 4/4/2018 9:45 PM China Finds California Wine Pairs Well With a Trade War - The New Yo... 4 of 5 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/business/economy/china-wine-trad... Baron Philippe de Rothschild. He found a natural audience. “People will buy symbols of luxury — watches, cars, expensive bottles of wine — to demonstrate they have the means to do that,” said Mr. Pearson, the Opus One chief executive. “There was no middle market. You were either spending all your money on the highest quality of wine or you couldn’t afford to buy anything other than the least expensive wine.” The change started when Xi Jinping became president in 2013 and began an anti-corruption campaign that zeroed in on illicit gift-giving. Wine imports dipped for a couple of years but then recovered as sellers began to learn how to market to a person who would buy a bottle at a time, not several cases. “The distributors who learned how to deal with consumers survived and got better at it,” said Mr. Boyce, the wine blogger. It isn’t clear how exactly the new tariffs will affect Opus One. Mr. Pearson sells the wine to a group of intermediaries in France known as negociants, who then send it to Chinese importers. It’s also unlikely that anyone willing to spend the $600 for Opus One in China would even notice the added charge. The middle-market wine buyer — with $20 or so to spare — would notice. France and Australia are already monsters in that market, sending half of all of the foreign wine that went to China last year. The United States share is just 2 percent, and it has been shrinking. The Wine Institute, which represents California growers, says that’s partly because they’re selling less for a higher price. “California has had a tough time getting into the conversation,” said David Amadia, the president of Ridge Vineyards. “It wasn’t considered a top wine region in China.” After his Geyserville zinfandel blend was served at a meeting between Mr. Xi and President Barack Obama in 2013, a flurry of new importers began asking for 1,000 cases at a time. He was initially excited about the attention. Then he realized he had no idea where it was going, or who exactly was so interested in it. 4/4/2018 9:45 PM China Finds California Wine Pairs Well With a Trade War - The New Yo... https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/business/economy/china-wine-trad... "We had concerns about gray market and counterfeiting," he said. So he rejected those orders, and says other American winemakers may also be choosing control over quantity. No one knows how much fake wine flows in China, but experts say French and Australian labels are stolen most often, and slapped on random bottles, because they are so well known and abundant. On Mr. Pearson’s desk, in Napa, he has a box of counterfeit Opus wines on display. The scammers did a terrific job on the box, he said, other than the “X” they inserted into the name Rothschild. “Part of me takes a strange amount of pride in it,” he said. “Your brand has to have enough value associated with it in order for someone to think it’s worth counterfeiting.” Ailin Tang contributed reporting. A version of this article appears in print on April 4, 2018, on Page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Pairs Well With a Trade War. © 2018 The New York Times Company 5 of 5 4/4/2018 9:45 PM
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Explanation & Answer

Attached.

Introduction

Body

Conclusion


Running head: IMPORTATION OF WINE INTO CHINA

Importation of Wine into China
Student’s Name
Course Number- Name of Course
Instructor’s Name
Date

IMPORTATION OF WINE INTO CHINA

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Importation of Wine into China
Executive Summary
China has been importing wine, but recently it has started producing its wine. The
importation of wine to China has been subjected to various changes, and the recent introduction
of retaliatory tariffs will have an impact on the sector.
Summary of the Article
Importation of wine to China from various countries has been going on for a long while.
In the past wine in China was considered as a luxury commodity and was placed in the same
class as cars and watches. The wine was expensive as we see the price of Opus One to be $600.
However, as the country develops and there is an increase in the wealthy Chinese, the de...


Anonymous
Excellent resource! Really helped me get the gist of things.

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