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Richard Graham
UK Member of Parliament for Gloucester, chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary China Group
AGE:60

EDUCATION:

1986-89: Oxford University, MA in modern history

CAREER:

1993-95: Chief representative in China, Barings

1995-2010: Director of Baring Asset Management

May-November 2010: Member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee

2010 onward: Member of Parliament for Gloucester

2012 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to Indonesia

2015 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to the ASEAN economic community

2016 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to the Philippines and Malaysia

July 2015 to June 2017: Member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee

September 2017: Member of the Select Committee on Exiting the European Union

Present: Chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Groups for Indonesia, China, and Marine Energy and Tidal Lagoons

British MP hails progress, from fashion to business

Richard Graham has helped broker many important China-UK partnerships since the 1980s
Cecily Liu
Crossing the Taklimakan desert in 1993. [Photo by Charles Blackmore/For China Daily]

Graham said such collaboration brings win-win benefits. Geely has benefitted from understanding how companies work in a Western environment and used that knowledge to carry out further international expansion.

Meanwhile, the investment from Geely helped the UK's economy, he said, adding that similar China-UK collaboration opportunities are plentiful.

"The UK offering has got a huge way to go," Graham said. "We have our bank of goodwill and considerable technological power. Particularly, for a country like China, we work best on collaborative partnerships."

As China has already achieved considerable progress in its economy and other areas through 40 years of reform, Graham said now is "a very interesting time to try and reflect on the options ahead".

Within the context of the United States backtracking from its globalization leadership role and the UK facing uncertainties as it leaves the EU, some analysts have pointed out that the time may be ripe for China to fill the newly created vacuum in global leadership.

Graham acknowledged the benefit of China's growing participation on the global stage. However, he pointed out that China should not "try to accelerate global ambitions and risk not focusing enough on the depth of reforms still needed today".

He added that the UK will continue to support China on its road to internationalization. "We've always been positive, always wanted to encourage China to participate in the global space," he said.

 

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Richard Graham
UK Member of Parliament for Gloucester, chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary China Group
AGE:60

EDUCATION:

1986-89: Oxford University, MA in modern history

CAREER:

1993-95: Chief representative in China, Barings

1995-2010: Director of Baring Asset Management

May-November 2010: Member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee

2010 onward: Member of Parliament for Gloucester

2012 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to Indonesia

2015 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to the ASEAN economic community

2016 onward: Prime minister's trade envoy to the Philippines and Malaysia

July 2015 to June 2017: Member of the Work and Pensions Select Committee

September 2017: Member of the Select Committee on Exiting the European Union

Present: Chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Groups for Indonesia, China, and Marine Energy and Tidal Lagoons

British MP hails progress, from fashion to business

Richard Graham has helped broker many important China-UK partnerships since the 1980s
Cecily Liu
Crossing the Taklimakan desert in 1993. [Photo by Charles Blackmore/For China Daily]

Graham said such collaboration brings win-win benefits. Geely has benefitted from understanding how companies work in a Western environment and used that knowledge to carry out further international expansion.

Meanwhile, the investment from Geely helped the UK's economy, he said, adding that similar China-UK collaboration opportunities are plentiful.

"The UK offering has got a huge way to go," Graham said. "We have our bank of goodwill and considerable technological power. Particularly, for a country like China, we work best on collaborative partnerships."

As China has already achieved considerable progress in its economy and other areas through 40 years of reform, Graham said now is "a very interesting time to try and reflect on the options ahead".

Within the context of the United States backtracking from its globalization leadership role and the UK facing uncertainties as it leaves the EU, some analysts have pointed out that the time may be ripe for China to fill the newly created vacuum in global leadership.

Graham acknowledged the benefit of China's growing participation on the global stage. However, he pointed out that China should not "try to accelerate global ambitions and risk not focusing enough on the depth of reforms still needed today".

He added that the UK will continue to support China on its road to internationalization. "We've always been positive, always wanted to encourage China to participate in the global space," he said.