Keith Bradsher

Naum Kazhdan/The New York Times

Keith Bradsher is the Hong Kong bureau chief of The New York Times, covering Asian business, economic, political and science news.

In 2013, he was part of the team awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting “for its penetrating look into business practices by Apple and other technology companies that illustrates the darker side of a changing global economy for workers and consumers.”

He has been a reporter for the newspaper since 1989; previous postings include as Detroit bureau chief; Washington correspondent for domestic economics; Washington correspondent for trade and international economics; New York business reporter for telecommunications; and New York business reporter for airlines and freight transportation.

He won the Asia Society’s Osborn Elliott Award and the Overseas Press Club’s Malcolm Forbes Award in 2010, for coverage of clean energy in China. He won the George Polk Award for national reporting for his coverage of sport utility vehicles in 1997 and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize the same year. Public Affairs published his book on S.U.V.’s, “High and Mighty,” in 2002 and it won the New York Public Library’s Helen Bernstein Award.



Articles

China Fines Volkswagen and Chrysler for Antitrust Violations

Regulators imposed penalties totaling $46 million, saying the automakers conspired to keep prices high on cars and replacement parts.

September 12, 2014, Friday

Looking Beyond China, Some Companies Shift Personnel

As businesses pay more attention to Southeast Asia, some are relocating executives to Singapore.

September 10, 2014, Wednesday

National Goals Still Murky After Zhejiang Church Razings

The pulling down of crosses and churches in Zhejiang Province could point to the beginnings of a national campaign against Christianity, according to an adviser to the Anglican archbishop in Hong Kong.

September 2, 2014, Tuesday

China Authorizes Local Governments to Issue Bonds

The lifting of a 20-year ban represents a fundamentally different approach to a chronic problem: how to finance projects like roads and bridges without unsustainable levels of debt.

September 2, 2014, Tuesday

On Hong Kong, Democracy and Protecting the Rich

In an unusual theoretical leap, a leading Chinese academic said democracy in Hong Kong must be limited in order to protect the interests of its capitalist class.

August 29, 2014, Friday

Hong Kong Told to Strive for a ‘Less Perfect’ Democracy

A leading Chinese scholar was sent to Hong Kong to make Beijing’s case for how the territory should choose its top official.

August 29, 2014, Friday

In China, Dueling Scholarship Programs From Billionaires

Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group, and Zhang Xin, the chief executive of SOHO China, will bankroll scholarships for students in China.

August 28, 2014, Thursday

Gift-Bearing Officials Try to Lure Chinese Factories Inland

With foreign investment falling, inland provinces are in a cutthroat competition to attract local industries.

August 28, 2014, Thursday

Natural Gas Production Falls Short in China

The nation, facing severe pollution from coal and a rising dependence on energy imports, has had limited success in extracting natural gas from coal and shale.

August 22, 2014, Friday

China Fines Japanese Auto Parts and Bearings Makers in Price Rigging

A regulator fined 10 of 12 companies a total of $200 million, a record for China. The penalties coincided with deteriorating relations between Tokyo and Beijing.

August 21, 2014, Thursday

THE iECONOMY

A series examining challenges posed by increasingly globalized high-tech industries.

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