With the global spread of the epidemic, the security of China's global industrial chain and supply chain has become a major issue worthy of attention. How to deal with the huge challenge of maintaining the stability and sustainability of the global industrial chain and preventing the industrial chain from decoupling? This time, the Roundtable of Yangtze Industrial Economic Think Tank invited Professor Liu Zhibiao, Dean of the Yangtze River Industrial Economics Research Institute of Nanjing University, and other experts and scholars to conduct professional and in-depth discussions on the following issues: (1) The epidemic has hindered China's imports, especially from Japan, Korea and Europe, which affected the normal circulation of domestic industrial chain. Do we have any good countermeasures and suggestions in this regard? (2) The shrinking external market has hindered China's exports to the United States and Europe, affecting the global value chain embedded by Chinese enterprises, and facing the risk of "divesting of all Chinese elements" in the supply chain. How to stabilize and consolidate China's status in supply chain? (3) After the outbreak, the global industrial chain may be restructured and changed, and the epidemic may shake the existing intra-product division of labor. How should we plan and respond to this as soon as possible?


