twofish-quant said:
It's true that most educated Chinese can speak/read English It's a required language for college, and I know people in China that have essentially native English ability since they have been taught the language since kindergarten if not earlier (i.e. there is a huge market in China for English-speaking nannies).
But that's one reason to learn Chinese. The problem here is that in a poker game, you end up being in a really bad disadvantage, if they can read your cards, but you can't read theirs.
Despite English being a compulsory subject in China, you would be surprised at just how low the level of fluency of most of its students in China is.
Take the top scorers on the English portion of the national college entrance exam and sit them down to have a conversation with a native English speaker. Beyond the simplest of speaking tasks, many, if not most, simply wouldn't be able to understand you and contribute to the conversation. Bring up a news article that they themselves have just read and have them summarize it in English. Again, a large number of them would simply fail at the task.
Their English skills, in order of highest to lowest proficiency, are reading, writing(composition), listening, and speaking.
The Chinese who attain high levels of English fluency at the various skills(reading, listening, speaking) generally do so only after spending a significant amount of time in an English speaking country. i.e., most only learn any type of functional English after attending university in a country foreign to theirs.
I think there may be an illusion that China is full of fantastic English speakers. The truth is, percentage wise, there just aren't many that are very good at all, even after years and years of forced study. The illusion comes from the fact that there are just so darn many Chinese, so of course some of them will develop excellent English skills. And the ones you see in America, Britain, Australia, etc. will be the ones with the best English. That leaves you seeing only an unrepresentative sample.
As far as the poker analogy, it is a very good reason why people should be learning Chinese. I just don't think it is at all a compelling reason for the OP to learn it.
The time commitment required for learning Chinese is, by itself, a good reason to rule out learning it. That is, assuming you want to learn it within the next few years. It simply won't happen unless you can sacrifice many, many hours per week for years on end. Stick with a language close to what you already know. It will come with significantly less effort.
Oh, and even if we can make the prediction that Chinese is the next superpower, that does not necessarily mean anything in regards to the best language for working in the aerospace industry.