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Re: Why China is headed for a fall

By: capt_nemo in ROUND | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 14 Nov 11 5:47 AM | 40 view(s)
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Msg. 36289 of 45651
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Sounds like the ghost towns they have built lately. Not a soul living in any of them........




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Realist - Everybody in America is soft, and hates conflict. The cure for this, both in politics and social life, is the same -- hardihood. Give them raw truth.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Why China is headed for a fall
By: Decomposed
in ROUND
Mon, 14 Nov 11 5:09 AM
Msg. 36288 of 45651

Why China is headed for a fall

by Tim Staermose


November 10, 2011
Manila, Philippines


There’s a key concept in economics called the law of diminishing returns. It sounds complex, but it’s actually very easy to understand.

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What China has been doing for years now, is the equivalent of having built thousands of bridges, each one providing diminishing returns to its economy. Even more concerning, China has been building these economic bridges, so to speak, even though when they weren’t necessary.

Consider that the share of fixed asset investment in China, at more than 65%, is the highest for any major economy in modern history. What’s more, China’s own electricity authority recently reported that there are 64.5 million dwellings in China where absolutely no electricity is being used. The investments they’re making are producing little return.

When I was back in Wuhan this summer, I saw exactly this phenomenon. You may never have heard of it, but Wuhan is an important commercial city of more than 10 million.

Barreling along one side of an 8-lane highway towards the airport with hardly another vehicle in sight, we passed apartment block after apartment block, sitting empty like a construction graveyard.

Eventually we crossed a gigantic new bridge over the Yangtze River. Barely half a mile downstream, another equally vast and expansive bridge was nearing completion… and others further down the river.

I was astounded. There was no traffic. No commercial activity. No people. No tolls. Just empty space, and a lot of ridiculously expensive bridges. It was something out of a bizarre zombie flick.

There are thousands of similar projects all over China, many funded by debt. And, with no direct cash flows earned back and the ongoing maintenance required, these infrastructure projects have become huge liabilities on the Chinese government’s balance sheet.

The conventional wisdom is that China’s economy will continue to grow 8% or 9% per year indefinitely. And a lot of people are drinking this Kool-Aid. It sounds a lot to me like the other old songs that we’ve heard over the past few years, like “real estate always goes up in value.” Famous last words.

I live by another rule: “All booms bust. The only question is when.” And China has had one of the biggest economic booms in history over the past decades. In fact, per capita consumption of cement in China is at the same levels as Taiwan and Japan right before those infrastructure-boom economies hit a brick wall.
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Full story: http://www.sovereignman.com/expat/why-china-is-headed-for-a-fall/


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