Chinese Economics Thread

AndrewS

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You also have to account for capital investments, working practices, and the type of work involved - as these all impact productivity.

Overall, there is economic convergence as the much larger populations of the developing world catche up, but we can also see that most are stuck in the middle-income trap.

The exceptions being a number of European countries and also the East Asian Economic Tigers who are similar to China in many ways.
 

ahojunk

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2016-05-28 11:01:46 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: Meng Xue

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Official data shows the total value of goods transported by China's logistics services increased 5.9 percent in the January-April period. [File Photo: jctrans.com]

The latest official data shows the total value of goods transported by China's logistics services increased 5.9 percent in the January-April period to 68 trillion yuan (10.4 trillion US dollars), compared to the same period a year ago.

The growth rate was 0.1 percentage points lower than in the first quarter.

The Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said market structure continued to improve although logistics growth pace slowed down.

In the meantime, the total value of industrial products transported by logistics services grew 6 percent in April, down 0.8 percentage points from the previous month.

The logistics demand for the mining and high energy-consuming sectors slowed down while that for the hi-tech industry kept a rapid growth pace.
 

Yvrch

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May 30, 2016
China’s one-child policy relaxed sees fertility clinics rush as predicted here

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putting heavy pressure on clinics and breaking down past sensitivities, and even shame, about the issue.

The rise in in-vitro fertilization points to the deferred dreams of many parents who long wanted a second child, but were prevented by a strict population control policy in place for more than 30 years.

Dr Liu Jiaen, who runs a private hospital in Beijing treating infertility through IVF, in which an egg and sperm are combined in a laboratory dish and the resulting embryo transferred to a woman’s uterus.

Liu estimated that the numbers of women coming to him for IVF had risen by 20 per cent since the relaxation of the policy, which came into effect at the start of the year. Before, the average age of his patients was about 35. Now most of them were older than 40 and some of the women were fast approaching 50, he said.

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Women in China who are now older were banned from having babies but now will be allowed to have children. Many chinese woman would not be able to conceive naturally and would use IVF. In 2014, NBF saw IVF going to 2-8 million per year over the next 10 years.

Over the past two decades, IVF technology has developed rapidly in China, where about 10 per cent of couples are estimated to need the procedure to conceive. In 2014, 700,000 women had IVF treatments, according to the health commission’s Women’s and Children’s Department, which said in a statement that demand for all types of fertility treatment had risen following the policy relaxation, including the use of traditional Chinese medicine.

The second part of the NBF prediction is that women in China using IVF would begin to use embryo selection. Embryo selection based upon intelligence for invitro fertilized (IVF) babies is becoming possible and we are on the cusp of genetic engineering. IVF babies are more easily embryo selected and accessible for genetic modification. This would provide an economic boost to China in 20-30 years and the beginnings of a significant societal shift.

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Blitzo

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On debt... a comprehensive analysis by HSBC

full write up here, grab a drink, it's 28 pages long:
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abstract posted below

China Inside Out ECONOMICS
CHINA

How worrying is China’s debt?

Recent data have been better than expected. The delivery of the stimulus promised at the National People’s Congress (NPC) in March should help sustain this rebound into 2H 2016. And yet pessimism about China’s economy has not gone away. The focus has shifted from growth to structural issues, such as the debt burden. Some argue that China’s debt-to-GDP ratio has already reached a point that could lead to systemic risk and derail growth. We disagree. Simply comparing China’s debt-to-GDP ratio with other countries is misleading, in our view. It is important to put China’s debt into perspective.

China’s debt-to-GDP ratio is indeed high, reaching 250% at the end of last year. Yet this must be seen in the context of China’s unusually high saving rate, which has
stayed above 40% for two decades. Savings are not distributed evenly in the economy. The household sector is a net saver – families save more than they can
invest – while the corporate sector is a net borrower. The result is that the higher the saving rate, the higher the borrowing. Our regression analysis using debt data from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) suggests that every 1ppt increase in the national saving rate implies a 3.6ppt rise in the debt level. From this perspective, China’s debt levels are consistent with its high saving rate.

Another factor is the structure of the financial system. With banks dominating, the household sector’s surplus savings have been transferred into corporate investment
through bank lending rather than equity financing, leading to faster debt accumulation. Equity financing accounted for less than 5% of total financing in the economy in the last decade. The rest was via debt financing, with bank lending accounting for over 70%.

Our analysis suggests that China’s debt levels have not reached a crisis threshold. This implies Beijing can and should continue to ease policy to fight deflation. Some worry that stimulus will allow Beijing to “kick the reform can down the road”, but the data so far suggest that most of the easing has gone to support needed infrastructure investment and mortgage lending. Investment in sectors with overcapacity is slowing. We believe reform and reflation are not contradictory. In fact, as policy easing can help contain the risks of a ‘debt deflation trap’, it can help facilitate the reform agenda by making it easier to reallocate labour and capital resources in the restructuring process.
 

ahojunk

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2016-05-28 20:29:16 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: Zhang Guanghao

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China will invest 4.7 trillion yuan in major transport projects to give more reliable transportation access to China's more remote areas. [Photo: Xinhua]

A massive spending plan has been outlined to try to give more reliable transportation access to China's more remote areas.

As part of a new 3-year outline for transportation development, over 300 new projects have been laid out.

Among them are a significant number of projects to connect this country's more isolated, and often impoverished, regions with regional hubs through road and rail.

Chinese authorities are planning to spend 4.7-trillion yuan - around 725-billion US dollars - on the projects over the next 3-years.

Zheng Jian with the National Development and Reform Commission says the massive spending plans are part of a pledge to pull everyone in China above the poverty line by 2020.

"We think access to more reliable forms of movement is the linch-pin to helping people out of poverty. This is why we've incorporated rural road construction in our new plans, which will link these remote areas to regional hubs in the next 3-years."

China's unique topography, particularly in the south and southwestern parts of the country, has left numerous communities somewhat isolated from the rest of the country.

This has limited their access to government support, leaving them toward the bottom of the development curve.

The new transportation spending plan also includes projects to create better links in China's major centers, including inter-city links in the Yangtze and Pearl River Delta regions, as well as throughout the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area.
 

Yvrch

Junior Member
Registered Member
Nick Lardy's piece.

Financial Times

June 1, 2016 5:41 pm
No need to panic, China’s banks are in pretty good shape

Nicholas Lardy

The country is not vulnerable to a financial crisis such as Asia in 1997, writes Nicholas Lardy.

The extraordinarily rapid rise of debt in China, particularly in the corporate sector, has given rise to fears that the country may be unable to avoid a banking crisis that would slow its growth and have substantial negative spillovers on the global economy.

Please continue to read the rest in the following link ...

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The writer is Anthony M Solomon Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute
 

AndrewS

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Registered Member
Wall Street Journal article

The Future of Banking Is in China
Tech companies use internet payment systems as a wedge into an array of money-management services
...
In a living example of what U.S.-based fintech companies can only aspire to, China’s giant technology companies are using their internet payment systems as a wedge into an array of money-management services, prying deposits and fee-generating business away from the country’s banks.

A recent Citigroup report says financial-technology companies in China already have a similar number of clients as the country’s major banks.

Read more:
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ahojunk

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China.org.cn, June 2, 2016

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The Yangshan port area in the Shanghai free trade zone. [Photo/Xinhua]

China's foreign service trade reached US$257.02 billion during the first four months of the year, up 16.8 percent year on year, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

Service trade accounted for 18.9 percent of the country's total imports and exports during the January-April period. The proportion was 3.5 percentage points higher than 2015, according to a statement on the ministry's website.

Distinct from merchandise trade, trade in services refers to the sale and delivery of intangible products such as transportation, tourism, telecommunications, construction, advertising, computing and accounting.

China is aiming to adjust the structure of its foreign service trade so that it is based on more sophisticated exports, and the data suggested it is succeeding in doing so. Exports of telecommunications, computing and information services grew at a rapid rate of 19.1 percent to US$8.84 billion during the first four months.

The European Union, the United States and Japan were among China's major trading partners in terms of service trade.

China's foreign service trade volume grew from US$362.4 billion in 2011 to US$713 billion in 2015, doubling the average international growth speed, earlier data showed.

The country has set the target of lifting its service trade volume to over US$1 trillion by 2020.
 

ahojunk

Senior Member
Wow! Most users in other countries are not even on 4G yet, but in China there are more than 500 mln

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Xinhua, May 31, 2016

There are now more than 500 million 4G users in China thanks to government measures, a minister told a conference Tuesday.

China owns the world's largest 4G network with more than 2 million 4G base stations, Industry and Information Technology Minister Miao Wei told the First Global 5G Event in Beijing.

The country's mobile Internet users processed more than 4 million terabytes of data last year, 103 percent more than the previous year, according to Miao.

China has formed a 5G R&D team to research and test the technology with a view to commercialize it by 2020.
 

Qi_1528

New Member
Registered Member
Nick Lardy's piece.

Financial Times

June 1, 2016 5:41 pm
No need to panic, China’s banks are in pretty good shape

Nicholas Lardy

The country is not vulnerable to a financial crisis such as Asia in 1997, writes Nicholas Lardy.

The extraordinarily rapid rise of debt in China, particularly in the corporate sector, has given rise to fears that the country may be unable to avoid a banking crisis that would slow its growth and have substantial negative spillovers on the global economy.

Please continue to read the rest in the following link ...

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The writer is Anthony M Solomon Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute

I'm not one to talk doom and gloom about the Chinese economy, but I'm not sure I buy this argument. For example, Japan had a high savings rate too before it ran into debt problems.

The only thing I can see that really saves China is the fact that the vast majority of its debt is held domestically, and the major banks are all state controlled. Bad debts can be written off with much greater ease than they can in a system dominated by private banks. The question is if the government is prepared to use these levers, or if factional disagreements will get in the way. It seems like certain people in the policy making establishment has fallen for a lot of neoliberal fallacies, such as thinking private debt is not a big deal, and deregulation is always a good thing.
 
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