Chinese Economics Thread

Blackstone

Brigadier
Early bird gets the worm; money talks, bull shyat walks. China nailed it on both accounts in their recent Eastern Europe venture.

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BEIJING, Nov 6 (Reuters) - China has set up a 10 billion euro ($11.15 billion) investment fund to finance projects in Central and Eastern Europe, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China said in a statement issued on Sunday.

The China-Central Eastern Europe fund will be run by Sino-CEE Financial Holdings Ltd, a company established by the bank earlier this year.

The company was formally launched by Premier Li Keqiang during his visit to Riga, Latvia, on Saturday.

The fund is aiming to raise 50 billion euros in project finance for sectors such as infrastructure, high-tech manufacturing and consumer goods, the bank said.

While targeting Central and Eastern Europe, it could extend to the rest of Europe and other regions if relevant to China-Central and Eastern Europe co-operation, it said.

The fund will be government-backed but will operate under business principles and be guided by the market, it added.

Central and Eastern Europe are part of China's modern Silk Road project where Beijing is hoping to carve out new export markets for its companies as the domestic economy slows.

"China has the advantage of cost-effective equipment and capacity while Central and Eastern European countries need to raise the level of industrialisation," said Premier Li in a speech reported by state news agency Xinhua.

But financing is a major challenge, he added, calling for diversified project financing channels to include institutions such as Beijing's Silk Road Fund.

Li also called for more co-operation on 'green economy' projects, such as wind and solar farms, and said China was keen to import high-quality farm goods.

China's Vice Commerce Minister Gao Yan said last year that Chinese companies have already invested more than $5 billion in central and eastern European countries.

But China's push for more investment at the gateway to the European Union comes amid growing calls in top Eurozone economy Germany to restrict Chinese investment in some sectors.

Riga is hosting a summit of leaders from 16 central and eastern European countries and China, a group dubbed '16+1' by Beijing.

China Life Insurance and Fosun Group are also involved in managing the fund, added the statement. ($1 = 0.8973 euros)
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
Interesting article on OBOR gaining momentum and maybe taking off, big. I hope President Trump takes note and get in on the action.

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“They humiliated me a year ago,” began Karl Gheysen, the then-CEO of the Khorgos Gateway dry port on the Kazakh/China border, in November of 2015.

He then told me a story about a talk that he attempted to give to an audience of senior executives of big rail companies at a conference in Europe a year earlier.

“I started talking about Khorgos and Kazakhstan, and the general of the executives interrupted and said, ‘We’ve heard this before, for the last 15 years we’ve heard Kazakhstan this and Kazakhstan that. We’ve all heard about the Silk Road. Go back to your playground and make something, and when you have something come back here and show me the volume!’”

That about summed up the general attitude in Europe at that time towards the emerging network of economic corridors that had been dubbed the New Silk Road. Since the late 1990s, the governments of Central Asia along with a few upstart investors and think tanks had been promoting a vision of a reconnected Asia, but what had actually been developing on the ground was haphazard at best — a nascent dry port here, a new highway to nowhere there.
The dry port in Lodz, Poland where Hatrans Logistics processes China-Europe rail cargo. Image: Wade Shepard.

Then in 2013 Chinese President Xi Jinping announced the trillion-plus dollar Belt and Road initiative, and the dormant Silk Road concept was suddenly awakened. Countries like Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Serbia, Poland, and Georgia rapidly began doubling down on their investments in trans-Eurasian infrastructure, building ports, special economic zones, highways, railways, and commercial centers in preparation for China showing up with their bags of money.

At the end of 2016, Silk Road development is booming. In addition to billions of dollars worth of new infrastructure rising up throughout Eurasia, the necessary political, economic, and financial frameworks are also being established. What once seemed to be the delusional dreams of Central Asian despots is now a raw reality that’s putting a geographic realm that covers 70% of the world’s population, 75% of energy resources, and 70% of GDP on the same economic trajectory.

Gheysen ended his story with a wry grin on his face. “Nobody believed it,” he said. “Nobody, nobody, nobody believed it.”

Part of the problem with China’s Belt and Road initiative and the broader New Silk Road endeavor in Europe was the lack of institutionalization. There was no clear power structure, no defining architecture, no overarching legal regime. It wasn’t a trade pact, it wasn’t a treaty organization, and it wasn’t a customs zone. It was basically a loosely adjoined, multifaceted array of bilateral and multilateral partnerships interlinking the EU, the Eurasian Economic Union, Eastern Europe, the lower Caucasus states, Iran, and ASEAN with China that would be held together by a newly enhanced transportation and energy grid. It was just a network, and as is the case with just about any network, defining it is about as easy as squeezing a drop of mercury between your fingers. It was something European policy makers had never seen before, and many were skeptical.

“Initially,” began Moritz Rudolf from the MERICS institute in Germany, “the main debates within Europe were focused on the question, ‘What is OBOR?’ OBOR, as a flexible vision, without being embedded in an institutional framework, as well as the multi-level approach by the Chinese government to promote the Silk Road Initiative, was very difficult to grasp among European policy makers.”

Now, few are laughing about the New Silk Road in Europe.

“The biggest reason for that [the change in mentality] is that on the westbound the trains are running,” Kees Kuijken of New Silk Way Logistics explained. “It’s obvious that the Chinese government wants the Silk Way connection overland into Europe, including Russia, and if the Chinese government really wants something, most of the time it really happens.”

To obtain this paradigm shift many European companies had to work feverishly to convince the market that this new connection actually worked, was secure, and reliable.

“The biggest challenge in the past was to get rid of some rumors,” recalled Nicolai Noeckler from Trans-Eurasia Logistics. “In the past, some people said ‘Oh no, come on, I don’t want to ship my cargo via Russia.’ They heard stories from a couple of decades ago and they were not really ready to do business via Russia. So the reliability of the railway product itself was the main task in the past, and it will be also the main task in the future to tell clients that to use rail on a really long distance [transport] is as safe as using a vessel or an airplane.”

Far from being a pipeline solely designed to dump Chinese products onto the European market, the New Silk Road is offering European manufacturers a new way to get their products to the booming consumer markets on the other side of Eurasia. Taking advantage of this opportunity was a key ambition for the city of Lodz, in central Poland.

Having once served as an epicenter of textile manufacturing, Lodz had recently fallen upon rough times — most of its factories have long closed down and its population is in decline, with nearby Warsaw sapping the city of its prime cuts of human capital. Being located at the crossroads of key north-south and east-west transport corridors, Lodz began looking for ways to rebuild its economy by leveraging its geographic position.

“Before the trains started coming to Lodz, I visited a Forbes fair in Guangzhou. That was in the year 2010,” recalled Witold Stepien, the senator of Lodz region “This is where out fascination with China started.”

At this Forbes convention, Stepien saw an exhibit by China’s western Sichuan province, was impressed by what they were developing, and subsequently engaged in a partnership with the province’s government.

These formal relations led to one of the first regular rail lines between China and Europe being established in 2012. The train would run from Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province, to Lodz, and its creation was driven by a joint partnership between the two local governments, Dell, and a Lodz-based freight forwarding firm called Hatrans Logistics. This rail line essentially connected Dell’s manufacturing operations in Chengdu with those in Lodz, and presented one of those much coveted “win-win” scenarios.

“Many people in the beginning said, ‘You will see, it will never go. It will be just two weeks, one month,’ something like that,” Stawomir Knap of Hatrans Logistics said. “But now it’s been more than two years. It’s working, oh yeah, it’s working.”

But Lodz was not content with just being a transshipment depot for trans-continental goods.

“When the trains started arriving we realized it was a great opportunity for our region for further development,” Stepien said. “Last year, 50 trains filled with foodstuffs from our region went to China. Foodstuffs like sweets, alcohol, and dairy products. The plan for the next year is that 500 trains from China will come to Lodz and 500 trains from our region will go to China.”

Apart from local food products — which are severely hamstrung by Russian sanctions — Lodz has established a textile manufacturing operation, which specializes in high-end fashion for the Chinese market, as well as a plant that produces televisions which sends its wares eastbound.

This ambition to develop more equitable trade relations with China by increasing eastbound volumes along the corridors of the New Silk Road gave birth to a company called New Silk Way Logistics, a joint venture between three of Europe’s largest freight forwarding companies, Essers, Wagenborg, and KLG Europe.

The idea for this joint venture was put forward by Ronald Kleijwegt of HP, who developed the first regularly scheduled train between China and Europe in 2012, pushed Unit 45 to innovate a new type of self-supporting shipping container specifically for extreme long distance rail freight, and has been the main architect behind the trans-Eurasia rail product.
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
Continued from previous post...

HP is currently the largest rail shipper of products going westbound from China to Europe, but filling the returning, eastbound containers has always proved problematic. According to New Silk Way Logistics, less than 10% of westbound containers are reloaded with cargo for their return trip east. Solving this problem was essential not just because of the obvious political ramifications of a trade imbalance but also because transporting empty shipping containers across a continent is an additional expense and, to put it simply, a waste. So Ronald and HP began providing the political support necessary for New Silk Way Logistics to pack containers full of European products and get them back to China.

According to Kuijken, European pharmaceutical, chemical, automotive, luxury, as well as agriculture and food companies are jumping in.

“So three competitors of each other are putting things together and they will make one dedicated joint venture together for the Silk Route,” said Karl Gheysen. “If these things start happening — a joint venture here, a joint venture there — it’s going to explode, it’s going to go massive.”

Karl Gheysen has not rested since he successfully set up the Khorgos Gateway dry port in Kazakhstan. He is now working for KTZ, Kazakhstan’s national railway, on a new mission to be the brand’s flag bearer in Europe. It may sound like history repeating itself, but after spending three years building one of the predominant stations of the New Silk Road in the east, he is now doing the same in the west.

“The China side has been activated,” Gheysen said. “The hardware, the dry port, and rail links in Kazakhstan are done. Now the next step we need to focus on is Europe. We’re going to build the backfill from Europe to China, north and south, and then you start connecting all these dots, and all these dots will align.”

Xi Jinping has also been busy weaving Europe into his traveling Belt and Road jamboree, recently visiting Serbia, Poland, and the Czech Republic, signing billions of dollars worth of bilateral trade deals, while Chinese Premier Li Keqiang was recently in Latvia for a meeting of the 16+1 and Russia, further laying down the political foundations of this pole-shifting initiative.
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“The moment is there to start pushing for Europe,” Gheysen declared. “Ronald from HP said, ‘Karl, now we have what we’ve been hoping for for years. Now suddenly everybody is listening to us. Suddenly, everybody woke up.’”
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
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Another one of Obama's brilliant strategy dead in the water
TPP was a bad strategy, because opposite of Western propaganda, its primary objective wasn't to promote high-end trade and link wide areas of Asia and the Americas, but to partner with the security part of efforts to contain China, through encirclement. The plan was meant to force China back to accepting American primacy as basis of the Asian order, not only militarily (which US still enjoys), but economically too.

On the economic front, TPP's demise wouldn't harm Asian free trade, because there's already the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), and Beijing is organizing the even bigger and more ambitious Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP). Without the TPP, FTAAP is the only game in town, and given Trump's hostility to free trade, US voluntarily cedes economic integration to the PRC. Unwise. Very unwise. And bad for long-term American national interests.
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
Speaking of the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific, Xi Jinping is wasting no time making hay while the sun shines. This one really gives me headaches, because while the Trump administration puts a torch to American leadership in globalization, China is doing all it can to sustain globalization and make free trade their competitive edge. Good bye Britton woods.

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China will seek support for a Beijing-led Asia-Pacific free trade area at a regional summit in Peru later this month, Chinese officials said on Thursday, after Donald Trump's U.S. election win dashed hopes for a U.S.-led free trade pact.

During his election campaign Trump took a protectionist stance on trade issues and labeled the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) championed by President Barack Obama a "disaster". There is now little chance of it coming up for vote in Washington before his inauguration in January.

Obama had framed TPP, which excluded China, as an effort to write Asia's trade rules before Beijing could, establishing U.S. economic leadership in the region as part of his "pivot to Asia".

Briefing journalists ahead of President Xi Jinping's departure for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Peru from Nov. 19-20, China's Vice Foreign Minister Li Baodong warned of the rise of protectionism and said the region needed a free trade agreement as soon as possible.

"Trade and investment protectionism is rearing its head, and Asia-Pacific faces insufficient momentum for internal growth, and difficulties in advancing reforms," Li said.

"China believes we should set a new and very practical working plan, to positively respond to the expectations of industry, and sustain momentum and establish a free trade area in Asia-Pacific at an early date," Li said.

Aside from Peru, Xi will also make state visits to Chile and Ecuador during a week-long trip to Latin America. Peru and Chile are both party to the now endangered TPP.

China has proposed the Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific (FTAAP) and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which some observers see as competitors to the TPP.

Li said Xi's attendance showed China's "confidence in promoting the FTAAP process".

"China is always positively advancing work on its own regional free-trade strategy. We, indeed, are continuously and positively advancing RCEP negotiations," China's deputy international trade representative Zhang Xiangchen told the briefing.

RCEP groups the 10 members of the Association of South East Asian Nations plus China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand, but not the United States.

Beijing had feared the United States would use the TPP to either force it to open markets by signing up or else to isolate it from other regional economies.

Some see the demise of the TPP as an opportunity emerging for Beijing from Trump's surprise victory, which also brings greater uncertainty for U.S.-China relations and the regional balance of power.

Ruan Zongze, a former Chinese diplomat now with the China Institute of International Studies, said the TPP would be the "first casualty" of Trump's election.

Since China isn't in that bloc, we don't have anything to lose," Ruan said.
 

B.I.B.

Captain
Speaking of the Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific, Xi Jinping is wasting no time making hay while the sun shines. This one really gives me headaches, because while the Trump administration puts a torch to American leadership in globalization, China is doing all it can to sustain globalization and make free trade their competitive edge. Good bye Britton woods.

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Countries like NZ and Australia already have free trade agreements with China, and are members of the RCEP led by China. TTP would have met the ultimate desire of both counties which was access to the North American market. So I guess its back to bilateral trade talks….. sigh

Actually China was invited to join the TTP in the beginning but declined. An attempt to join later was rejected on a variety of reasons. Eg It was felt in some quarters that in the interim China under Xi had moved China away from a domestic economy that was compatible with a rules based open trading system which was at the centre of the TTP

Therefore to come up with a direct alternative similar to what the TTP offers means, China would have to be willing to incorporate a higher standard than what the RCEP has.
 
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advill

Junior Member
It is enlightening that China is vigorously encouraging global free trade and investments. This is a pragmatic way to go, and helps check serious threats from ISIS (Islamic Extremists) that is becoming more apparent/"growing" in several South East Asian countries. The ISIS threats could eventually be intensified along the borders of China's N.W. Provinces. China's recent investments/assistance in the Philippines and Malaysia have helped elevate some major economic problems. These 2 countries also face serious ISIS threats from their own local Jihadists groups. Many are returning from Syria and Iraq, where ISIS is retreating from their occupying bases, as they are pursued by Syrian, Iraqi and other friendly forces. These ISIS returnees also posing serious threats to Indonesia, Singapore, Myanmar and even to Australia. Besides robust military/security responses, the Economic well being and progress of people in our region a best solution i.e. "Keeping evil thoughts and desires away, & give people hope to progress and prosper". China is playing a leading role as of now.
 

Janiz

Senior Member
It is enlightening that China is vigorously encouraging global free trade and investments.
Wow, money pouring out of China... Up until now it was against the rules and illegal. Now that's a new fashion! Probably coming out from Mr Xi's anti-crruption campaign. Those who weren't sanctioned by the state and did that against the rules are into the famous campaign. Those smart who waited are now free to go!

That's the truth.
 
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