Chinese Economics Thread

Martian

Senior Member
Trade volume between Fujian and Taiwan are "up 98 percent from...last year"

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Trade volume between Fujian and Taiwan are "up 98 percent from the same period of last year."

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"Fujian-Taiwan trade volume nearly 1 billion USD in April
2010-05-20 09:15:42
Source: People′s Daily Online

Trade volume between Fujian and Taiwan totaled 3.3 billion U.S. dollars from January to April, up 98 percent from the same period of last year.

And the figure in April alone amounted to 990 million U.S. dollars, which was the best month on record since 2009. It increased 90.4 percent compared to the same period last year, and 5.6 percent compared to last month.

Imports from Fujian to Taiwan during January to April reached 2.7 billion U.S. dollars, 1.1 times higher than the same period of last year. Exports reached 620 million U.S. dollars, up 59 percent."

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By the way, Taiwan and Fujian share the same Chinese dialect.

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Taiwan and Fujian are adjacent and separated by a mere 90 miles of water.

Taiwanese and Fujianese are brothers and share the same dialect. When I publicly speak Min Nan with my mother in the United States, Fujianese have informed my mother that they can understand our conversation.

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"The Southern Min languages, or Min Nan (simplified Chinese: 闽南语; traditional Chinese: 閩南語; pinyin: Mǐnnán yǔ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Bân-lâm-gí/Bân-lâm-gú; literally "Southern Fujian language"), are a family of Chinese languages spoken in southern Fujian and its neighboring regions, in Taiwan, and by descendants of emigrants from these areas in diaspora."
 
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Martian

Senior Member
China has the fastest economic growth in world history

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One more to go...

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"China has the fastest economic growth in world history

Hundreds of billions of dollars are invested presently by China in natural resources in Africa, Australia, Brazil, Russia, Iraq, Europe, Canada, East Asia, and US

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Sahit Muja

PRLog (Press Release) – Feb 25, 2011 – Sahit Muja: China has the fastest economic growth in the world's history.

China's economic growth in the past 20 years and its GDP growth averaged 10 percent. The Chinese economy is now 550 percent larger than it was in 1990. In 2009, China surpassed Germany and in 2010, surpassed Japan to become the second-largest economy in the world. China will overtake the United States to become the largest economy in the world. China has averaged 10 percent growth annually since it embarked on market reforms in 1978.

The remarkable economic growth in China in the last 10 years have changed the landscape of China and the global economy. Economic growth is not only important to China, it is also becoming increasingly important to the world. Chinese power has increased considerably in economy, military, geopolitical, trade and financial affairs. China is indeed one of the world’s greatest power. China's economic growth accelerated to 10 percent this year.

China is the world’s fastest-growing major economy. China is the world's largest producer of steel and world's largest consumer of copper, iron ore, aluminum, ferrochrome, chrome ore and nickel.

Hundreds of billions of dollars are invested presently by China in natural resources in Africa, Australia, Brazil, Russia, Iraq, Europe, Canada, East Asia, and US. This is a very Chinese approach and sadly most American’s perceive this as a negative gesture, rather than positive. China has made remarkable gains in the past 30 years and as a people, they are very proud to be Chinese and very proud of where China stands today.

America seem to be suffering from “sour grapes” lately; in that China is actually doing something better than they. I have had the privilege of living in China and the U.S. Both countries have some strong similarities. Both Chinese and American people are hard working, intelligent and have big dreams for a better life. China and the U.S. would be "better off" if we could benefit from each others' strengths and identify and improve our weaknesses.

China is simply playing the game that America had invented, but doing it better, winning, and we don’t like it. China will be the world’s largest economy in 20 years. China has an advantage to surpass The U.S. and European economies. The Chinese foreign reserves rose by $199 billion in the fourth quarter to $2.85 trillion. With reserves of $2.85 trillion, China has an advantage to invest largely in energy, metals, and other natural resources. China has increased control and access to oil, natural gas, minerals, all other commodities, and raw materials worldwide.

China has exploited the economic crisis in Africa, Latin America, Russia, U.S., Middle East, Iran, Afghanistan, and Europe to control natural wealth. China has expanded its access to world markets by way of state companies backed by guaranteed capital from the Chinese government. China’s actions have left the U.S., European, and Indian companies far behind in the competition.

Chinese power has increased considerably economically, militarily, geopolitically, and in trade and financial affairs. China is indeed one of the world’s greatest powers. China’s economic growth accelerated to 10 percent in 2010. China’s energy consumption surpassed the US by 0.4% at 2.252 billion tons of oil equivalent. China bought record volumes of oil, natural gas, coal, copper, aluminum, gold, ferrochrome, chrome ore and iron ore this year.

The world’s fastest-growing major economy consumes more than a third of the world’s aluminum output, a quarter of its copper production, a tenth of its oil and accounts for more than half of the trading in iron ore. China is the world’s largest producer of steel and world’s largest consumer of copper, iron ore, aluminum, ferrochrome, chrome ore and nickel.

This year China bought hundreds of billions of dollars worth of iron ore, refined copper, crude oil, alumina, chrome ore, coal, ferrochrome, and other commodities. China has launched its investment policy because of rising demand, economic growth, and crippling pressure on its own natural resources.

China’s population has almost tripled from 500 million to 1.3 billion in 50 years. China is hungry for land, food, energy, and all other natural resources. Hundreds of billions of dollars are presently invested by China in natural resources in Africa, Australia, Brazil, Russia, Iraq, Europe, Canada, East Asia, and the US.

China’s government said its foreign exchange reserves soared to a record $2.85 trillion. If China invests $2.85 trillion dollars in natural resources and energy worldwide, China will become the world’s largest economy in 20 years.

Sahit Muja
President & CEO
Albanian Minerals
New York

# # #

Albanian Minerals is a metal mining and trading company. It is one of the fastest growing mineral companies in Europe.

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Note: I edited the article for ease of reading.
 
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Martian

Senior Member
Profit for China's electronics manufacturers surges 58%

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Innovate with modern and affordable electronics from China
• Consumer electronics
• Computer & networking
• Telecom products
• Electronic accessories
• Home appliances

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"Profit for electronics makers surges 58%
08:52, February 25, 2011

The profit of China's electronics manufacturing industry surged an annual 58 percent in 2010 on huge output and improved technology used in TV sets, mobile phones and computers, the regulator said yesterday.

The output of LCD TVs, laptops, tablet computers and 3G phones expanded rapidly last year in China. It is the world's largest handset, computer and TV production manufacturing base, said the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

In 2010, the output of China's electronics manufacturers grew 16.9 percent annually and their profit jumped 57.7 percent. Last year, China produced a total of 998 million handsets, 246 million computers, and 118 million TVs to rank No. 1 globally in all three segments. The LCD (liquid crystal display) TV models accounted for 75.6 percent of TV production and 3G phone output grew 60 percent, according to the ministry.

The expansion was also seen in China's software and Internet industry, observers said.

China's e-commerce trade volume tripled in 2010 to 4.5 trillion yuan (US$681.8 billion), the ministry said.

Source: Shanghai Daily"

Note: I slightly edited the article for ease of reading.
 
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Martian

Senior Member
Vizio Remains Top LCD TV Brand in North America in 2010

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The Vizio L42HDTV

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"Vizio Remains Top LCD TV Brand in North America in 2010
2011/03/02

Taipei, March 2, 2011 (CENS)--The latest report issued by DisplaySearch shows that Vizio, the U.S.-based sales arm for Taiwan`s TV maker Amtran Technology Co., Ltd., scored a 27.6% share of the North American market for LCD TV in the fourth quarter of 2010 to outpace Korea`s Samsung by sales volume, and hence dominated the market for two consecutive years.

DisplaySearch`s report indicates that Vizio sold some 500,000 LCD TVs more than the runner-up Samsung to lead the market in the fourth quarter of the year. Market observers pointed out that Vizio`s banner sales also benefitted Amtran and some Taiwanese firms, including Hon Hai Precision (assembler), AU Optronics and Chimei Innolux Corp. (display panels), Delta Electronics (power supplies), Mediatek (IC chipsets), etc.


With its sales partner holding the No.1 spot in North America in the past two years, Amtran has been determined to further explore the market by joining hands with Japan`s LCD TV vendor JVC, in a bid to keep the success. On August 27, 2010, the firm inked a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on cooperation with JVC`s subsidiary Victor Company of Japan to mark the beginning of the collaboration. Based on the MOU, the two sides will jointly promote JVC-braded LCD TVs in the U.S. starting this year.

Noteworthily, although being routed by Vizio in North America by sales volume, Samsung remained No. 1 in the global LCD TV market with a 21.4% share in the fourth quarter of 2010, trailed by Sony, which posted a 14.2% market share and a 54% growth in sales quarter-on-quarter, according to DisplaySearch`s report.

LG came third with a global market share of 12.7%, while Panasonic and Sharp ranked No.4 and No.5, respectively, with an 8.3% and 8.1% share in the quarter.

(by Steve Chuang)"
 

Martian

Senior Member
China's defense budget to grow 12.7% in 2011: spokesman

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China increases military power

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"China's defense budget to grow 12.7% in 2011: spokesman
2011-03-04 11:45:57

BEIJING, March 4 (Xinhua) -- China said Friday it plans to raise its defense budget by 12.7 percent to 601 billion yuan (91.5 billion U.S. dollars) in 2011, compared with an increase of 7.5 percent last year.

The year's draft defense budget was 67.6 billion yuan more than 2010, and accounted for about 6 percent of the country's total budget, said Li Zhaoxing, spokesman for the annual session of China's national legislature.

"The government has always tried to limit military spending and it has set the defense spending at a reasonable level to ensure the balance between national defense and economic development," said Li.

The former foreign minister said China's defense expenditure is transparent and defensive in nature.

The bulk of the spending would go towards moderately improving armament, military training, human resource development, infrastructure of grassroots units and the living standards of the servicemen, said Li.

"China is committed to peaceful development and a national defense policy that is defensive in nature," said Li.

He said, compared to the world's average, China's military spending is low given its 1.3 billion population, vast land and long coastal lines.

"The limited military strength of China is solely for safeguarding its national sovereignty and territorial integrity and would not pose a threat to any country," said Li."
 

Martian

Senior Member
Senior Indian reporter brazenly questions China's 12.7% defense increase

Last week, India announced a defense spending increase of 12% (see below). The percentage increase in defense spending by China and India is virtually identical. However, a senior Indian correspondent brazenly asked China's spokesman Li Zhaoxing (a former foreign minister; also a former ambassador to the United States) about the necessity for China to "spend a hell of a lot of money on defense" and the concern of China's neighbors.

If you're interested, you can watch the question-and-answer segment in the following video:

[video]http://v.ifeng.com/lianghui/xianchang/201103/4d0a7751-dcdc-4d6c-a739-5a218bca9ac6.shtml[/video]

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"Jane's - Jon Grevatt - ‎1 hour ago‎
India's defence budget, which will increase nearly 12 per cent to INR1.64 trillion (USD36.6 billion) in Fiscal Year 2011-12 (FY11-12), is expected to provide additional impetus to the country's military modernisation drive, officials and ... "
 
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Martian

Senior Member
40% pay increase for China's migrant laborers in 2010

Excerpt from BusinessWeek: "The pay of the migrant laborers who fuel China's export industry rose by 40 percent in 2010, according to Credit Suisse's Tao. It will continue climbing 20 percent to 30 percent in each of the next three years as Chinese leaders pump up domestic demand."

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"Global Inflation Starts with Chinese Workers
By Sophie Leung and Simon Kennedy
March 3, 2011, 5:00PM EST

Government support and a tight labor supply are boosting wages in China. Over the next decade that will put inflationary pressure on the global economy

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Job seekers read help wanted ads at a labor market in Qingdao (Yang Tongyu/Imaginechina/AP Photo)

For decades low wages in China helped keep prices at bay around the globe. That era is roaring to an end. As China embraces wholesale wage increases, the world's No. 2 economy may soon drive up costs enough to erode corporate margins and scare inflation-wary investors away from bonds. The government is playing an important role in this shift. When Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao convenes the annual National People's Congress on Mar. 5, delegates will sign off on higher pay scales around the country as part of a plan to boost the domestic economy. All 31 Chinese provinces and regions are likely to boost their minimum wages in 2011 for the second consecutive year, according to Credit Suisse Group (CS).

Economists say an epochal shift is under way. "When historians go back and describe 2010, the big story will be the massive increase in salaries that will redefine the global manufacturing model and redefine the inflation outlook for the next 10 years," says Dong Tao, chief regional economist for non-Japan Asia at Credit Suisse in Hong Kong.

Tao says China is fast approaching the so-called Lewis turning point, named after Arthur Lewis, the Nobel prize-winning economist whose work described that critical moment in a developing economy's rise when its surplus labor supply dries up, and hikes in wages, prices, and inflation ensue. In China's case, demand for workers will outstrip supply by 2014, Tao's team calculated in a January report.

Li Wei, an economist at Standard Chartered in Shanghai, says China may have already hit the Lewis point. If the country "continues to grow 9 percent to 10 percent per year, there will be a wage spiral" that pushes up prices and sends bond yields higher around the world, Li says. China's own inflation is gathering momentum, with inflation running higher than the official 2011 target of 4 percent in each of the past four months, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of China.

Despite the risks, China's government wants to encourage workers to spend, ease pressure on families struggling to afford food, and head off social unrest, says Sun Chi, an economist with Nomura Holdings (NMR) in Hong Kong. Higher pay should also make exports more costly. That would please China's trading partners, who fear being overwhelmed by cheap goods.

Wages are going up even without the government's prodding. The development of China's west has turned interior cities such as Chongqing into production centers that compete for labor with coastal factories. The pay of the migrant laborers who fuel China's export industry rose by 40 percent in 2010, according to Credit Suisse's Tao. It will continue climbing 20 percent to 30 percent in each of the next three years as Chinese leaders pump up domestic demand.

Workers are getting picky. A recent pay hike of more than 10 percent in a Shenzhen bra factory wasn't enough to keep some workers in town. Luo Chenen, a 33-year-old migrant worker who sews bras for Hong Kong-listed Top Form International, says "quite a few" of her colleagues left after the lunar new year for their hometowns. They won't come back because "there are jobs there as well. Right now is not like in the past, when finding a job was difficult." As proof of employers' desperation, the district of Shenzhen where Luo works is plastered with recruitment notices, some promising "High Pay for Urgent Hire."

China's wages now occupy the middle range of labor costs in Asia. Average monthly pay in 2009 for Shenzhen on the southern coast was $235, while Shenyang in northeast China had a mean of $197, both less than Yokohama's $3,099, Seoul's $1,220, and Taipei's $888, according to the Japan External Trade Organization. By comparison, monthly factory wages were $100 in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $148 in Jakarta, Indonesia, and $47 in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

It's not just in China's big cities where wages are rising fast. In the countryside, where small factories are popping up, per capita net income jumped 10.9 percent in 2010, to 5,919 yuan, according to a National Bureau of Statistics of China report in January. "Rural migrant workers' wages are now rising faster than ever before, and we can probably talk about a wage explosion here," Jonathan Anderson, chief economist for emerging markets at UBS (UBS) in Hong Kong, wrote on Feb. 3.

Policy makers may make changes in the hukou household-registration system, according to UBS analysts, a step that may ease the problems created by labor scarcity. The system, which authorities have already relaxed somewhat, requires Chinese to apply for residency permits when they move and can impede the free flow of workers. The more mobile workers are, the more quickly they can move to parts of the country that need labor the most.

Although reforming hukou will help, China's rising prices soon will feed into inflation elsewhere, if history is any guide. China's consumer price index has in the past decade preceded shifts in the so-called core U.S. rate for goods by about 20 months, according to data compiled by Société Générale and Bloomberg. While he predicts inflation in the U.S. will remain benign into next year, Rudy Narvas, a Société Générale economist in New York, says there is now an "upside" risk, partly because of Chinese costs. U.S. corporate clients are telling him they may start to "test the waters" to see how much of the price pressure from China and elsewhere they can pass along to customers, he says.

Apparel companies and retailers are already feeling the pinch from higher wages in China. Next, Britain's second-biggest retailer, said in January that higher labor costs in China will contribute to an 8 percent increase in its prices in the first two quarters. Trading group Li & Fung of Hong Kong, a top apparel supplier to Wal-Mart Stores (WMT), predicts the price of Chinese exports will rise as much as 15 percent this year as workers earn more. "The pressures aren't subsiding," says Randal J. Konik, an equity analyst at Jefferies & Co. (JEF) in New York, who identifies luxury handbag maker Coach (COH) and women's clothing retailer Chico's (CHS) as having "high exposure to Chinese manufacturing."

Coach started a four-year plan on Jan. 1 that will move some production out of China and into locales such as India, Chief Financial Officer Michael F. Devine III said on a Jan. 25 conference call. Gerry Weber International, Germany's No. 2 maker of women's clothing, is shifting production from China to sites with cheaper labor costs, CEO Gerhard Weber said in a Dec. 7 interview. The company is counting on its ability to move sourcing faster than rivals.

Chico's, too, is seeking to diversify its production base away from China. Higher Chinese wages are a "major factor" behind the shift, says Robert C. Atkinson, head of investor relations at the company, adding, "It's not easy when most of the world is trying to do the same thing."

The bottom line: Over the next decade the inflationary impact of ever-higher wages throughout Chinese industry will raise prices around the world.

With Cotten Timberlake and Chris Burritt. Leung is a reporter for Bloomberg News. Kennedy is a reporter for Bloomberg News."
 
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pugachev_diver

Banned Idiot
A good thing that the workers in China are getting paid more. But the downside for me, personally, is that when I go back to China to visit, my foreign currency can't buy as much as it used to do. bummers
 

delft

Brigadier
Re: 40% pay increase for China's migrant laborers in 2010

So those workers will be able to pay for train tickets.
 
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