Chinese Economics Thread

crobato

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Ted Koppel makes a documentary in China


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'The People's Republic of Capitalism'

Ted Koppel's four-part documentary covers old territory on the global effects of China's economic boom. But the cultural upheaval taking place in the communist nation is a revelation.

By Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 9, 2008
 

crobato

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VIP Professional
Sinosteel's $1.32 Billion Takeover of Midwest Succeeds
The resource-hungry Chinese company pioneers the first hostile takeover of a foreign company

by Sameera Anand

Sinosteel's strategy to stay the course in its acquisition of Midwest has paid off, resulting in the first ever successful hostile takeover by a Chinese company in Australia. Sell-side adviser Morgan Stanley and buy-side adviser JPMorgan stand to benefit handsomely.

The Chinese steelmaker on Friday informed the Australian Securities Exchange that it has cornered 50.97% of Australian mining and exploration firm Midwest's outstanding shares, meaning its A$1.36 billion ($1.32 billion) takeover attempt will succeed.

Sinosteel's latest announcement marks closure to a saga which has been ongoing since the fourth quarter of 2007. The Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE) initially came to the table as a white knight after mining and infrastructure company Murchison Metals made an unsolicited takeover offer for Midwest in October 2007. Midwest directors, advised by Morgan Stanley, felt the offer did not fully value the target and sought Sinosteel's help to rebuff it.

In December Sinosteel tabled its own offer of A$5.60 per share for control of Midwest. But Sinosteel was forced to take the proposal directly to minority shareholders in March 2008 when Midwest's directors chose not to recommend the offer to shareholders, making it the first-ever hostile bid by a Chinese company for an Australian firm. On April 29 Sinosteel improved its offer to A$6.38 per share, representing an equity value of A$1.36 billion, and gained the endorsement of the Midwest board, turning the offer friendly.

Then on May 26, Murchison unexpectedly re-surfaced with a reverse merger proposal, on which it was advised by Gresham Partners. Murchison's all-share offer implied a value of A$7.17 per share based on share prices up to May 23. Sinosteel refused to enter a bidding war and on May 28 said it would not increase its offer for Midwest.

Instead, Sinosteel raised questions about the legality of Murchison's offer, with some of its salvos making regulators sit up and take notice.

The outcome was that on July 7 Murchison withdrew its merger proposal, as uncertainties regarding its bid had put pressure on its share price, making the all-share proposal less attractive. Meanwhile, shareholders continued to tender shares to Sinosteel as they seemed to share the Chinese firm's view that, in an uncertain environment, a cash offer was a safer bet than shares.

However, Murchison does not plan to tender the 10% of Midwest it accumulated as part of its blocking strategy. The company said in an ASX filing on July 7 that it "intends to play an active role in Midwest as one of the company's biggest independent shareholders and will seek to maximise the value and strategic significance of its shareholding". This means that Sinosteel may not be able to proceed with its original plan to cross the 90% shareholding threshold and delist Midwest.

On July 10 Midwest informed the ASX that it would expand its board from six directors to nine by inducting three Sinosteel nominees. The three are: (Tony) Cheng Sijun, (Michael) Wu Hongbin and Ian McCubbin. Midwest included the new directors despite Sinosteel holding only 47.14% on that date, effectively signalling to the market that its takeover was set for success.

On the same day Midwest informed the ASX that it would issue 3 million shares worth A$19.2 million to Morgan Stanley Australia as payment for corporate advisory services, payable in the event that Sinosteel's shareholding in Midwest crosses 50.1%. Morgan Stanley has agreed to "conduct an orderly sale in the marketplace of the shares within a reasonable time period".

The A$19.2 million fee payable to Morgan Stanley is in addition to a payment already made when Murchison's original offer lapsed in February. In April, while disclosing its financial results, Midwest attributed its negative Ebitda of A$0.76 million to costs related to defending the unsolicited takeover by Murchison, including A$7.75 million paid to various advisers including Morgan Stanley.

The fee payable to JPMorgan, who guided its Chinese client to success in uncharted territory, hasn't yet been disclosed. The tactics Sinosteel employed, its legal standing and its decision not to increase its A$1.36 billion offer were all, in hindsight, spot on and the US investment bank will no doubt share a large part of the credit—and a handsome fee—for the advice it offered.

JPMorgan, and a number of other investment banks watching from the sidelines, will be hoping that a slew of China outbound M&A deals into Australia will materialise but, at the moment, this is looking less likely. Sinosteel's takeover received the blessing of Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board but it has also caused some disquiet in Australia, coming as it did close on the heels of other M&A deals in the natural resources sector.

In January, China embarked on its largest ever outbound acquisition when the Aluminum Corporation of China (Chinalco) and US aluminium producer Alcoa teamed up to buy 12% of the outstanding shares of UK-listed minerals group Rio Tinto, at an outlay of $14 billion. Rio Tinto is under siege by Australian mining firm BHP Billiton. Then, in March, Chinese oil and gas company Sinopec spent A$600 million to buy 60% of Australian oil producer AED Oil's Puffin and Talbot fields.

Most China outbound deals are being done by SOEs, a corporate structure which is alien to Australia and which raises concerns that it is actually the Chinese government that is buying Australian firms. And while Australia understands China's need to secure natural resources for its 1.3 billion strong population, questions are being asked about why the same outcome cannot be reached via long-term supply contracts between Chinese buyers and Australian companies.

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Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
China has engineer a soft landing with slowing inflation and still dobule digit growth and Another proof that the economy is decouple from US and largely driven by domestic growth this year the retail sales grow by 25%

China's economy slowed down for a fourth straight quarter as inflation eased in June, official figures showed on Thursday, giving more ammunition to advocates for a looser monetary policy.

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew 10.1 percent in the second quarter after rising 10.6 percent in the first three months, said Li Xiaochao, spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics at a press conference in Beijing. China's economic growth has been on a steady decline since peaking in the second quarter of 2007.

NBS chief economist Yao Jingyuan said the double-digit GDP growth indicated China's economy was still growing at a steady and relatively fast pace.

"The cooling of GDP growth indicated the government's macro-economic policy to prevent the economy from going overheated has paid off," said Yao. The slowing world economy and weaker demand on international markets also adversely affected the Chinese economy.

Another widely watched indicator, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) -- an important measure of inflation, moderated to 7.1 percent in June after rising 7.7 percent in the previous month thanks to easing food prices.

The combination of economic slowdown and easing inflation may give rise to louder calls for an ease in the monetary policy.

Analysts said that the tight monetary policy put in place at the end of last year has brought about great difficulties for many firms, especially private ones. Thousands of small and medium enterprises have gone bankrupt in the coastal areas as they could hardly get loans from banks, reports said. Fast appreciating yuan value, rising cost of labor and raw materials are also key reasons for the situation.


As the world's largest developing country, China needs fast economic development to maximize employment.


However, any ease in monetary policy will be a tough call, in face of inflation pressure.


"In spite of falls in the consumer prices in the last two months, the prices are still running at a relatively high level," Li Xiaochao said. "We will continue to prevent prices from rising too fast and curb inflation."


Adding to the price pressure, the Producer Price Index (PPI) continue to jump, rising to a three-year high of 8.8 percent in June over a year earlier after increasing 8.2 percent in the previous month.


The PPI measures the prices at the factory gate level and is usually used to predict future CPI level, as retailers or manufacturers will eventually pass the rising cost to consumers.


Inflationary expectation is also a major concern. "With the rapid price increases in the global market, the public will have expecations for further price rises, " according to Li.


If consumers expect prices to rise, they will ask for pay increases, or rush to buy products, thus exerting further upward pressure on prices.


Li also cited the recent petrol and electricity price increases, as well as post-quake construction which will increase the demand for building materials.


These concerns may be part of the reasons why the finance committee of the National People's Congress, China's parliament, pledged on Wednesday to maintain its tight monetary policy for the rest of the year.


However, watchers sensed a softening of words in its description of the fight against inflation. The committee said curbing price pressures would be a "prominent task" in the months ahead, instead of "top priority," phrasing that economic leaders repeated in the early months of 2008.


Analysts believe policy makers are trying to find a balance between inflation and economy growth and are gradually shifting towards preventing a major economic slowdown.
 

crobato

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VIP Professional
Foreign Policy
July/August 2008

The Next Asian Miracle

By Yasheng Huang

Democracies are peaceful, representative—and terrible at boosting an economy. Or at least that’s the conventional wisdom in Asia, where for years growth in India’s sprawling democracy has been humbled by China’s efficient, state-led boom. But India’s newfound economic success flips that notion on its head. Could it be that democracy is good for growth after all? If so, China better watch its back.

Consider the experiences of the following two Asian countries. In 1990, Country A had a per capita GDP of $317; Country B’s stood at $461. By 2006, Country A, though 31 percent poorer than Country B only 16 years earlier, had caught up: It enjoyed a per capita GDP of $634, compared with Country B’s $635. So, if you had to guess, which of these two Asian countries would you assume is a democracy?

You might be tempted to conclude that the better-performing country is authoritarian China and the laggard is democratic India. In reality, the faster-growing country is India, and the laggard is the occasionally autocratic Pakistan. This fact certainly belies the commonly held notion that—especially among Asian countries—authoritarian states have an advantage in growing an economy compared with their democratic counterparts, who are forced to reckon with such pesky trappings as labor standards and political compromises.

But surely, the familiar China-India comparison would support an authoritarian edge, right? The conclusion seems so obvious: China is authoritarian, and it has grown faster; India is democratic, and it has grown more slowly. For years, Indians have defended their democracy with a sheepish apology—“Yes, our growth rate is terrible, but low growth rates are an acceptable price to pay to govern a democracy as large and as diverse as India.”

There is no need to apologize now. India has ended the infamous 2 to 3 percent annual “Hindu rate” of growth and begun its own economic takeoff. Recent Indian success is not only impressive in terms of its speed—growing at the “East Asian rate” of 8 to 9 percent a year—but also in terms of its depth and breadth. The Indian miracle is no longer confined to the much vaunted information-technology sector; its manufacturing is taking off. Even the historically lackluster agricultural sector is beginning to grow.

So where does this leave the “authoritarian edge” that China’s economy has supposedly enjoyed for years? The emerging Indian miracle should debunk—hopefully permanently—the entirely specious notion that democracy is bad for growth. And the emerging Indian miracle holds substantial implications for China’s political future. As Chinese political elites mark the 30th anniversary of economic reforms this year, they should reflect on the Indian experience deeply and absorb the real reason behind their own miracle.

The idea that there is a trade-off between economics and politics is ingrained in the minds of many policymakers and business executives in Asia, as well as the West. But that idea has never been systematically proven. If India, with its noisy, chaotic, and lumbering political arrangements, can grow, then no other poor country must face a Faustian choice between growth and democracy. A deeper look at the two countries shows that they have succeeded and failed at different times for remarkably similar reasons. Their economies performed when their politics turned liberal; their performances faltered when their politics slid backward. Now, as many poor countries grapple with similar political and economic choices, we must understand this dynamic. It is high time to get the China-India story right.

INDIA’S UNTOLD HISTORY

That story doesn’t begin in 2008. It’s a horse race that goes back decades, and one that tells us much about the relationship between democracy and growth, governance and prosperity. From an economic perspective, it is not the static state of a political system that matters, but how it has evolved. The growth India enjoys today sped up in the 1990s as the country privatized TV stations, introduced political decentralization, and improved governance. And contrary to the conventional wisdom, India stagnated historically not because it was a democracy, but because, in the 1970s and 1980s, it was less democratic than it appeared. To understand just what is happening in India’s economy today—and how it relates to the country’s political system—we must travel as far back as the 1950s.

Many scholars blame India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, for adopting a development strategy that caused India to stagnate from 1950 to 1990. But this view is unfair to Nehru, and it shifts the blame from the real culprit—Indira Gandhi, Nehru’s daughter and prime minister during much of the period from 1966 to 1984. Nehru’s commanding-heights approach was the reigning ideology in many developing countries, some of which, like South Korea, were quite successful. The issue is not how harmful Nehru’s economic policies were, but why India intensified and persisted in this model when it was clearly not working. To answer this question we have to understand the lasting damage that Indira Gandhi inflicted on Indian democracy.

Patronage became her electoral strategy as she undermined a vital institution in a functioning democracy—the party system. Gandhi weakened the Congress Party, once a proud catalyst of the independence movement, by sidestepping many of its well-established procedures, reducing its grass-roots reach in the states, and appointing party officials rather than allowing rank-and-file members to elect them. The shriveling of the Congress Party meant that Gandhi had to use other means to get reelected: crushing political opposition, pandering to special interests, or offering political handouts.

Or cancellations of elections altogether. Indira Gandhi imposed emergency rule in June 1975 and cancelled the general election scheduled for the following year. It was no isolated event. As early as 1970, she postponed or cancelled Congress Party elections. In addition, she moved very far to replace federalism with her own centralized rule. One telling statistic, as shown by political scientists Amal Ray and John Kincaid, is that between 1966 and 1976 the Gandhi government invoked Article 356 of the constitution—which empowers the federal government to take over the functions of state governments in emergency situations—36 times. The government of Nehru and his successor (1950–65) resorted to this measure only nine times. From 1980 to 1984, she invoked this power an additional 13 times. The misuse of the extraordinary power vested in the executive damaged an important institution of Indian democracy.

The cumulative effect of Gandhi’s actions is that the Indian political system, though still retaining some essential features of a democracy, became unaccountable, corrupt, and unhinged from the normal bench marks voters use to assess their leaders. In a functioning democracy, voters punish those politicians who fail to deliver at the ballot box. Not in India. Both the 1967 and 1971 reelections of the Congress Party followed a decline of per capita GDP the year before. It was not democracy that failed India; it was India that failed democracy.

The economic consequences of this period of illiberalism were long lasting. Because Gandhi’s political fortunes depended on patronage, she felt no compulsion to invest in real drivers of economic growth—education and health. The ratio of teachers to primary-school students throughout the long Gandhi years stubbornly hovered around 2 percent. After her rule, in 1985, only 18 percent of Indian children were immunized against diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus (DPT), and only 1 percent were immunized against measles. Even today, India is still paying for her neglect. The low level of human capital remains the single largest obstacle to that country’s developmental prospects.

The good news is that India is shedding this harmful legacy. As Indian politics became more open and accountable, the post-Gandhi governments began to put welfare of the people at the top of the policy agenda. For example, the adult literacy rate increased from 49 percent in 1990 to 61 percent in 2006. In due time, these social investments will translate into real dividends.

CHINA’S GREAT REVERSAL

The story of China’s rise seems, on the surface, quite different. A communist and closed regime undertakes an efficient, massive, and rapid embrace of the global economy—and sends its country into overdrive. It appears to be a far cry from the common understanding that democracy promotes growth because it imposes constraints on rulers and reassures private entrepreneurs of the safety of their assets and fruits of their labor. The idea that China grew because of its one-party rule stems from a mistaken focus on a single snapshot in time at the expense of an understanding of shifting trends. China did not take off because it was authoritarian. Rather, it took off because the liberal political reforms of the 1980s made the country less authoritarian. Like India, when China reversed its political reforms and saw governance worsen in the 1990s, citizens’ well-being declined. Household income growth slowed, especially in the rural areas; inequality rose to an alarming level; and the gains of economic growth accruing to ordinary people fell sharply. China even underperformed in its traditional areas of strength: education and health. Adult illiteracy rose. Immunizations fell. The country’s GDP might have been booming, but it was also hazardous to your health.

The real Chinese miracle began back in the 1980s—when Chinese politics was most liberal. Personal income growth outpaced GDP growth; the labor share of GDP was rising; and income distribution initially improved. China accomplished far more in poverty reduction in the 1980s without any of the factors (such as foreign direct investment) now viewed as essential elements of the China model. In four short years (1980–84), China lifted more of its rural population out of poverty than in the 15 years from 1990 to 2005 combined. If India became less democratic under Indira Gandhi, China became less authoritarian under the troika rule of Deng Xiaoping, Hu Yaobang, and Zhao Ziyang in the 1980s. Therein lies the key insight into China’s economic takeoff.

One of the first acts by the reformist leaders was to signal an improving environment for private property. In marked contrast to today’s massive land grabs, the Chinese government in 1979 returned confiscated bank deposits, bonds, gold, and private homes to those former “capitalists” the regime had persecuted. The number of people affected by this policy was not large, around 700,000. But symbolism mattered for a country still reeling from the Cultural Revolution. There were also other symbolic acts designed to elicit the confidence of private entrepreneurs in the new political environment of a post-Mao era. In 1979, two vice premiers visited and personally congratulated an entrepreneur who was granted the first license to operate a private restaurant in Beijing. As early as 1981, a Communist Party document signaled a willingness to recruit its members from the private sector, a well-publicized gesture. The widely held view that the party only began to recruit capitalists late in the Jiang Zemin era is simply incorrect.

The reformist leaders also began to embark on meaningful political changes. As scholar Minxin Pei has noted, every single important political reform—such as the mandatory retirement of government officials, the strengthening of the National People’s Congress, legal reforms, experiments in rural self-government, and loosening control of civil society groups—was instituted in the 1980s. The Chinese media became freer in the early reform era. The timing here is critical. This “directional liberalism” of China’s politics either preceded or accompanied China’s economic growth. It was not a result of economic success.

This liberalism mattered the most for growth in rural China, where the majority of Chinese citizens live. Private access to capital eased in the 1980s. Private entrepreneurship and even some privatization became widespread, especially in poorer parts of the country that needed them most. Of 12 million rural businesses classified as township and village enterprises, 10 million were completely private. The change in direction of China’s politics was sufficiently credible to encourage millions of entrepreneurs to go into business for themselves.

But in the 1990s, the Chinese state completely reversed the gradualist political reforms that the leadership began in the 1980s. This assessment comes from a well-placed insider, Wu Min, a professor at the Party School under the Shanxi Provincial Party Committee. In a 2007 article, Wu revealed that the political reform program adopted at the 13th Party Congress in 1987 implemented some substantial changes. The congress abolished the party committees in many government agencies and explicitly delineated the functions of the party and the state. After 1989, there was no progress on the political reform front, especially in reducing and streamlining the power of the Communist Party.

The political reforms of the 1980s were designed to enhance the accountability of the government by creating some checks and balances over the power of the party and by fostering intraparty democracy. Wu cites one specific measure in the 1990s to derail the reforms of the 1980s. According to Wu, in the 1990s China instituted explicit provisions prohibiting the National People’s Congress (NPC) from conducting evaluations of officials in the executive branch and the courts. Wu comments, “This is obviously a step backward.”

Just how far did this step set back China? How about nearly 30 years? Consider China’s track record when it comes to industrial fatalities. In 1979, in the aftermath of the capsizing of an oil rig that resulted in 72 deaths, the NPC held hearings at which officials in the Ministry of Petroleum Industry were called to testify. The minister was determined to have been negligent and was sacked. But since the mid-1990s, there have been hundreds of explosions and industrial accidents in China’s coal mines. Thousands of people have lost their lives. No hearings have been held, and not a single official at the rank of minister or provincial governor has ever been held explicitly responsible.

Like Indira Gandhi in the 1970s and 1980s, the Chinese state greatly centralized its economic management in the 1990s. It was another reversal from the promising reforms of a decade earlier, the gist of which was delegating decision-making to those best informed about local situations. In 1994, the central government increased substantially the shares of tax revenues going to the central coffers and abolished one of the most innovative Chinese reforms—fiscal federalism. A less well-known development in the 1990s was that the Chinese state centralized the budgetary and other functions of villages. So, even though people were voting in village elections, the officials elected exercised very little power.

The economic consequences of these reversals were substantial. The 1990s saw depressed growth in household incomes relative to GDP, which means that the average Chinese person was losing ground. The employee share of GDP —the income going to the general population—peaked in 1990, at 53.5 percent. By 2002, it had declined to 45 percent of GDP. At 45 percent, the Chinese economy in 2002 was benefiting its people less than it was in 1978, when its employee share of GDP stood at 48 percent. Similarly threatening for the poorest Chinese is a development that has garnered almost no attention: The country is backsliding on literacy. On April 2, 2007, the state-run China Daily published an article with an unusually frank title, “The ghost of illiteracy returns to haunt the country.” It reported that the number of illiterate Chinese adults increased by 30 million between 2000 and 2005. In 2005, there were 115.7 million illiterate Chinese adults, compared with 85 million in 2000. The roots of the problem began in the 1990s. Consider how literacy is defined—the ability to identify 1,500 Chinese characters by the age of 7 to 9. An adult reaching into the illiterate group by 2005 received all his or her primary education in the mid-1990s. In addition, immunization rates against DPT and measles—rising throughout the 1980s—began to decline in the 1990s. In time, China will pay dearly for these colossal failures.

In the 1990s, the nature of China’s growth was fundamentally altered. In the 1980s, growth was broad-based and positive for the poor; since then, the percentage of people benefiting from growth has narrowed, and social performance has deteriorated. The impact of this great reversal is strongest in the silent and less visible rural areas of China.

THE WAY TO REFORM

Of course, understanding the origins of India’s and China’s separate paths to development is just half the story. What’s more telling is how these two countries enacted and reacted to reforms—and what that says about the relationship between political liberalization and economic growth.

After the Soviet collapse, Chinese political elites converged on the view that China avoided the same fate because China had not reformed its politics. The truth is precisely the opposite. The single most important reason why China survived the 1989 Tiananmen crisis is because its rural population was content. In the 1980s, rural China experienced the most radical economic and political reforms. It was reform that saved the Chinese Communist Party.

Political reforms contributed to Indian growth as well. Take the media. During the long Gandhi era, though the print media were free, the government controlled the TV stations—a more important source of information for a country with high illiteracy. The privatization of the stations in the 1990s not only enriched the quality of entertainment for the average Indian but also added transparency to Indian politics. Many corruption and bribery scandals were first exposed on TV, the effects of the exposures being magnified by the vivid images of politicians receiving cash in shady hotel rooms. That is the right way to fight corruption.

As China tightened its political grip on rural affairs in the wake of the Soviet collapse, India moved in the opposite direction. In 1992, India amended its constitution to strengthen a reform with long and deep implications—village self-government. This panchayati raj phenomenon promises to transform an urban-centered, elitist system to one that is Tocquevillian in character and is empowering women along the way. The auxiliary institutions of Indian democracy, so atrophied under Indira Gandhi, have been renewed. World Bank indicators show a notable improvement in key areas of Indian governance during the period of high growth since the mid-1990s.

In fact, India leads China in a number of important areas of reform. Throughout the 1990s, India reduced state controls on the banking sector, allowed the entry of private domestic and foreign banks, and abolished government interference in setting the equity pricing of initial public offerings on the stock exchange. China is nowhere near India in terms of pace and depth of financial reforms.

Would democracy galvanize opposition to reforms? Many progressive reformers in China hold this view, but this is a hypothesis long on fear and short on facts. Consider the following fact about Indian politics: All the reforms have been carried out by a coalition of multiple parties rather than by a single-majority ruling party. This is true of the Congress Party in the early 1990s, the Bharatiya Janata Party between 1998 and 2004, and the Congress Party today.

What about building infrastructure? Even liberals in India sometimes wish for a dose of authoritarianism here. A powerful government in China is able to sidestep all the political and legal complications and build world-class railroads, highways, water systems, and other networks overnight. Surely, authoritarianism has an edge when it comes to public works projects. But no. Building infrastructure has followed—not preceded—Chinese growth. In 1988, China had roughly 91 miles of expressway. That did not begin to change until the late 1990s, when the country poured massive resources into infrastructure. Only in the past eight to 10 years could the country claim to have infrastructure rivaling that of developed countries.

Many foreign investors think that infrastructure explains the different pace of growth between China and India. No such evidence exists. In the 1980s, India started with some infrastructural advantages over China. It had a longer system of railways, for example. Although we can debate today which country is performing better, there is no doubt that China outperformed India in the 1980s. It was reforms and social investments that propelled Chinese growth, not fancy airports and skyscrapers.

One justification for building those massive infrastructure networks is to attract FDI. For years, Western economists and business analysts have chided India for not following China’s lead in this area. But that criticism puts the cart before the horse. Like infrastructure, FDI follows GDP growth rather than precedes it. In the 1980s, China received very little FDI, and yet the country grew faster and more virtuously than its later growth. FDI is a result of growth, and the first order of the policy business is how to grow the economy—not how to attract FDI. As long as India can grow in the 8 to 9 percent range, even without superior infrastructure, it can easily triple or even quadruple its FDI inflows from its current level of $7 billion a year. Growth can self-finance the infrastructure truly needed for business and economic development.

China has built critical networks, such as power stations and transportation links, but since the mid-1990s, unconstrained by public voice, media scrutiny, and private land rights, Chinese leaders have wasted massive resources on urban skyscrapers that have no economic benefits. Many of them are government buildings and are extraordinarily expensive, costing more than $100 million in some cases. And the financial costs of these projects do not even begin to approach their opportunity costs—those investments in education and health China has failed to make. That a country constructed nearly 3,000 skyscrapers in Shanghai and added 30 million illiterate Chinese during the same decade is truly remarkable.

The economic dividends of political reform don’t appear overnight, which skews the timeline and confuses the cause. But by using nearly every metric, political liberalization has spurred rather than stunted growth in both China and India.

After a long hiatus, China’s leadership has rhetorically returned to a vision of the 1980s—that political reforms should be a priority. Rural China has begun to recover from the neglect of the 1990s, and rural income has grown the fastest since 1989. All this is good news. But consolidating these achievements will require a more substantial undoing of the illiberal policies of the 1990s. How India managed to emerge from its own long shadow of illiberalism offers some valuable lessons. In the past, China taught India the importance of social investments and economic opening. It is time for today’s China to take a page from India—and from the China of the 1980s—that political reforms are not antithetical to growth. They are the keys to a healthier and more sustainable foundation for the future.


Professor Yasheng Huang, of the Sloan School of Management at MIT, is author of Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008). He is writing a book on how politics shapes business, education, and entrepreneurship in China and India.


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crobato

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China increasing sophistication of exports

By TIFFANY AUMANN • Advocate Reporter • July 20, 2008

NEWARK -- Twenty years ago, China was known for making toys, shoes and clothing.

Today, the world's largest nation can make just about anything that any other nation can. There's one key reason for the quick catchup: Competition.

Songhua Lin, assistant professor of economics at Denison University, said international partnerships have been an effective way to inject dollars and knowledge into the Chinese economy.

"In order to make it better, you have to introduce competition, and that's coming from abroad," Lin said.

During the past couple decades, exports from China gradually have increased in sophistication.

In the 1980s, exports largely were raw materials. By the late '80s and early '90s, toys, shoes and clothing were flowing out of China.

Increasingly complex products, such as computers and auto parts, have been made in China in the past decade. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, virtually no product is made by the United States, European Union or Japan that also is not made in China.

China now is the United States' second-largest trading partner, representing about 12 percent of all trade in 2007, according to the United States Census Bureau. Canada, at 18 percent, was the biggest.

China began to emerge as a world trading power after 1978, when its government began a series of economic reforms designed to lead it away from a socialist command economy and toward a market-driven one. Since 1991, the Chinese economy has grown at a rate of 10 percent per year. In 2001, China became a member of the World Trade Organization and was granted normal trading relations with the United States.

In 2007, the American trade deficit with China was $256 billion, about double what it was in 2003 and eight times what it was in 1995 -- $34 billion.
FOREIGN INVESTMENT AND PARTNERSHIPS

Several Chinese government policy decisions have contributed to the changes, including the formation of economic zones and incentives, and encouragement of foreign direct investment and joint ventures. Not only are land, materials and labor less expensive in China, but the government reduces taxes and waives some tariffs for foreign businesses.

Because of processing trade, where a final product is made of components from many places, it is difficult to determine how far China has come in improving the quality of its exports.

However, China is making strides is in the automotive industry. In 2006, the first Chinese automobile appeared at the North American International Auto Show.

China's largest automobile producer, Chery, doubled its number of passenger vehicle exports from 2006 to 2007, according to the company Web site, and is planning to enter the U.S. market in a couple of years.
FUTURE

The income level for most Chinese has not risen to what usually accompanies an economy that makes such sophisticated products, she said.

Despite friction between the United States and China about intellectual property rights, Lin said, little evidence exists that foreign know-how has in fact spilled into the Chinese economy. Safety and environmental standards still challenge exporters.

In a 2003 report written for the Woodrow Wilson International Center, Harvard professor Kelly Sims Gallagher wrote, "The U.S. companies' Chinese counterparts have gained some knowledge about manufacturing and business practices but little understanding of how to design automobiles. In other words, the foreign companies have had a modernizing, but not a truly developmental, effect on the Chinese automobile industry because the U.S. firms did not transfer much knowledge along with the products."

The National Bureau of Economic Research reports the share of China's exports produced by state-owned firms declined from 67 percent in 1995 to 40 percent in 2005. Foreign-invested firms produced a greater share of exports, from 32 percent to 58 percent during the same time period.

Privately owned Chinese firms represent a small portion of exports but had increased their share to about 18 percent in 2005.

Lin said most scholars think China still is operating beneath its potential for maximum efficiency and will continue to grow. In addition, an incentive exists for foreign firms to operate in China to capitalize on its consumer market.

Some American firms, however, might be reconsidering manufacturing in China.

"A lot of companies are re-examining their outsourcing strategy to China and looking at manufacturing here instead. The weak dollar makes it more expensive to manufacture there and bring here and cheaper to manufacture here and take there," said Jerry Besanceney, of Buckeye Lake, owner of Prestige Wood Products, based in Gahanna, and an Ohio State University-Newark board member.

He managed the building of the Universal Veneer mill in Dalian, China, five years ago and also owns Eagle Industries and Eagle Trucking Co., in Bowling Green, Ky.

Kent Mallett contributed to this report.

Tiffany Aumann can be reached at (740) 328-8544 or [email protected].

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crobato

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China's economy to become world's biggest

Wednesday, 9 July 2008 11:17

China's economy will overtake that of the US by 2035 and be twice its size by mid-century, a new study by a US research organisation concludes.

The report, by economist Albert Keidel of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said China's rapid growth is driven by domestic demand more than exports, which will be sustainable over the coming decades.

'China's economic performance clearly is no flash in the pan,' Keidel writes. 'Its growth this decade has averaged more than 10% a year and is still going strong in the first half of 2008. Because its success in recent decades has not been export-led but driven by domestic demand, its rapid growth can continue well into the 21st century, unfettered by world market limitation.'
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Keidel, who has worked as a World Bank economist and US Treasury official, said the rise of China to the world's biggest economy will happen regardless of the method of calculation.

Under current market-based estimates, China's gross domestic product is about $3 trillion compared to $14 trillion for the US. Based on purchasing power parity (PPP) measure used by the World Bank and others to correct low labour-cost distortions, he said China's GDP is roughly half of that of the US.

Keidel's calculations suggest that using the PPP method, China will catch up with the US as an economic power by 2020, with an equivalent GDP of $18 trillion. Based on the more commonly accepted market method, the turning point will come by 2035. By 2050, he estimated Chinese GDP at some $82 trillion compared with $44 trillion for the US.

However, the Chinese standard of living will remain lower - with per capita GDP in China between half and two-thirds the level of that in the US in 2050, according to the report. keidel said poverty will remain a significant problem in China for decades despite considerable progress.

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crobato

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China's income inequality looms large as biggest policy challenge
Mon Jul 21, 2008 6:05am EDT
By Alan Wheatley, China Economics Editor - Analysis
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BEIJING (Reuters) - When French cosmetics retailer L'Occitane en Provence eyes Hong Kong for a share listing because Asia is the fastest-growing market for its fig-scented soaps, it speaks volumes about the rise of the region's middle class.

China, in particular, with its 1.3 billion consumers, has marketing men salivating. Brands from Pizza Hut (YUM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) to Rolls Royce (BMWG.DE: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) are increasingly counting on China, where retail sales rose 21.4 percent in the first six months, to drive growth.

At the tonier end of the discretionary spending spectrum, Richemont (CFR.VX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the maker of Cartier jewellery and Mont Blanc fountain pens, last week cited strong demand in China and Hong Kong for forecast-beating quarterly sales.

Alongside swelling ranks of super-rich, there were still 204 million Chinese in 2005 living on less than $1.25 a day, according to the World Bank. The result is a gulf in incomes that is one of the country's greatest social and political challenges.

Which makes a new essay by the World Bank's chief economist, Justin Yifu Lin, intriguing reading.

Before his recent appointment, Lin was a prominent Peking University professor who frequently advised the government on development issues.

In "China's Dilemma", a collection of papers co-published by Australian National University and Asia Pacific Press, Lin argues fundamental flaws in China's economic model are partly to blame for the yawning gap between rich and poor.

Lin criticizes a basic Communist Party economic tenet that puts, in the name of "efficiency", the interests of corporations before those of workers and leaves it to government redistribution policies to tackle the ensuing inequalities.

"It is our task to ensure that in the course of development, the income of the poor grows faster than that of the rich, but it should not be accomplished by redistribution," Lin writes.

STABILITY RISKS

Firms may be raking in high profits thanks to the emphasis on "efficiency", but it is only because the state shields them from market competition and lavishes subsidies on them, Lin argues.

"Essentially, however, these profits are a kind of wealth transfer that will inevitably lead to social instability," he warns.

Lin's recommendations for a more equal share-out of China's wealth add up to a radical manifesto:

-- China must promote smaller banks to help small firms grow. He attacks the current set-up whereby big firms receive loans for capital-intensive projects from state-owned banks that would never dream of lending a peasant money for a new hen house.

-- Resource companies should pay significantly more tax. Low taxes and fees -- just 1.8 percent in China against 12 percent in America, Lin says -- have generated fabulous wealth for some mining and petroleum firms, further skewing income inequality.

-- Where possible, China should scrap monopolies and introduce competition, which would lower profits and prices.

"Income differences between urban and rural regions will decline once a complete market system is fully in place," Lin predicts.

These differences have been widening, not narrowing.

According to an Asian Development Bank report last year, the Gini coefficient for China soared to 47.3 in 2004 from 40.7 in 1993, putting it at a level more typical of Latin America.

In a society where income was perfectly distributed, the Gini coefficient would be zero; if all the income was in the hands of one person, it would be 100. The figure for India is 36.2.

By a different measure, when China embarked on market reforms in 1978, urban disposable incomes were 2.6 times greater than rural net income. By 2006 they were 3.3 times bigger, forming what Lin says is one of the biggest income gaps in the world.

"As the old adage suggests, 'shortage is not a problem, but inequality really matters'," he writes.

FOOD PRICE RISES

For policy makers, the task of tackling inequality is complicated by rising food prices. The urban poor, who spend a lot of their disposable income on food, are obviously hit hard.

Yet higher food prices are a boon for those among China's 737 million rural population with spare produce to sell, said Wang Dewen, a researcher at the Institute of Population and Labor Economics with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing.

With heavy government spending on rural health, education and infrastructure also kicking in, rural incomes jumped 19.8 percent in the first six months from a year earlier, outstripping a 14.4 percent rise in urban incomes.

"As you can see, the income growth of Chinese farmers was higher than inflation, and that means an improvement in the standard of living," Wang said.

But he added: "Inflation always hits poor people more than rich people, and China is no exception."

A recent study by Asian brokerage CLSA found that 54 percent of households earning 1,000 yuan ($147) a month or less had cut back on meat consumption due to rising prices.

In the same vein, the World Bank said inequality in Vietnam was likely to increase, even though a lot of peasants near the poverty line are net sellers of rice and are benefiting from higher prices.

"The complexity of poverty and distributional impacts of rising food prices warns against sweeping 'one size fits all' responses," the bank concluded.

($1=6.816 Yuan)
(Additional reporting by Zhou Xin; Editing by Mathew Veedon)

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Optimism high in China, survey shows
By Brian Knowlton
Published: July 22, 2008


WASHINGTON: Buoyed by years of extraordinary growth and with the promise of the Olympic Games just ahead, the Chinese hold strikingly positive views of their national economy and of the direction their country is heading, ranking first in both measures among 24 countries recently surveyed. They were almost universally optimistic about prospects for the Games, which open Aug. 8.

But the survey, part of the Pew Global Attitudes Project, also found rising concern in China about the corollary costs of rapid growth. Respondents' biggest concern - expressed by 96 percent - was rising prices. Corruption and environmental degradation also worried majorities of Chinese.

Over all, however, Chinese satisfaction with the country soared in recent years, according to a survey of Chinese adults after the onset of civil unrest over Tibet and before the May 12 earthquake in southwestern China.

"This is clearly a nation that sees itself as ascendant, and that leads to tremendous satisfaction with the way things are going nationwide, even though the people are still struggling on an individual level," said Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center, which conducted the survey.

Eighty-six percent of the Chinese surveyed said they were content with the country's direction, up from 48 percent in 2002 and a full 25 percentage points higher than the next highest country, Australia. And 82 percent of Chinese were satisfied with their national economy, up from 52 percent.

By comparison, only 23 percent of Americans surveyed said they were satisfied with the country's direction and only 20 percent said the U.S. economy was good.

Russians were the third most-satisfied people with their country's direction, at 54 percent.

Except for Spain, which placed fourth at 50 percent, the peoples of major European countries were far from content. Only about 3 in 10 British, French and Germans expressed satisfaction.

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Autumn Child

Junior Member
Interesting editorials based on Nature Journal.

China's impact on science continues to grow
By Todd Morton | Published: July 25, 2008 - 01:24PM CT

The journal Nature has published a series of reports that provide some perspective on China's place in the scientific community. As China's economy continues to develop , the Chinese scientific community is moving lock-step to keep up with the economic growth and establish itself as a source of innovation.

The explosion of science is hardly a surprise, as the level of spending on science in China has skyrocketed—growing 20 percent per year for the last 20 years. However, most of this money is going toward secondary research on existing technologies rather than fundamental innovations. This is a disparity that China is attempting to remedy with its most recent set of initiatives, which contain a call for "indigenous innovation."

All of the money spent on research initiatives has provided China with a steadily climbing number of science and engineering graduates; the number of scientific publications has also seen growth, recently surpassing Japan in raw volume. China still has much work to do in improving the quality of the publications. Despite gains in the last two decades, the citation impact score—which is a measure of how a publication impacts the rest of the field and future research—is at 0.73, below the world average of 1.0. The burgeoning fields of materials science and nanotechnology, both Chinese specialties, show scores closer to that of the world average.

I personally do not find this news a shock, as China appears to be following a path similar to that taken in the American industrialization and scientific booms of the early and mid-20th century. The United States economy, at one time, was based on heavy industries and raw production capacity. As industrialization provides jobs and draws people out of poverty and into the middle class, education increases and provides a more capable work force.

Providing a service or technology that others cannot is the route to the highest profits; rather than investing in the massive capital and man-power required for heavy industry, one can simply innovate the industry and sell the innovation instead—this is the idea behind the so called Information Economy. It may be hard to imagine now but, at one point, every kid in America wanted to be an engineer. Science spending was huge, the space race was going at full speed, the education level of the population increased dramatically. I'd argue that this gave America the intellectuals that allowed it to move away from a goods-based economy to a service-based economy.

A quick glance at modern China reveals shades of mid-20th century America: a budding space program, huge industrial and manufacturing capacity, the growth of the middle class, and a young generation excited about science and engineering. China's shift away from raw materials and manufactured goods is only natural. Given it has several times the population of any other highly developed nation, watching China's shift to innovation will indeed be an exciting time for the global science community.

Nature, 2008. DOI: 10.1038/454382a

This trend is very significant and showing that China was developing on the right track. The "copy" or "cheap knock off" label on the Made in China brand will slowly go away. The thing is, I did not know that China leads in material science and nanotechnology innovation as the article cleimed. Can anyone with knowledge in this mater enlighten me?
 
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