Chinese Economics Thread

ansy1968

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Michael Hasenstab, chief investment officer for Templeton Global Macro, explains the benefits of and opportunity to China's CBDC (central bank digital currency), and its potential threat to dollar dominance in Financial Time.

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Beijing’s ambitions could spur acceptance of renminbi as main rival to US currency
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The writer is chief investment officer for Templeton Global Macro

Markets have been gripped by cryptocurrency fever. The price of bitcoin has attained new highs while debate has raged over the emergence of cryptocurrency technology.

But these may be a sideshow for a big developing trend — the rapid digitalisation of the renminbi.

This shift, combined with other macroeconomic and political factors, could be the key that accelerates the decline of the dollar’s dominance as the world’s leading reserve currency. It could also hasten the acceptance of the renminbi as the main rival to the US currency.

Central banks around the world have been grappling in recent years with the concept of digital currency technology. Few nations, though, are as aggressive as China in their approach to developing a so-called central bank digital currency.

Such a currency would be overseen by a central governmental authority, removing the element of anonymity that is fundamental to the decentralised, blockchain-ledger of popularised cryptocurrencies like bitcoin or ethereum. The theoretical benefits of government oversight of these new digital assets are numerous.

CBDCs allow for greater prevention of fraud or crime, enable instantaneous international transactions, reduce transaction costs, permit greater financial inclusion and aid the provision of direct fiscal stimulus to individual citizens.

For China, adoption of a CBDC both within and beyond its borders would allow its financial system to reduce reliance on the dollar and limit the role and oversight of foreign financial institutions and regulators. While many countries have started discussing the potential future application of CBDCs, China has pushed ahead with development.

In April 2020, Beijing piloted a digital currency in four cities, allowing commercial banks to run internal tests converting between cash and digital money, account-balance checks, and payments. The pilot programme expanded to 28 major cities in August. Aiming for broad circulation in 2022, China plans to test the digital currency in additional major cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, this year.

This pioneering approach should accelerate the elevation of the renminbi on the world stage. Some users outside China, particularly in the US, might be reluctant to use a digital currency controlled by China. However, early adoption in parts of Asia, Latin America and Africa is likely to proceed significantly faster.

Global reserve currencies’ relative importance historically is explained by the macroeconomist Barry Eichengreen. Currencies are more prized as reserve assets when they satisfy two conditions: first, when they are stable, liquid and widely used in international transactions; and second, when they are backed by a country to which another state has important security links.

China’s development in recent years puts it on a clear path to satisfy these criteria as its government has maintained relative policy stability. The country accounted for 16 per cent of global output in 2019, but the renminbi represented a little over 2 per cent of global reserves as of the second quarter last year.

Lack of renminbi-denominated assets for foreigners to own has inhibited its rise as a reserve currency. But now the renminbi will be supported by the Chinese authorities opening their $15tn domestic bond market to foreign participants. Greater demand for these bonds will push down yields, lowering borrowing costs.

More important, if China captures the first-mover advantage to meet the world’s demand for use of digital currencies to settle international financial transactions and own digital assets, the appeal of its CBDC could rise sharply.

China has also made great strides in invoicing its trade in renminbi. The security and geopolitical rationale for holding renminbi has become stronger through such measures as China’s Belt and Road Initiative financing of projects in developing countries.

Covid-19 might also be a catalyst for the greater acceptance of the renminbi as a global reserve currency. The economic carnage of the pandemic has sent already large fiscal deficits ballooning and driven even more accommodative monetary policy in the US.

This historically unique combination of impending massive fiscal and vaccine-led growth, where short-term interest rates are anchored at zero, will expand an already large current account deficit, putting further pressure on the value of the dollar.

The digitalisation of the renminbi will add to these economic and geopolitical factors. This will have a durable, transformative impact on the international economy.
@weig2000 its all about control and here is an excellent analysis from Alex Christoforou, (he used to work in Silicon Valley) he maybe a bias pro American but he see thing as it is.

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Team Blue

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One of them is a legit 100% White-worshipping (and apparently actually White himself) nutjob who wants China to model itself on some revolutionary communist ideals. Thank god these foreign agents have no chance of convincing China to go back to that shitty model.

The current Chinese model is distinctly Chinese, and he wants China go back to some failed European model. Nah, screw that and screw him. China is going it's own way. Doesn't need any more 'help' from Westerners, whether they be Communists or Capitalists or Anarchists.

China will more than happily accept trade, financing initiatives, technology transfer and so on. But enough with these Westerners lecturing China on her political and economic system.
The constant, unceasing "This will ruin China's economy" is ridiculous. Looking out East from the West, the PRC is outclassing us in a lot of ways, and we seem to be screwing ourselves mainly on the basis of "China bad".
 

weig2000

Captain
@Orthan might enjoy reading these.

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Foreign direct investment in China grew at the fastest pace in more than a decade during the first quarter of 2021, according to data released by the Ministry of Commerce on Thursday.
The news came amid lingering concerns that pandemic disruptions and
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could accelerate a supply-chain exodus from the world’s second-largest economy.
Foreign direct investment – excluding financial sectors such as banking, securities and insurance – surged 43.8 per cent during the January-March period, year on year. That was the highest quarterly growth rate since the second quarter of 2008.

China is not just a low-cost OEM for global brands. Chinese manufacturers are increasingly going directly to global customers.
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Sales of non-pandemic goods are on the rise as China’s business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce trade boomed alongside traditional trade in the first quarter of the year.
Exports of kitchen products, household appliances and outdoor sporting goods through B2B e-commerce channels during the quarter edged out masks and sanitisers – the dominant trade a year ago – according to one of China’s biggest B2B e-commerce marketplaces, DHgate.
The volume of trade in household appliances and kitchen products on DHgate’s platform surged fivefold compared with the same period last year, while trade in women’s apparel quadrupled and trade in wearable devices tripled. The comparison base was low, however, as sportswear and apparel trade was depressed a year ago amid global lockdowns.
The biggest importers of goods on its platform in the first quarter were the United States, Britain, France, Canada and Italy.
 

voyager1

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The Asian nation’s holdings -- the second-largest foreign holder behind Japan -- increased by $9 billion in Feb. to $1.1 trillion, the highest total since July 2019, according to figures from the Treasury Department released Thursday
China loves holding US dollars Lmao.
Imagine holding your enemy's currency who is planning to inflate its debt to heaven and is increasingly restricting your ability to buy goods with it, muppets
 

horse

Colonel
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They could use it to create a digital dollar stablecoin before the US does.
Haha! You're right! That is SO FUNNY!

Once they get the details and tests of the DCEP out of the way, then it is a turnkey system almost for USD and all others!

:p
 

Tam

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China loves holding US dollars Lmao.
Imagine holding your enemy's currency who is planning to inflate its debt to heaven and is increasingly restricting your ability to buy goods with it, muppets


That is because China has too much US dollars. We print'em, we give'em. The more the US prints, the more China accumulates US dollars.

In a way it helps the US otherwise the massive printing would cause hyperinflation...hyperinflation of various assets are already happening in the US such as stocks, Bitcoin and real estate, but China is keeping the CPI low.
 

Reclaimer

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Retail sales beat expectations, rising 34.2% from year ago

Economy's momentum slowed slightly from previous quarter China's economy soared in the first quarter as consumer spending strengthened, joining production and investment in recovering from the Covid slump a year ago.

Gross domestic product (CNGDPYOY) climbed a record 18.3% in the first quarter from a year earlier, largely in line with the 18.5% predicted in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The figures are skewed by comparisons from a year ago when the economy was in lockdown. A better reading of the economy's momentum comes from quarter-on-quarter growth (CNGDPQOQ), which slowed to 0.6% from 2.6% in the previous three months.

China's economy steadily picked up pace after an historic contraction in the first quarter of last year, recovering all its lost ground by the end of September. The rebound has been led by strong industrial output and robust exports as the pandemic fueled demand for Chinese-made medical goods and electronic devices.

"We are seeing a bit more balanced recovery in the Chinese economy" Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS AG, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. As policy starts to normalize, property and infrastructure investiment are set to slow in the next few quarters, she said. "So that early pickup in construction industry is going to give way to more household consumption," she said.

China's benchmark CSI 300 Index (SHSZ300) erased an earlier loss of as much as 0.6%. China's 10-year government bond futures also reversed earlier losses to rise as much as 0.1% while the yield on benchmark 10-year sovereign debt fell one basis point to 3.165%. The onshore yuan lost 0.17%, the first drop this week, to 6.5329 per dollar.

Bumper GDP growth, rising inflation and soaring debt levels have put policy makers on guard. Beijing has signaled it wants to scale back fiscal and monetary stimulus now that the recovery is gathering pace, and is tightening regulatory oversight in areas such as lending and real estate. The central bank has aslked banks to curtail loan growth in coming months, though officials have stressed a gradual tapering of policy.

Globally, the rollout of vaccines is helping to bolster the world economy and underpinning China's growth. On top of that, the Biden administration's massive fiscal stimulus is expected to have huge spillovers for the rest of the world, especially in China, the world's biggest exporter. Bloomberg Economics' Chang Shu upgraded her growth forecast for China for this year to 9.3% from 8.2% previously. The government's official target is for growth above 6% this year.
 
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