Chinese Economics Thread

dfrtyhgj

Junior Member
Registered Member
Mooncakes and zongzi should not be packed with precious metals, mahogany or other valuable materials.

The requirements restricting excessive packaging will be mandatory national standards to curb extravagance and eliminate luxury packaging.

China's packaging waste accounts for about 30 to 40 percent of the urban household garbage. And most of the packaging waste was generated from excessive packaging

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56860

Senior Member
Registered Member
Mooncakes and zongzi should not be packed with precious metals, mahogany or other valuable materials.

The requirements restricting excessive packaging will be mandatory national standards to curb extravagance and eliminate luxury packaging.

China's packaging waste accounts for about 30 to 40 percent of the urban household garbage. And most of the packaging waste was generated from excessive packaging

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Nice. Reminiscent of the skyscraper ban.
 

ThomX

New Member
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That 1 trillion yuan is like an afterburner...
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This critic thinks that PBOC concealed a lot of FX profit unconverted for strategic reserve. The 1 trillion is virtually not even a debt burden. Now the rules are broken by the Western leech, and it's time for the Big Brother to protect Chinese enterprises and capitals.
 

LesAdieux

Junior Member
I am sorry to contradict you, but I beg to differ. Appreciating the Yuan is something which you definitely do not want to do.

What makes a currency strong is having huge surpluses in its balance of payments.

China receives each day a tsunami of hard currency which it must, necessarily, NOT convert in Yuans. That is why China has so many USD treasury bills (not converted into yuan), and deposits in foreign banks denominated in Sterling Pounds, USD, CHF and Yens.

THAT IS ALSO ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT REASONS TO HAVE THE BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE. To get rid of the excess foreign currency which cannot, should not, be converted into yuans and is to risky to accumulate in other countries currencies.

Using those parameters, the Yuan is by far the strongest currency in the planet. This not wishful thinking. This is a hard fact of life.

It has absolutely everything to become a hard currency reserve for the world, maybe even THE reserve currency of the world, with possibilities of replacing the USD in a relatively short period of time.

HOWEVER...

The price of becoming the reserve currency of the world is having consistently HUGE trade deficits. This is a blessing, but can also be a curse if one abuses this power. It means you can buy anything around the world, be it commodities, be it machinery, ships, wars, etc.... by simply printing green (or in China's case RED) rectangular pieces of paper)

Have you ever wondered how come the US has for the past 50 (yes, fifty) years not had a single year with trade surplus?

Enough for the time being.


"to get the reserve currency status, the underlying economy must consistently run huge deficit"

this is a carefully manufactured myth with the RMB in mind. after getting traction, it has been parrotted from time to time.

the truth is, when the Bretton Woods system was established in 1944, the US ran massive Surplus with the rest of the world, and the surpluses lasted for a long time.
 

jfcarli

Junior Member
Registered Member
"to get the reserve currency status, the underlying economy must consistently run huge deficit"

this is a carefully manufactured myth with the RMB in mind. after getting traction, it has been parrotted from time to time.

the truth is, when the Bretton Woods system was established in 1944, the US ran massive Surplus with the rest of the world, and the surpluses lasted for a long time.
Yes and no... You can see from the graph below that right after Brettonwoods ( 27 December 1945) surplus started dwindling down.

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The nominal trade balance was artifcially positive, but the US was having HUGE deficits in GOLD, which backed its currency. It just did not show because the deficits were working behind the scene. Gold was the actual currency, not the paper it was printed on. And there, in their gold reserves, the US started bleeding starting the end of the war.

Comes 1971 Nixon realized it could no longer continue bleeding gold (deficits), it turned the dollar into a FIAT currency, because it was nearly broke from exchanging dollars for actual gold at the price of $ 35.00 per ounce.

The graph clearly shows that starting with the end or WWII exports spiralled downwards and imports started growing.

THAT is when it truly became the world reserve currency on its own merits, not on the merits of gold. Here is when they started having the obscene priviledge of buying anything, anywhere giving pieces of green paper in exchange.

They are on the verge of losing that obscene priviledge because they abused of the priviledge.
 

LesAdieux

Junior Member
Yes and no... You can see from the graph below that right after Brettonwoods ( 27 December 1945) surplus started dwindling down.

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The nominal trade balance was artifcially positive, but the US was having HUGE deficits in GOLD, which backed its currency. It just did not show because the deficits were working behind the scene. Gold was the actual currency, not the paper it was printed on. And there, in their gold reserves, the US started bleeding starting the end of the war.

Comes 1971 Nixon realized it could no longer continue bleeding gold (deficits), it turned the dollar into a FIAT currency, because it was nearly broke from exchanging dollars for actual gold at the price of $ 35.00 per ounce.

The graph clearly shows that starting with the end or WWII exports spiralled downwards and imports started growing.

THAT is when it truly became the world reserve currency on its own merits, not on the merits of gold. Here is when they started having the obscene priviledge of buying anything, anywhere giving pieces of green paper in exchange.

They are on the verge of losing that obscene priviledge because they abused of the priviledge.

yes and no ? gold "deficit" helped to maintain the Britton Woods? a bit warped beyond my comprehension.

Nixon was forced to decouple because of the run on the dollar. it actually made the dollar stronger till the second run on the dollar......

moment of truth: US inflation data will be released in 10 hours.
 

Strangelove

Colonel
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TCL to expand global footprint​

By FAN FEIFEI | China Daily | Updated: 2022-03-09 09:27
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Visitors check out TCL displays during an expo in Las Vegas in January. [Photo/Xinhua]
Electronics giant charts plans for more complete industrial chains worldwide

Chinese consumer electronics giant TCL Technology Group Corp will speed up its globalization push, establish more complete industrial chains across the globe, and increase investment in next-generation display technologies, said Li Dongsheng, founder and chairman of the company.

Li, who is a deputy to the 13th National People's Congress, said Chinese enterprises should accelerate the construction of global industrial and supply chains, which is of great significance in improving their competitiveness.

He said that in the face of anti-globalization risks, TCL has adjusted the layout of its overseas industrial chain to effectively avoid trade barriers, ramped up localization efforts and continuously increased capital input in research and development.

For instance, the company has expanded overseas plants in Vietnam, Mexico and India, and established joint ventures with local partners in Brazil to jointly build production bases, supply chains and an R&D system.

"Looking ahead, we will also actively consider increasing industrial bases in Africa and strengthening our business in the Middle East," Li said. So far, TCL has established 42 research and development centers and 32 manufacturing bases around the world, with operations in over 160 countries and regions.

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said stabilizing industrial growth will be its top priority this year, and it will step up the promotion of industrial chain upgrades and enhance the core competitiveness of manufacturing in the country.

Building global competitiveness has always been an important strategy for TCL, Li said, while noting the company's revenue from overseas markets stood at 117.4 billion yuan ($18.6 billion) in 2021, up 60 percent on a yearly basis.

In his proposal to this year's two sessions-the annual meetings of China's top legislature and political advisory body-Li called for intensified efforts to support more homegrown companies to participate in key fields in industrial chains and improve the industrial chain of the Chinese manufacturing sector.

He suggested the country should attract foreign high-tech manufacturing enterprises to invest and establish factories in China, as well as encourage and support leading Chinese enterprises to expand their manufacturing advantages to overseas markets, and set up R&D centers and production bases.

China has gained an upper hand in the liquid crystal display (LCD) field, accounting for about 60 to 70 percent of global production capacity, but it still lags behind in new display technologies, such as organic light-emitting diodes or OLED, Li said.

He noted the company is accelerating layout of next-generation display technologies, such as OLED, quantum dot and micro light-emitting diodes. Compared with traditional LCD, the new display technologies show great improvements in terms of image contrast, brightness and color spectrum.

It has invested heavily in medium-sized displays, including laptops, tablets and vehicle-mounted displays, and started construction of a T9 production line, which mainly produces commercial display equipment, Li added.

Chinese enterprises should step up efforts for breakthroughs in key technologies through self-dependent innovation, and promote integration of the new generation of information technologies and intelligent manufacturing with the current industrial supply chain, said Zhang Qizi, deputy director of the Institute of Industrial Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
 
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