Either:
1) Things are really bad and they are really trying to make sure the real estate industry doesn't completely have the bottom fall out ("we went too far with bubble deflation we need you guys to not all go bankrupt")
or
2) Things aren't bad and they are trying to get the bubble going again in complete 180 to what they've done in the past 2.5 years...("sorry guys we are complete idiots we are going back to housing speculation days")
Which one is more likely?
Wang Jianmin, who specialises in Taiwan issues at Minnan Normal University in Fujian province, said the negotiations were an important part of efforts from both sides to reduce economic reliance on Beijing.
The core of the initiative is to counter the mainland and establish a US-Taiwan economic cooperation system, and to include Taiwan in the US supply and industrial systems,” Wang said.
According to Wang, Beijing should be wary of closer economic links between Taiwan and the United States.
“The US will pressure Taiwan not to work [closely] with the mainland … and it is obvious that excluding the mainland and reducing [the island’s] reliance on the mainland will be part of the agreements,” he said.
Wang noted that Taiwan’s exports to the mainland fell last year. According to data from the mainland’s Taiwan Affairs Office, imports from Taiwan amounted to US$219.07 billion from January to November – down 2.9 per cent from the same period a year earlier.
“[Beijing] needs to pay close attention to the impact [of the initiative] on future economic and trade relations between the two sides of the strait,” Wang said.
He added that it was likely to drive more Taiwanese investment to the US, citing Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company as an example. The chip giant last increased its investment in a US plant to US$40 billion. Wang said Beijing should try to compete with Washington by boosting cross-strait cooperation, especially given that China is engaged in trade and tech wars with the US. “Cross-strait cooperation is of greater importance to us since we need [Taiwan’s] products, like hi-tech goods.”
But Tang Yonghong, a Taiwan affairs professor at Xiamen University in Fujian, was less worried about the negotiations, saying they were more focused on issues like trade facilitation and would have little impact on US-Taiwan trade or cross-strait economic ties.
But he said the negotiations could drive other countries to follow suit by seeking similar deals with Taiwan, undermining Beijing’s efforts to promote its one-China message in the international community.
Tang suggested Beijing could take countermeasures including cancelling the reduced tariffs it offers on a list of Taiwanese goods under the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement signed by the two sides in 2010.
In addition, he said mainland China could reduce imports from the island and switch to domestic and other suppliers.
And why bet on 8% when he think 5.5% is the most likely outcome? There are a lot of things I am trying to make sense of.Both sound really bad, no? So if you believe they are the only two possibilities then why are you so optimistic on China?
Can you walk through the math on electricity demand doubling? Norway has not seen its electricity demand grow significantly despite having the highest EV penetration in the world.
Also residential rooftop is suspect - the math breaks down quickly unless everyone can go fully off the grid. Majority of the cost of electricity is in grid maintenance. The natural answer is storage but I don't think there is enough space to put batteries in to allow buildings to go off grid. Whatever costs you get at a residential level, things are cheaper at an utility scale; which necessitates the maintenance of the grid and makes it tough public policy to allow people to go off grid.
No need for cooking the GDP data by the West when they already use the lawyer, insurance fees, pron and drug industry into their GDP figures lolWe should examine GDP truthfulness for every major economy, as it is very rare that a major economy claims unprecedented growth while simultaneously experiencing a collapse in average lifespan, birth rate and labor participation.
Its the 1).I'm confident against extreme outcomes. Your point on "real estate at the mercy of the central government" is a valid point....if this was 2013 as opposed to 2023.
I can tell you that the central government has been relaxing housing policy since middle of 2022, relaxing 2nd house purchase restrictions, allowing local governments to reduce down payment restrictions, *and* cutting LPR/RRR at the same time via PBoC. Meanwhile Liu He is at Davos telling everyone how important it is for housing to develop in a healthy manner.
Yet.....the sales data trend has not improved in aggregate. Based on what I see for the first 3 weeks of 2023 the YoY comparisons are still deteriorating in Tier 2/3 cities (like...-20% down YoY) and only turned positive in Tier 1 in the third week.
Soooo......
Either:
1) Things are really bad and they are really trying to make sure the real estate industry doesn't completely have the bottom fall out ("we went too far with bubble deflation we need you guys to not all go bankrupt")
or
2) Things aren't bad and they are trying to get the bubble going again in complete 180 to what they've done in the past 2.5 years...("sorry guys we are complete idiots we are going back to housing speculation days")
Which one is more likely?