Chinese Economics Thread

ABC78

Junior Member
International economist and bestselling author Dambisa Moyo discussed the commodity dynamics that the world will face over the next several decades, focusing in particular on the implications of China's global rush for resources. As well as challenges western accusations against China in Africa. These topics are the subject of her book Winner Take All: China's Race for Resources and What It Means for the World.

[video=youtube;bf8-5QBbzmU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bf8-5QBbzmU&list=PLOL2t8YQ7764WJZW28W5oLfmZiheFk4I2&index=19[/video]
 
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A.Man

Major
I like her also-Dambisa Moyo: Is China the new idol for emerging economies?

[video=youtube;4Q2aznfmcYU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Q2aznfmcYU[/video]
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
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CES: China, Emerging Asia to Lead Consumer Tech Growth

5:27 PM PST 1/5/2014 by Michael Walker

"Has North America's market share peaked? I think the answer is a resounding yes," says Steve Koenig, director of analysis for the Consumer Electronics Association.

LAS VEGAS -- Driven by untapped demand in huge markets, China and other developing nations will overtake North America in retail spending on consumer technology products for the first time in 2014, Steve Koenig, director of industry analysis for the Consumer Electronics Association, said in a press conference Sunday at the 2014 International CES show.

"Has North America's market share peaked? I think the answer is a resounding yes," Koenig said. "Spending leadership will be No. 2 for some time to come."

Koenig added that -- extrapolating from CEA's research, which tracks data at more than 340,000 stores in 80 countries-- worldwide growth in consumer tech spending will slow by 1 percent in 2014.

Robust smart phone and tablet sales--which account for 43 cents of every dollar spent on consumer technology -- continue to impact sales of digital cameras, camcorders, GPS devices and other devices whose functions they replicate.

Smart phones and tablets had until recently offset the decline in other categories. But, with smart phone and tablet sales easing in mature markets such as North America, Koenig said, "The growth is becoming not enough to offset the decline. We're waiting for the next cycle of innovation to lift us again."

Global TV sales are returning to slow growth, thanks to falling prices and ever-larger screens at lower price points: Walmart sold out of a 70-inch screen priced at $1,000 during the 2013 holiday season. But Koenig said the market for televisions is being relentlessly tested by tablets. "There's less of a need to have multiple [TV] displays in the home when you have tablets you can take from room to room."

Koenig said global technology spending will be evenly divided between emerging and mature markets in 2014. Emerging Asia now leads the world in spending, anchored by China, which spent $282 billion on consumer tech in 2013.

China's dominance is a story of sheer numbers. Koenig pointed out that there are more than 160 Chinese cities with populations of 1 million or more, compared to nine in the U.S, adding that while most of the growth in China has come from major urban centers, the potential from China's smaller cities and rural areas is "mind boggling -- these vast untapped markets. By 2020, a third of every tech collar spent will come from China and the emerging Asia region."

Koenig also pointed out that the Chinese in particular are hungry for tech gadgets like smartphones, tablets and high-definition televisions. In the U.S., he said, 55 percent of consumers agreed with the statement "tech products supply me with the tools that I need for success." In China, 90 percent agreed.

This is the trap the US has gotten itself into. A lot of people think if jobs come back to the US with wages Americans are use to being paid, it doesn't matter if prices go up on products because the higher-wages-than-outsourcing will be more than be enough to cover the higher costs. But if your market is saturated, how will these companies make money? They're dependent on foreign markets. No one in any emerging economy is going to be paying the price it costs to make those products on American wages. And someone from an emerging economy will kill that American company because they will be able to sell a cheaper alternative on the market.

I was watching Fareed Zakaria's show on CNN this morning and he was touting a book about how the world is turning away from globalization showing figures how global trade has gone down. That could be just because of the global recession and people are buying less. But if the US and other developed economies are turning away from the very globalization they started, they're going to end of being the losers and China will most likely end up being the winner. China can nearly produced everything they can manufacture. The stuff they can't will be too expensive for everyone else to buy.

China is more insulated from this because Chinese products don't have significant market share in places like the US. And remember Made in China in most cases doesn't translate to Profited by China because those are foreign corporations outsourcing their products to be made. It also means less pollution produced to make those outsourced products nor does China have to scour the world for the resources to make them.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
China makes fresh bid to curb shadow banking, contain debt risk
Photo
6:07am EST
By Heng Xie and Gabriel Wildau
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's cabinet has published guidelines strengthening regulation of risky off-balance-sheet lending in a new effort to address growing financial risks from an explosion in debt.
The State Council's guidelines call for tighter regulation of banks' off-balance-sheet lending and say that trust companies - the biggest non-bank players in what's called "shadow banking" - should return to their original purpose as asset managers and not engage in "credit-type" business.
A copy of the council's Document 107, dated December 11, was obtained by Reuters. There's been no official confirmation of the document, which was addressed to government agencies at the central and local level.
An index of the biggest mainland stocks .CSI300 closed at its lowest level in five months on Monday, as concerns about the new regulations weighed down the market. .SS
China's policymakers are concerned that the country's economy has become overly reliant on borrowing to fuel growth and that debt-fueled investment has created massive overcapacity in many industries.
If strictly implemented, the deleveraging push could put China's economy on a more sustainable long-term path by reducing the risk of a bad-debt crisis. But short-term growth would likely fall as a reduction in credit growth spurs a fall in spending.
"One can predict that growth of total social financing will slow and fixed-asset investment will also slow," said Liu Yuhui, director of the financial focal point laboratory at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank, referring to the central bank's measure of total credit from all sources.
"If this isn't accompanied by various forms of debt restructuring, some sectors may see their funding chains broken and there could be defaults," he said.
An official audit released last week showed that China's local government debt reached 17.9 trillion yuan at end-June 2013, or up from 10.7 trillion at end-2010. [ID:nL3N0KA034] Local governments are among the largest recipients of shadow bank loans.
China's ratio of total debt-to-GDP, including government, corporate and household debt, was set to reach 218 percent of GDP by the end of 2013, up 87 percentage points since 2008, rating agency Fitch estimates.
Though this level remains lower than many developed countries including the U.S. and Japan, economists warn that such rapid debt run-ups have been associated with financial crises in other nations. That's because most economies aren't able to efficiently deploy such a large amount of investment within a short period.
The State Council's guidelines also come amid two major cash crunches in the past six months. The interest rates that banks charge each other for short-term loans spiked to record highs in June and again last month, as banks scrambled to raise cash to pay maturing debts. <CN/>
Many bankers attributed the interest-rate spikes in part to the growth of shadow banking.
ALTERNATIVES FOR CUSTOMERS
Banks raise funds for shadow bank loans largely by selling so-called wealth management products (WMPs), which they market to savers as a higher-yielding alternative to traditional bank deposits.
Regulators are concerned that banks are using short-term interbank borrowing to fund payouts on maturing WMPs, even when the underlying assets - including loans, bonds, and bank acceptance bills - haven't yet matured.
"In the last year, banks have been hit hard by liquidity problems. Quite a few banks wish the central bank would relax liquidity, but based on Document 107, it appears the relevant authorities don't agree," said Liu.
While the guidelines signal high-level concern about the risk from shadow banking, they contain no specific rules.
In China's policymaking process, the State Council typically issues broad guidelines, which regulatory agencies then follow up with specific rules.
Indeed, rumors have circulated for several months that the banking regulator is preparing new rules to crack down on the use of complex interbank transactions designed to disguise risky corporate loans as loans to other banks.
AMEND, DON'T END
The State Council document says shadow banking is a "beneficial" and "inevitable" consequence of financial development and provides an official definition of the term.
But the guidelines also call for closer monitoring and tighter regulation of banks' off-balance-sheet lending, which is often conducted through intermediaries such as trust companies and securities brokerages.
Shadow banking has grown rapidly in China since 2010, when banks began running up against limits on expanding loans through traditional channels.
With credit demand still strong but banks increasingly constrained by regulations such as capital adequacy and loan-to-deposit ratios, institutions devised complex structures designed to keep lending to customers.
Like bank WMPs, trust companies raise funds by selling high-yielding investment products, using the proceeds to make loans or buy other assets.
Chinese savers have flocked to these products as an alternative to low-yielding bank deposits, a weak stock market and a frothy property market. Trusts surpassed insurance companies this year to become the non-bank financial institutions with the most assets under management.
If fully implemented, cutting off trusts' credit business could restrict lending to weak borrowers such as local governments and property developers, who are largely shut out from traditional bank loans but can still obtain high-interest trust loans.
A Reuters investigation last year found that local governments, property developers and industries suffering from surplus capacity accounted for about 70 percent of trust loans given in 2012.
CAN LOOPHOLES BE CLOSED?
Trust loans outstanding reached 4.62 trillion yuan at the end of September, according to the China Trustee Association. Such loans accounted for 11 percent of net new corporate fundraising in the first 11 months of last year, central bank data shows.
The latest guidelines follow a set of regulations issued in March, which limited the amount of shadow bank loans that banks could package into WMPs.
With the new policies, authorities seek to address the problem of banks exploiting loopholes by clarifying the responsibilities of various regulators, including the People's Bank of China, the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the China Securities Regulatory Commission.
The State Council also said that investors must bear the risk of losses associated with WMPs and that banks are forbidden from providing guarantees on the underlying credits.
Analysts are concerned WMP investors widely perceive the products as carrying an implicit guarantee from state-owned banks, even when the fine print says otherwise. That leaves banks exposed to the risk from many loans not on their balance sheets, as they could face heavy pressure to compensate investors to protect their reputations.
The fresh guidelines also call on the PBOC to develop new statistics to measure shadow banking and to make regular reports to the State Council.
(Additional reporting by Zhao Hongmei and Xu Yong; Editing by Richard Borsuk)
Rising home prices send China's 'Rat Race' scurrying underground
Photo
Sun, Jan 5 2014
By Koh Gui Qing and Aileen Wang
BEIJING (Reuters) - Zig-zagging left and right through a maze of dark, narrow corridors in a high-rise's basement, 35-year-old kitchen worker Hu has joined the many thousands of Chinese fleeing fast-rising property prices by heading down - down underground.
Hu lives here beneath an affluent downtown apartment building, in a windowless, 4 square-meter (43 square-foot) apartment with his wife. For 400 yuan ($65.85) a month in rent, there's no air-conditioning, the only suggestion of heat is a pipe snaking through to deliver gas to the apartments above and the bathroom is a fetid, shared toilet down the hall.
"I can't afford to rent a house," said Hu as he showed off his meager appointments. Living in basement apartments isn't illegal in China, but like anywhere else it is nothing to brag about and Hu, who guts fish for 2,500 yuan a month at a popular Sichuanese hotpot restaurant on the street above, declined to provide his given name. "If I weren't trying to save money, I wouldn't live here," he said.
Locals have dubbed Hu and his fellow subterranean denizens the "rat race" - casualties and simultaneously emblems of a housing market beyond the government's control.
Despite efforts to discourage property speculation and develop affordable housing, a steady stream of job-seekers from the countryside and a lack of attractive investment alternatives have kept prices soaring. Residential property prices rose 10 percent in November from the same month of 2012, according to data released last week, and have been setting new records every year since 2009. Prices in Beijing are rising even faster - 16 percent a year - with rents climbing 12 percent a year.
LOVELY SEWER, CLOSE TO MANHOLES
That's pushing more and more newly arrived urbanites underground. Of the estimated 7.7 million migrants living in Beijing, nearly a fifth live either at their workplace or underground, according to state news agency Xinhua. Beijing's housing authority refuted this statistic, saying in an email to Reuters that a government survey last year found only about 280,000 migrants living in basements and that only a small percentage of Beijing's basements were being used as dwellings.
Last month, authorities sealed Beijing's manhole covers after local media discovered a group of people living in the sewers below, with one, a 52-year-old car washer, reported by the local media to have been living there for at least a decade. The sewer dwellers were relocated and those not from Beijing sent back home.
Surging residential prices are both boon and bane to the government. China's booming property sector accounts for roughly 15 percent of GDP and heavily indebted local governments rely on land sales - selling land earns them roughly three times what they collect from taxes.
But rising prices are putting home ownership farther out of reach for most Chinese, worsening the gap between rich and poor and breeding social discontent.
"Some people can buy several homes, some people can't even buy one," said Mao Yushi, co-founder and honorary president at the Unirule Institute of Economics, an independent think tank in Beijing. "There will be an impact on society."
The government has responded by restricting home purchases and boosting the supply of low-cost public housing. In Beijing, the total floor space of public housing rose 20 percent in the first 11 months of 2013 from the year before.
But with the promise of employment and education beckoning in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai, the problem appears likely to only get worse. Beijing saw another 316,000 migrants arrive in 2012, lifting its population to 19.6 million.
IF YOU HAVE TO ASK, YOU CAN'T AFFORD IT
That has made housing in Beijing more expensive relative to average incomes than in many developed countries. The median price for residential property in Beijing is over $4,500 a square meter, according to property developer Soufun, with rents running at $9.50 per square meter - in a nation where the average annual income is just over $6,000.
That makes Beijing homes almost three times as expensive for Chinese as buying a home in New York City is for Americans, according to Reuters calculations based on data from the World Bank and San Francisco-based property website Trulia. Renting a 1,000 square-foot apartment in China's capital would cost almost double the average citizen's monthly income.
Not surprisingly, public opinion polls routinely rank rising home prices as one of the biggest sources of anxiety among Chinese adults. A 2012 survey by the Hong Kong media website Phoenix found that couples in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen spend on average 42 percent of their combined monthly income on mortgages. Chinese have invented the term "housing slave" to describe those struggling to make hefty monthly mortgages payments.
But with Beijing home prices having risen six-fold in the past decade, according to Soufun, even cheap public housing can be beyond the reach of many, forcing them to seek less attractive alternatives.
In a basement below a block of apartments in downtown Beijing, residents walk stooped to avoid pipes hanging from the ceilings. "This is better than other basements in the area," said one 26-year-old resident.
The typical basement or workplace apartment is less than 5 square meters, according to Xinhua, less than a tenth the size of the typical Beijing apartment. Fires sometimes break out in basements when people cook - at least three were reported in Beijing last year.
Apartments are so small that Hu said he and his wife have trouble sleeping together in their tiny bed. He has resorted to spending most nights in another basement apartment provided by his restaurant.
His wife yearns for a larger home above ground and in the meantime makes do by decorating the room with plastic bells and flowers that Hu says she finds in the street. Their dream of owning a home remains distant and Hu says basement living has hurt their relationship.
"It's too difficult to have a house right now," said Hu. "Every basement has people living in it. See for yourself. There are so many of us out there."
(Reporting by Aileen Wang and Koh Gui Qing; Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Shao Xiaoyi; Editing by Wayne Arnold)
I have lived in a penthouse, I have lived in a Basement. the View was better from above, the rent was better from below.
China concerns hit stocks, gold rebound continues
Photo
8:07am EST
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Concerns over a slowdown in China's economy triggered a third day of falls for world shares on Monday and extended a spritely rebound in gold to leave it at a near three-week high.
Figures showing that China's services sector slowed sharply last month added to a stack of disappointing data from the world's second largest economy over the last week and left Wall Street eyeing another cautious start.
MSCI's world stock index .MIWD00000PUS, which tracks 45 countries, was at a three-week low following Beijing's hefty overnight drop and a rocky start to 2014 for Tokyo's Nikkei .N225 which saw its biggest fall in over two-months.
European moves were far more muted, however, as a raft of data showing the divergence between top economies Germany and France, but also the gradual recoveries in Italy and Spain, cushioned the impact.
Ahead of the start of U.S. trading, the pan-regional FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 had fought back to neutral territory as London's FTSE .FTSE, Paris's CAC 40 .FCHI and Frankfurt's Dax .GDAXI all recovered from early tumbles.
"You could argue we have had some mixed news on the economic front, but I think in general the trend in the numbers is an improving one globally," said Robert Parkes, an equity strategist at HSBC.
"The China is data is relevant but of course so are the euro zone PMIs that we have seen... We don't believe we are going to see a hard landing in China."
Despite the recovery in stocks there was still plenty of evidence of the caution the China data had fostered among investors.
Safe-haven European bonds were holding gains, copper - highly-attuned to China's fortunes - remained firmly under pressure, while in the currency market the dollar .DXY hovered near a four-week high.
CHINA
The culprit for the moves was growth in the China's huge services sector which slowed sharply in December to its lowest point since August 2011.
The figures also came hot on the heels of a similar official survey on Friday and two other PMIs last week showing factory activity also soured.
China's CSI300 share index .CSI300 sagged 2.3 percent, hitting a five-month low and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS slid 0.8 percent to a three-week trough.
The Chinese index is now down 3.9 percent since the start of the year, adding to last year's 7.6 percent decline.
"The focal point of the Asian markets is more on Chinese growth and on Chinese political situation and how it's going to pan out this year" said Guy Stear, Asian credit and equity strategist at Societe Generale, as opposed to worries much of the world has about a reduction in U.S. central bank stimulus.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Global services PMIs: link.reuters.com/dyh85s
Asia manufacturing PMI: link.reuters.com/maz35s
Thai baht: link.reuters.com/jev65v
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
GOLD RUSH
The main beneficiary of the Asian tensions remained gold as it continued to rebound from last year's worst run in over three decades.
It was sitting at $1,238 an ounce as afternoon dealing gathered momentum in London, it's highest in three weeks and on course for a fifth day of back-to-back gains. Oil bounced too after four days of falls, with Brent at $107.76 a barrel.
"Weaker equities will have more of an impact on gold prices than a stronger dollar," said Helen Lau, an analyst at UOB-Kay Hian Securities in Hong Kong. "It is all about allocation by funds."
On the opposite side of the China coin was the South Korean won as it hit a near six-week low. Ongoing political uncertainty in Thailand also left the baht at a near four-year trough and Thai stocks .SETI at a 16-month low.
With Japanese equities taking a beating, the yen got some respite against the dollar, up 0.3 percent at 104.55 yen. And with the ECB's first meeting of the year looming on Thursday the euro edged up from a one-month low to $1.36.
Wednesday's December Fed meeting minutes and then Friday's non-farm payrolls data could determine the dollar's next move. They should give further clues on how quickly the Fed is likely to wind in its huge stimulus program in the coming months.
"With the Fed having set the tapering process in motion, it would likely take a fairly significant miss to derail tapering expectations and push yields significantly lower from their year-end levels," analysts at BNP Paribas wrote in a note.
(Additional reporting by Dominic Lau in Tokyo; Editing by Toby Chopra)
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
An explanation of the recente cash crunchs in china:

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In five years, debt grew from 125% to 215% of GDP. Whoa. I wonder if it would gave been better for china´s economy to grown at 5% since 2008. More sustainable, instead of growing by debt.

I think it is too early to call the china economic growth come to a stall. The China basher have been predicting with glee that as the wages goes higher, China will be in trouble because the investment will move to a cheaper wage countries like Vietnam, India, Indonesia. So goes the theory, but reality is something else . Benefiting from the economy of scale and bless with abundant supplier and increasingly investing in Higher productivity machinery,Chinese manufacturer have been able to absorb the rising wages. With improving economic climate in the West. Chinese exporter thrives. Here is article from New York times

Even as Wages Rise, China Exports Grow

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By KEITH BRADSHERJAN. 9, 2014

Launch media viewer
The Hong Kong Toys and Games Fair attracts exporters, whose sales are growing more slowly, but still growing. Timothy O'Rourke for The New York Times

HONG KONG — Cheng Chunmeng, the general manager of a manufacturer of colorful children’s chairs in east-central China, gave his workers a 30 percent raise last year to keep them from leaving. His labor costs are rising even faster in dollar terms, as the Chinese currency slowly climbs against the United States dollar.

Yet Mr. Cheng, like many Chinese exporters, enjoys growing sales to the United States. “I saw a remarkable increase in orders from the United States starting in March, and getting better and better since then,” Mr. Cheng said. “I feel 2014 will be an even better year.”

Export gains like Mr. Cheng’s suggest that despite years of predictions of trouble for China’s export juggernaut, it has not yet been derailed by fast-rising costs for blue-collar labor, by an appreciating Chinese currency or by foreign investment shifts toward other, lower-wage Asian countries.

China is poised to announce on Friday its largest annual trade surplus in dollar terms since 2008.

China has kept its export machine running even while wages rise. Blue-collar pay has soared between fivefold and ninefold in dollar terms in the last decade, wrecking China’s reputation as a low-wage place for export-oriented manufacturing. Rocketing wages and benefits reflect an acute shortage of manufacturing labor, as a younger generation goes to college instead of heading for factories and as rural China has mostly run out of young adults to send to the cities.

Cheng Chunmeng of Hangzhou Luyi Arts & Crafts. Timothy O'Rourke for The New York Times

China’s exports, while growing more slowly than a few years ago, are still far from stalling despite the disappearance of its advantage in labor costs. Chinese exporters say they have been able to keep prices low and retain overseas customers because factories are becoming more productive. Much of the manufacturing has stayed in China because the highly developed supply chains leading to and from the factories remain among the best in the world.

“We haven’t started thinking of moving to another country,” said Xiang Wenwei, the sales director of the China Mybaby Group, a 3,000-employee manufacturer of baby strollers in Ningbo that makes and assembles all of its major components. It relies on a dense web of suppliers near the factory for everything from raw materials to factory equipment maintenance.

The trade gains for China are magnified because over the last several years many companies have shifted the production of components from high-wage Asian countries like Japan and South Korea to China itself. So China is producing more of the value in each product, and not just doing the final assembly of products produced elsewhere.

China has begun to account for more than half the American trade deficit in some months, including last November, partly because of rising production of shale gas and shale oil that has reduced America’s need to import energy. China was only a quarter to a third of the American deficit before the global financial crisis began in 2008. As the American economy continues to improve, economists predict that Americans will import even more from China.

“The pickup in China’s trade surpluses could lead to rising trade tensions if they are perceived as holding back job growth in the U.S. and dampening the economic recovery,” said Eswar Prasad, a Brookings Institution economist specializing in China.

The gradual recovery in demand in the United States and Europe is being partly absorbed by Chinese exporters instead of stimulating longer hours and further investment at factories closer to home. The unexpected strength in China’s export sector has weakened the West’s economic recovery and retarded job creation in the United States and Europe.

Asked this week for their view on China’s trade surpluses, United States Treasury officials reiterated their opinion that the renminbi, China’s currency, remains significantly undervalued, which China denies, and said that rebalancing the Chinese economy remained incomplete.

The composition of the American trade deficit with China is also shifting in ways that could affect employment in the United States, according to the latest American data, released on Tuesday. The American deficit is increasingly in goods classified by the United States Commerce Department as advanced technology products, notably consumer electronics, while starting to shrink in categories of lower value like shoes.

Chinese leaders and some economists have contended for years that a decline in China’s export competitiveness is imminent, but their country has continued to post trade surpluses. They have used their predictions of slowing exports to justify resistance to pressure from Washington for faster appreciation of the renminbi against the dollar. The renminbi rose only 3.1 percent against the dollar last year, and weakened 1.2 percent against the euro.

The question is how much longer China can remain the dominant exporter. Many economists still predict trouble ahead for Chinese exporters. “Even if there is an increase in the trade surplus, this is temporary,” said Diana Choyleva, a China specialist who is the head of macroeconomic research at Lombard Street Research in London.

She noted that when calculated in renminbi and adjusted for inflation, China’s exports actually fell in some months last summer, although they have strengthened considerably since last October. China’s trade surplus is also less than half as large as a share of national economic output compared with five years ago when the surplus was slightly larger in dollar terms. The Chinese economy has grown nearly 80 percent in nominal renminbi terms since then and doubled in dollar terms.

Export figures for China were exaggerated by a few percentage points early last year as exporters overstated their shipments to circumvent Chinese controls on moving money into the country to speculate on further appreciation of the renminbi. But while some overstating of shipments may still take place, the strength in exports in recent months appears more genuine, particularly compared to an artificially high base of exports a year ago, said Louis Kuijs, a China economist in the Hong Kong office of the Royal Bank of Scotland.

“I have much more faith in the veracity of the numbers now,” he said.

In separate interviews this week with nearly a dozen Chinese exporters, at Hong Kong trade fairs or by telephone, all said that their biggest problem lay in labor: finding enough blue-collar workers and paying for their soaring wages.

Mr. Cheng said that a decade ago he paid about $75 a month for entry-level industrial workers and provided virtually no benefits. Now, he said, his 200-worker business, the Hangzhou Luyi Arts & Crafts Company, pays $570 a month plus $100 a month in government-mandated benefits.

That works out to compensation roughly three times as high as in Indonesia, four times as high as in Vietnam, five times as high as in Cambodia, and as much as 10 times as high as in Bangladesh. But all of those countries have other problems, such as overburdened, unreliable electricity grids, which force companies to install costly generators and buy expensive diesel instead.

Like many companies in China, Hangzhou Luyi has responded to surging wages with increased investments in automation. “This machine takes the place of five workers,” Mr. Cheng said, sitting in a booth at a Hong Kong trade fair this week and pointing at a poster on his wall of a computer-controlled, die-cutting machine for producing chair components.

Similar investments at factories across China mean that fewer hours of labor typically go into each product. So labor costs per unit do not rise nearly as quickly as wages.


Extremely heavy investment in new factories and new equipment, as the state-owned banking system continues to pump out credit at a remarkable pace, has also created considerable overcapacity. Exporters are unable to raise prices without losing overseas markets to nearby rivals. This prompts managers like Chen Yaping, executive director of the Zhejiang Daseng Stationery Company, a toymaker in Yiwu City, to focus increasingly on research and developing their own brands.

Foreign investment in China has stagnated while surging in Southeast Asian rivals like Cambodia, Indonesia and Vietnam, setting off hand-wringing in Chinese media. But China still invests heavily in China. Domestic investment dwarfs foreign investment elsewhere in the region, leaving Chinese entrepreneurs and state-owned enterprises with more than enough cash to keep buying machinery.

A result of rising productivity and manufacturing overcapacity is that average prices for American imports from China have actually dropped 0.9 percent in the last year even as the renminbi has risen and Chinese wages have soared, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington. That decline in prices has kept the pressure on Western competitors — and kept Chinese exports buoyant.

Hilda Wang contributed reporting.
 
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
China microblogging site Weibo sees decline in users


2 hours ago
The logo of Sina Corp"s Chinese microblog website "Weibo" is seen on a screen in this photo illustration taken in Beijing in this September 13, 2011 file photoNetizens have regularly tapped into Weibo to share unfiltered information
The number of online microblog users in China has declined steeply with almost 28 million people abandoning Sina Weibo in 2013, a government report says.

The fall marks the site's first drop in usage amid a government crackdown on so-called 'rumour mongers' online.

Web users are also believed to have migrated to mobile messaging platforms.

The China Internet Network Information Center said in its annual report there was an overall decline in the number of social media users.

It noted that while growth in Weibo dropped by 9 per cent in 2013, instant mobile messaging services experienced rapid growth, with apps such as WeChat registering more than 78.6 million users.

Twitter remains blocked in China and netizens have regularly tapped into Weibo's ability to share unfiltered information.



Sina Weibo logo



Weibo's surge in popularity gave users new opportunities for self-expression, but it also attracted the attention of authorities who moved swiftly to silence voices online.

A law was introduced to allow the Chinese government to jail microbloggers and dozens more were arrested.

The BBC's Celia Hatton in Beijing says that increased censorship and the arrests of several prominent Weibo users have led many ordinary users to abandon public forums like Weibo, in favour of more private forms of communication.

One Weibo user was not surprised at the decline. "It just isn't the same anymore, so I'm not surprised," said awxiang. "It is not safe anymore, so it is time for everyone to move say goodbye to Weibo."

Another microblogger smallspearv agreed: "It isn't worth it to put myself in danger, it just is not worth the risk."

Others like connielearnpa say that both Weibo and WeChat can both be used in different ways. "One is for personal means, while the other is more public."
 

LesAdieux

Junior Member
China's GDP for 2013: 56.88 trillion CNY, $ 9.4trillion, growth rate 7.7%

here I used the current USD/CNY exchange rate 6.05
 

Franklin

Captain
I wonder why more Chinese cities don't introduce congestion charges. This will help them to raise revenue and reduce traffic and pollution. So far i only heard of beijing doing it.
 

solarz

Brigadier
I wonder why more Chinese cities don't introduce congestion charges. This will help them to raise revenue and reduce traffic and pollution. So far i only heard of beijing doing it.

I think they probably will eventually. As to why they're not doing it now, they're probably using Beijing as a pilot project and waiting for data on that. Unfortunately, bureaucracy moves slowly.
 
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