As a rule of thumb that has yet to let me down, anyone drawing fanciful conclusions from data that simply does not support such leaps are not neutral observers looking to extrapolate the best answer based on the information available, but rather are biased actors hunting for evidence to support their deeply held, pre determined positions.
The opinions of such people are not convincing to me.
That's true, but there another side to the equation. The biases you hold yourself. We all have to fight our own just as hard as those we see in other people. Harder actually.
The best we can hope for in my opinion is to minimise bias. Neuroscientists and psychologists have shown we are are not fully rational beings. That still puts us far ahead of chimps, which don't seem able to control their impulses and emotions at all, but the animal part of our brains still has the capacity to rule us. I'd like to think another 50,000 or so years of evolution will have changed this if our species can survive that long.
Articles about China's economy from western lame stream media should be interpreted as reflection of Western economies. I remember in the run up to 2008, there were weekly reports about massive non-performing loans in China and how China's banking sector was about to go under. In the end, the banks that went under with massive non-performing loans weren't from China, and it wasn't China's banking sector that required bail-out. Now, keep in mind that part of China's output is export. When that export shrinks, it actually means the west isn't consuming as much, which in turns tell us growth in western economy is slowing down.
Agreed. It should be obvious China is affected by the state of the Western (and increasingly, world) economy just as much as the state of China's affects the rest of the world. It's a reciprocal relationship.
I've mentioned before in this thread the argument that private debt is much more of a problem for economic stability than public debt, so long as the state issues its own currency. Greece ran into problems because it can't run the emergency level deficit it needs to get its economy growing again. Anyway, private debt is a much bigger problem in the West than it is in China. I expect that if there's a debt crisis this year, it will start in the US or Europe, and then spread to China and other nations. And when or if it hits China, Beijing has all the tools available to deal with this debt. It's just a matter of having the political will to use them.