Chinese Economics Thread

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Xinhua Headlines: China's economy expands solidly despite trade frictions
Xinhua| 2018-07-16 18:42:31
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China's economy expanded steadily in the first half of 2018 as continued restructuring efforts provided resilience and impetus against pressure from trade frictions.

The country's gross domestic product expanded 6.8 percent year on year in the first half of 2018, well above the government's annual growth target of around 6.5 percent, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed Monday.

In Q2, China's GDP rose by 6.7 percent year on year, slightly lower than the 6.8 percent from the previous quarter but representing the 12th straight quarter that GDP growth rate has stayed within the range of 6.7 to 6.9 percent, according to NBS data.

This has extended a firm expansion from last year, when China's GDP went up 6.9 percent, picking up the pace for the first time in seven years.

NBS spokesman Mao Shengyong told a press conference Monday that the Chinese economy has been running soundly in the first six months, offering "a good start" for the country's pursuit of high-quality development with further restructuring progress and improved economic quality and efficiency.

STRUCTURAL IMPROVEMENT

Despite some softening on the investment and industrial production front, many positive signs can be captured from Monday's data, reflecting China's progress in economic reform and restructuring.

The service sector expanded 7.6 percent year on year in H1, outpacing a 3.2-percent increase in primary industry and 6.1 percent in secondary industry, according to NBS.

China's private investment picked up in January-June, growing 8.4 percent year on year, which is 1.2 percentage points higher than that of the same period last year. Meanwhile, fixed-asset investment in high-tech manufacturing displayed particularly strong momentum by growing 13.1 percent.

Retail sales of consumer goods also grew 9 percent year on year in June, accelerating from the 8.5-percent rise seen in May.

"By shifting away from old growth drivers and moving up on the global industrial and value chain, China is seeing increasingly higher growth quality," said Wang Jun with China Center for International Economic Exchanges.

The domestic job market remained stable in June, with the surveyed unemployment rate in urban areas at 4.8 percent, unchanged from the level in May and down 0.1 percentage point from June last year.

China's energy consumed per unit of GDP declined 3.2 percent year-on-year in H1, exceeding the initial target of having energy consumption per unit of GDP cut by at least 3 percent in 2018.

TRADE FRICTIONS IMPACT LIMITED

While noting increasing external uncertainties, Mao said the impact of China-U.S. trade frictions, if any, would have been limited on the Chinese economy in H1.

The trade frictions unilaterally stirred up by the United States, have not put much pressure on China's domestic consumer prices, according to Mao.

He expects China's consumer prices to maintain mild growth in the second half, as the prices of food items including pork and cooking oil, likely to be pushed up by more expensive imported soybeans, are still relatively low.

Meanwhile, it requires further observation to judge the potential impact on the economy in H2, he said.

"Rising trade protectionism has posed a major challenge to world economic recovery, which has also brought us some challenges and uncertainties," he told reporters.

The trade war, ignited by the United States and currently involving 50 billion U.S. dollars, will slow China's GDP growth by 0.2 percentage points with full consideration of the second and third rounds of the impact of reduced exports on related industries, according to a research team led by central bank economist Ma Jun.

Ma, a member of the monetary policy committee of the People's Bank of China, added that the trade war would not necessarily have much impact on the capital market and exchange rates.

STEADY TREND UNCHANGED

For the rest of the year, officials and economists are confident that China's economy will remain stable as domestic demand is now the deciding force behind economic growth.

Consumption has continued to play a more prominent role in driving growth in H1, with final consumption contributing 78.5 percent of the economic expansion in January-June, up from 77.8 percent in Q1 and 58.8 percent last year, according to NBS data.

"After years of adjustment, the economic landscape has undergone profound changes as internal demand has emerged as the primary economic driving force," said Ning Jizhe, head of the NBS.

"The economy is resilient with huge potential and stamina, and will continue to operate in the reasonable range," Ning said, citing China's vast market, ongoing reform and growing new growth impetus.

Tang Jianwei, an analyst with Bank of Communications financial research center, said he expects consumption growth to continue rebounding in H2 as the recent import tariff cut and the ongoing individual income tax reform would boost consumption in the rest of 2018.

"We have the confidence, capabilities, and conditions to ensure stable and sound economic growth while pursuing high-quality development," Ning said.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
The effects of the tarrifs won’t really hit Q2. If anything, the threat of the tarrifs would have helped Q2 figures as companies bring forward purchases to try and get as much inventory built up as possible before the higher tarrifs hit.

I would also expect softer consumption in Q3 and Q4 as both the direct effects of the tarrifs (higher prices) hits, and as households hold back on non-essential purchases and consumption to brace for the anticipated downturn once the trade war goes into full swing.
 
now I read (LOL not me but Xinhua used triple spacing between sentences)
Commentary: Why China's economy is strong enough to weather trade headwinds
Xinhua| 2018-07-19 18:56:29
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As the old Chinese saying goes, true gold fears no fire. The same could be said about China's economy, whose resilience again defied pessimists' projections and pressure from trade tensions.



China's GDP logged a 6.7-percent growth in the second quarter of this year, a slightly milder but still healthy increase compared with the 6.8 percent in the first quarter.



China remains one of the world's fastest-growing economies, and its pace of expansion has stayed within the range of 6.7 to 6.9 percent for 12 straight quarters.



The impact from the trade war ignited by the United States has yet to fully surface, but China's economy, increasingly reliant on domestic consumption, is well-positioned to withstand external pressure.



Exports, industrial output, and investment growth lessened, but domestic consumption and services, already a dominant driving force of the economy, have picked up the slack.



Final consumption and the service sector contributed to a majority of the economic growth in the first half, and their shares continued to expand.



Private investment picked up. High-tech industries outpaced the overall industrial sector in both investment and output.



Job data offers a wealth of information regarding economic strength. The surveyed unemployment rate in urban areas was 4.8 percent in June, the lowest level since the nation started to conduct such surveys in 2016.



These were achieved amid a prudent monetary policy, a deleveraging-focused regulatory environment, and pressure from escalated trade tensions. This fact only warranted more confidence in China's economic fundamentals.



Decades of fast GDP expansion have produced the world's largest middle-income group in the country, whose demands for a better life and high-quality goods give impetus to the economy's rebalancing and upgrading.



Sales of electrical home appliances, communication devices, and cosmetics products increased at double-digit rates in the first half. New energy vehicles, industrial robots and smart televisions outperformed traditional manufacturing sectors.



The Chinese economy is not trouble-free, and it would be self-deceiving to say there are no clouds on the horizon. But Chinese policy makers are vigilant and prepared.



Authorities have moved resolutely to contain leverage, one of the most alarming uncertainties for the economy. China's leverage ratio growth has slowed down substantially since 2017. And there are no signs the course would be reversed.



Policy makers are also making strides in market-oriented reforms to improve the business environment. Telling evidence of China's growing appeal for foreign investors is a 96.6-percent year-on-year surge in the number of new overseas-funded companies established in the country in the first six months.



Thanks to its intrinsic economic strength, China will be subject to only limited impact from the trade war.



As long as it accelerates supply-side structural reform and persists in improving the economy's quality and efficiency, the country will be able to withstand any future headwinds and emerge stronger from the pressure test.
 
now noticed the tweet
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China's population aged 60 and above will reach 300 million in 2025, accounting for 1/5 of the total population, and the figure is expected to reach 487 million around 2050, taking up of 34.9 pct of the total, an official from National Health Commission said on Thur

DijlUXWWAAAmCH4.jpg


***
of course a thought occurred to me if I'd be still alive in 2050 ... born 1971 so ... LOL!
 

KlRc80

Junior Member
Registered Member
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China’s next internet giants are getting big by serving the country’s poor

This is a big year for Chinese tech IPOs. Smartphone maker Xiaomi just completed one of the
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on Hong Kong’s stock exchange, and other big floats are expected from
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,
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, and
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.

Some of the most highly anticipated listings in China’s tech industry share something in common–they have gained popularity by catering to consumers outside of the country’s educated, cosmopolitan elite.

ByteDance, for example, has reportedly been mulling an IPO that could take place this year and bring its market value to
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(paywall). Touted as one of China’s leading consumer-facing AI companies, one of ByteDance’s most successful apps in China is Toutiao—a news aggregator that curates a feed of stories based on an users’ previous reading (not unlike how Facebook’s News Feed offers up content users are most likely to click on).

By now, Toutiao has evolved into a social media platform that rivals Tencent’s WeChat and Weibo. But after it first launched in 2012, it grew popular by offering up lightweight, often sensational news articles. Scrolling through its main news feed yields articles about a street-food vendor nimbly manning 12 grills at once, a video of a cat getting hair cut, and pictures of people who only work out their upper bodies.

According to Jenny Lee, a partner at VC firm GGV Capital, Toutiao appeals to internet users in China’s smaller cities looking for news and entertainment outside of stodgy state-controlled media outlets, which dominate print and online publishing in the country. These users’ tastes tend to lean more lowbrow than longread.

“Toutiao actually allows you to see the world from where you are,” Lee told Quartz in an interview in April. “It doesn’t appeal to folks in coastal cities where we have an explosion of information. But for a farmer out in the field, or the taxi drivers, they might never leave their town for their entire life.

Data from Toutiao shows that almost 90% of its users come from places outside China’s first-tier cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen.

In shopping, Shanghai-based Pinduoduo is set to raise $1.6 billion in an IPO that would value the company
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—roughly half the market cap size of JD, one of its main rivals. While JD and Alibaba, China’s largest e-commerce company, have steadily offered more and more luxury products on their site, Pinduoduo has moved in the opposite direction. The company soared in popularity by offering group-buying deals on products from no-name Chinese brands. Like Toutiao, it’s been most successful among shoppers outside of China’s major cities.

“People living in the five rings of Beijing wouldn’t understand our purpose,” Pinduoduo co-founder Colin Huang, a former Google engineer,
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(link in Chinese). “The new consumer economy isn’t about giving Shanghainese the life of Parisians. It’s about providing paper towels and good fruit to people in Anhui province.”

In video, Kuaishou, which competes with some of Toutiao’s video apps, has rose to popularity and distinguished itself from its rivals by providing a glimpse into the lives of China’s countryside dwellers. Currently valued at about $18 billion, the company is reportedly
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in Hong Kong.

Many of Kuaishou’s videos feature young men in rural China playing pranks on one another. In one, a boy whacks another with an empty water jug—and that’s all. In another, teenage boys eat instant noodles and stage a fart competition. In another, a boy takes his friend on a motorcycle ride only to leave him abandoned in a puddle of mud.

According to Chinese research firm Jiguang, only 7.5% of Kuaishou’s users come from first-tier cities. Yet its growth in China’s poorer cities has helped it expand into richer ones—perhaps tellingly, in June, the company purchased AcFun, a cartoon-centric video site that has been around for more than 10 years and has a bigger presence in China’s wealthiest cities, for a
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Kuaishou CEO Su Hua has embraced his app’s popularity among China’s lower classes. “We hope that Kuaishou is a mirror of the world, showing the most complete and accurate look of the world. I don’t want to show things that elites prefer to see in the mirror just because that’s what the elites want to see,”
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(link in Chinese).
 
now I read
China's listed companies upbeat about H1 performance
Xinhua| 2018-07-22 16:39:55
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China's listed companies are happy with their performance in the first half of the year, as the economy grew beyond expectations.

So far, 2,141 companies listed on the country's two stock exchanges have released mid-year performance estimates, and 54 percent of them expect profit growth, according to Securities Times.

Some 392 companies, or 18 percent of the total, expect net profits to at least double, while another 114 loss-making firms forecast turnarounds.

China's economy expanded steadily in the first half of 2018 as restructuring provided resilience and impetus against trade frictions.

GDP expanded 6.8 percent year on year in the first half of 2018, surpassing the government's annual growth target of around 6.5 percent.

Chinese shares saw strong rebounds Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rising 2.05 percent to close at 2,829.27 points. The Shenzhen Component Index closed 1.12 percent higher at 9,251.48 points.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
This video introduce the southern Chinese merchant ethic in doing business. In the west Chinese are vilified as dishonest merchant and produce shoddy product.
But that is further from the truth. Merchant depend on recurrent business from their client or customer.If their client is not happy they won't give them repeat business Not to mention recommendation by word of mouth.So they do everything in their power to retain their customer satisfaction and trust
A good businessman is also a trustworthy gentlemen This is their most prized asset. I saw this with my own eye
Listen to this video this is the truth and not propaganda. "doing business in good faith is not only right but rewarded with repeat business and trust from their client, In this episode it tell they story of logistic company just started when an accident happened So has to compensate half million dollar that is all the money he had. He hesitated but compel to reimburse his client due to his ethic of "righteousness before profit" Not knowing because of his act people word got out and trusted him more than his competitor and business was booming
 
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now I read
China to improve fiscal, financial policies to boost real economy
Xinhua| 2018-07-24 00:36:25
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China will better utilize its fiscal and financial policies to support the expansion of domestic demand, structural adjustment and boost the development of the real economy, according to a government meeting.

Measures will be taken to promote effective investment focusing on addressing inadequacies, gathering more momentum and improving people's livelihood, according to the State Council's executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Monday.

China will keep its macro policies stable, refrain from resorting to a deluge of strong stimulus policies, and the government will exercise targeted and well-timed regulation in the face of external uncertainties to make sure the economy performs within a reasonable range, the meeting said.

The Monday meeting agreed that a more proactive fiscal policy would be pursued. The government will focus on tax and fee cuts, and more companies will be eligible for the preferential policies of the additional deduction of R&D spending in taxable income, a policy expected to cut another 65 billion yuan (about 9.6 billion U.S. dollars) of tax this year, on top of an initial goal of reducing taxes and fees by 1.1 trillion yuan this year.

Efforts will be stepped up in issuing 1.35 trillion yuan of special bonds for local governments to see more tangible progress on ongoing infrastructure projects.

The country's prudent monetary policy will be neither too tight nor too loose, according to the meeting. The government will keep the social financing scale at a reasonable level, and liquidity will remain proper and sufficient.

The government will step up efforts to ensure delivery of the state financing guarantee fund, targeting 140 billion yuan of loans for about 150,000 small and micro firms each year.

The meeting also decided to deepen investment reform to solicit more private investment in fields including transportation, telecommunications, oil, and gas.

Capital demand for ongoing projects must be guaranteed effectively, it said.

A series of major projects will be pushed forward and planned to meet the need of development and improve people's livelihood.
 
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