First German companies were forced to build plants in the US like Volkswagen and Siemens.
btw, this is not true at all. China did not peg its currency to US to help its export. It pegged its currency to US for currency stability. Back in the 90s when USD was really strong, it actually hurt its competitiveness against other Asian currencies that devalued their currencies by 50% against USD during the Asian crisis of the late 90s. Unfortunately, USD right now has serious structural issues, so it has worked out that USD weakness leads to greater Chinese export. But the original idea was that China wanted for its currency to be tied to a currency it viewed as stable.American debt issues are extremely serious, with the American debt about to hit 15 trillion US dollars. That is why the US government is debasing or "Quantitative Easing" the US dollar. By causing inflation, long term established debts become cheaper to pay off. Also US exports become cheaper for foreign consumption, increasing net money flow into the US, and exporting to the US becomes more expensive for export nations. An example would be building a car plant in America proper, using American workers, American steel, etc, rather than exporting to the US as the US GDP investment would generate higher profits for the foreign company.
The Chinese currency is pegged to the US dollar. PRC officials decided to peg their currency to the dollar some time ago so that Chinese companies could continue to export to the US at a competitive rate, regardless of US inflation. The downside for China is that by being pegged to the US dollar, inflation pressures are transferred from the US economy into the Chinese economy. With China being one of America's top trading partners, most the heat from Quantitative Easing is being absorbed into the Chinese economy, not the American economy. Thus, at the moment, the US is stuck in economic limbo until the Chinese economy finally overheats from US currency debasement.
The great question is, how many more trillions of US currency debasement can China hope to absorb before the Chinese economy "over-heats"? In engineering terms, the US is using the all of China as kind of heat-sink, hoping that China will be forced to decouple their currency from the dollar as the US currency is determined to achieve a nuclear core meltdown. But if China does that, the price of Chinese exports to the US will go up, resulting in Chinese products being less competitive on the world market.
The US has been playing this capitalist economic game of chicken for decades. First German companies were forced to build plants in the US like Volkswagen and Siemens. Later on, Japan was forced to start building factories in the US to maintain their GNP at the expense of their GDP. And now we are witnessing China being subjected to the same pressure. American politicians are about to raise the US debt ceiling to well surpass the 15 trillion dollar mark. It is far easier for the US Fed to create money out of thin air than it would be for any nation to ever hope to absorb it.
Do you have sources for these figures because that 66% is definitely wrong from what I have read and why would anyone include property prices in annual inflation?The big Chinese cities of Beijing, Shanghai, etc, account for over 80% of the value of property in all of China. Last year alone, these properties increased in value by approximately 66%. Yet the PRC does not allow these figures into the PRC's annual rate of inflation calculation. The vast majority of these properties are bought by financial speculators as a financial vehicle. By definition, this is called a property bubble.
Again do you have valid sources for this (not some youtube video)? Because that is not the case for mortgages.Furthermore, and much more worrying, is that there seems to be little control of credit in China, extremely large loans are being given out to individuals that have no credit history, have poor credit, or bad credit. This is the case because a review of credit history is not required for a loan in China! Now things in China, property wise, are starting to sound a lot like the conditions leading up to the US property crisis.
Just wondering what are these extremely large multinational organizations and their very large sums of money?I'm not saying I believe this, I'm just giving the reasons why extremely large multinational organizations are starting to bet with very large sums of capital on a PRC property melt down. Oh, the PRC will no doubt do what the US did. Pump large amounts of cash in an attempt to blunt the damage, but time will tell.