Posted on 06/18/2014 9:51:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In one of the most comprehensive studies ever conducted of Chinas bubblicious property market, Professor Gan Li at Texas A&M University estimates that there are a whopping 49 million vacant homes in China right now.
As a percentage, this is twice the vacancy rate that the US housing market experienced at the peak of its recent bubble suggesting that China has a rather painful housing collapse in store.
This should be a brutal blow to the economy given that housing comprised 15% of GDP last year. And the slowdown is already apparent.
In fact, Chinas president Xi Jinping uncharacteristically announced a new normal recently, declaring the heady days of 10% GDP growth to be over. His vision of China is moderate growth and less stimulus.
But Ive identified a far greater problem for China one that few people are talking about. And frankly Im not sure they can fix it.
We discussed yesterday that China does not have the capacity to feed itself. By the estimates of one state official, the countrys agricultural imports require more land to grow than the entire land mass of California.
The reasons are simple. For one, China doesnt have enough fertile land in production to support its populations growing food demand.
Theoretically this is fixable. With a bit of time, patience, and technology, barren soil can be rehabilitated In other words, China doesnt have enough enough productive land capacity to support its population.
But the far greater issue is Chinas massive freshwater deficiency.
Chief Economist Qian Keming of Chinas Agriculture Ministry summed it up by telling the audience at the Third China International Agribusiness Forum:
Fresh water resources are only 2100 cubic meters per capita, which is only 28% of the worlds average level.
and
The shortage of [water for agricultural irrigation] each year is about 30 billion cubic meters. China imported about 148.6 billion cubic meters of water in 2013, which was equivalent to 38% of Chinas agricultural water.
Heres that number in perspective: China water imports of 148.6 billion cubic meters last year handily exceeded the 569 MILLION (0.569 billion) cubic meters of oil that the United States imported.
Water is THE critical resource in agriculture. Without it, youre not producing. This makes Chinas deficiency a long-term headwind to their food production dilemma.
Its not something they can import their way out of either, because all of this comes at a time of flat (and even declining) yields, particularly from the worlds largest food exporter which just happens to be the United States of America.
After decades of growth, grain yields in the US have topped out. Farmers have managed to extract all that the earth is capable of providing.
Many developing markets are no help either. Most people dont realize that Africa, despite its legendary agricultural potential, is actually a net importer of food.
So between the supply constraints and the constantly growing demand, its clear where this trend is going.
The BEST possible scenario to unfold is rising food prices. The worst case could be shortages.
All of this is potentially destabilizing. History shows that while human beings will put up with a lot of sacrifices at the behest of their governments, starvation is not one of them.
This approaching food crunch is the reason why agriculture is THE investment for the next decade and beyond.
But more importantly, its another gigantic nail in the coffin for the status quo. And there are plenty more.
Nearly every developed western nation is bankrupt. Most major central banks are insolvent and theyve created bubbles everywhere. The century-old monetary experiment is starting to draw to a hasty, inevitable conclusion.
Meanwhile apathy is at high tide. You can see it in voting booths and streetside revolutions around the world people are sick and tired of the status quo of thieving politicians of war of getting spied on of being told what they can/cannot put in their bodies.
Theyre finally now starting to wake up and demand real changes not just changing the players in charge, but changing the game itself.
Politicians will fight with every resource they have to maintain the status quo. But in conjunction with the fundamentals of food, the confluence of all these forces together is more than any system can possibly withstand.
It might not be today. It might not be this decade. But at some point in our future, there will be a complete reset in the way society organizes and governs itself.
Just make sure youre wearing your seat belt.
That has been claimed for many decades.
Only because the hipsters are demanding more and more of the inefficient “organic” food. The higher-tech industrial style farming continues to improve.
It couldn't do any worse under China.
I suggest my liberal friends move to Haiti and apply their big government ideas. Come back after you fix it.
RE: Logical solution: Let them colonize Zimbabwe and other places like it. It was the bread basket of Africa when the whites were running it.
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The funny thing is if you look at China’s history, she has never been a colonial power ( not in any of the Dynasties, except maybe under the Mongols, who in turn, were culturally subsumed into the Han culture ).
Countries around China ( e.g. Vietnam ) did pay homage to the Chinese Emperor and paid some sort of regular tribute, but that was it.
Someday, someone will look out at the ocean and figure out how to desalinate effectively with some kind of solar contraption. There is plenty of water.
Unlike the USA the Chinese will not have a problem placing desalination plants along their coastline with a few nuclear power plants to provide the energy required.
Anyway, the aforementioned places are considered favorites for outsourcing manufacturing of some fairly high tech stuff.
Do you know why that it? Hint: It isn't because of the natives.
If you guessed ethnic Chinese, then go to the head of the class.
In a previous life our company did a lot of business with an Indonesian named Ibrahaim Mohammed or something like that. He was ethnic Chinese, too.
China has destroyed its water supply. My friend went to China as a consultant before the Olympics. Seems that China didn’t want the world to see or realize just how polluted it was. He said the water and rivers were so bad that he told them MILLIONS would die from cancer etc. Some rivers were red and bubbling. He said a top official replied...SO WHAT?
“After decades of growth, grain yields in the US have topped out. Farmers have managed to extract all that the earth is capable of providing.” This is demonstrably false. If it were true there would be no subsidies to layup land from the government as prices would rise and eliminate their purpose.
If it were true there would be no subsidies to layup land from the government as prices would rise and eliminate their purpose.
Quick, buy some land.
And now for a message from Thomas Malthus...
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