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China's Utterly Distorted Economy Is a Train Wreck Waiting to Happen
World Tribune ^ | 6/29/07 | Sol Sanders

Posted on 06/30/2007 12:37:30 PM PDT by hardback

For the nonafficionado, Peking opera is “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing” to quote a famous dramatist from another culture. [Cantonese opera even more so; for as snobbish Mandarin-speakers have sometimes quipped, not even Guandong natives ever really master the six, sometimes considered eight, tones of their language, so they just keep shouting louder and louder.] There is certainly plenty of noise now with the media and interested parties promoting the Chinese economy. Straight line projections of future gross national product growth [and projections for imported raw materials sales] may be the way we get to Mars before the astronauts. Most of those writing and talking about the China scene at the moment seem never to have heard of “the problem of the unanticipated consequences of purposive action”.

Just as in the Chinese opera, the attention is directed to the personalities with the accompanying music simply emphasizing the stylistic movements – most always predictable – in a drama having little to do with reality.

Yet, what may be unfolding now in China is less Chinese opera than Greek tragedy. That is, if we use one of the definitions for Classical Hellenic drama where an individual [or in this case individuals] cannot escape from the toils and tribulations of events in his present environment leading to disaster. But is our metaphor out of control? Are we, indeed, comparing apples and oranges?

Dr. Hu of Shih, one of modern China’s most illustrious and original thinkers, claimed one long-neglected Chinese philosophical school, Later Mohist writings [c. 300 BCE], often dealt with themes familiar to Western philosophers. But for whatever reason, the glorious ancient Chinese civilization which gave the modern world so many things – including gunpowder and movable type and [alas!] the idea of a meritorious ruling bureaucracy – never developed formal logic.

“Metaphor seems to be emphasized over more rigorous argument forms in China; deductive geometry became a model for philosophical method in the West but not in China; no work with concerns similar to Aristotle's Metaphysics became a paradigm of Chinese philosophy; atomism [Ed. Note: “The theory that all statements, propositions, situations, etc., are composed of mutually independent, simple, primary, and irreducible elements”- OED] arose in the West but not in China.” [Jean-Paul Reding, http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=4161]

Some have said the fundamental difference comes from the fact the Chinese language never developed a verb equivalent to the Indo-European languages’ “to be”.

This is not obscure philosophicbabble but probably crucial to understanding the present situation in which the Chinese – and now the world – find themselves. For it brings us back to where we are – or rather, where we will be.

The roaring Chinese economy – and its fragile political structure based on nonrepresentative one-party government founded on Marxist dogma which its leadership now in fact rejects except as propaganda – is headed for a fall.

Crises overtake governments on almost a daily basis somewhere in the world. But there are differences with such a happening – if and when it comes in China. The multitudinous effects of a breakdown in China, the world’s most populous country, could be categorized in all sorts of ways.

But whatever else is occurring, China’s fate is rapidly increasingly being linked to the economies, if not the political stability, of the rest of the world. And that is happening with an increasing escalation and intensity, even though in terms of statistics, China may not represent that much of the world’s riches, production and, well, wealth.

China’s subsidies for exports, barriers to imports, a phenomenal savings rate so high there is a totally distorted consumer economy, corruption so widespread it is an economic factor, politicized lending for bankrupt state-owned enterprise, giantism in premature infrastructure, a skyrocketing military expenditure, an overload of mammoth foreign exchange holdings, a collapsed tax system, regional boondoggling out of the center’s control, a falling rural standard of living, etc., etc., have despite its rapid GNP growth created a totally distorted economy hurtling toward crisis.

As Minxin Pei of the Carnegie Endowment has said, it is hard to predict where, how, and when the bubble will burst because like a human patient suffering from a number of life threatening diseases and malfunctions, it is hard to know which one will kill him.

But what some Western business circles have whispered behind their hand as “China magic” has intoxicated outside investors and traders to the point where they have thrown “the rule of the prudent investor” to the winds. When the first bust of the Shanghai stock market-cum-casino came a few weeks ago, the markets of the rest of the world reacted sharply because there was fear that “magic” had disappeared. But the bailout by the government soon restored the aura of the China boom, so that more recent radical Shanghai market fluctuations have been seen for what they are, just another turn of the roulette of largely manipulated government stocks. [Shanghai has climbed 50 percent in less than a year.]

Meanwhile, foreign financial houses are rushing to buy equity participation in Chinese banks which officially list vast amounts of their loan portfolio as in default. China has begun to spin off part of its currency reserves as overseas investments including in foreign private equity firms. Unable to profit at home, Chinese oil companies are pumping up inflated world prices with all sorts of under-the-table deals with rogue and pariah producers. With huge new buildings in Shanghai and Beijing nearly empty, “hot money” is pouring into China to be “parked” in new real estate in anticipation of an eventual reevaluation of the yuan. The old Marco Polo Syndrome of unlimited numbers of Chinese customers lives on with international service organizations from accounting to IT software firms willing to collaborate with Beijing’s notorious secret police in order to secure “market share”. The American consumer has become addicted to cheap Chinese imports – often exported at below cost – to the point where again well publicized traditional Chinese food adulteration has taken a quantitative leap.

An index to what is happening is an announcement by Beijing’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange that 29 banks – 19 of them domestic including the Big Five state-owned commercial institutions – had received unspecified punishment for "assisting speculative foreign capital to enter the country disguised as trade or investment".

"There has been a huge turn-round in the overall balance of payments coming from the capital account with 'hot money' inflows of around $5-$10 billion a month," Jonathan Anderson, UBS's chief Asia economist told the Financial Times.

Beijing’s action, more than anything else, is proof of what many Old China Hands had long believed: the draconian foreign exchange regulations which make China’s currency legally nonconvertible are leaking like a sieve. With U.S.-China trade, for example, now running at about $25 billion a month – including a surplus in Beijing’s favor of over $19 billion in April alone – it is child’s play for wily Chinese exporters and importers to bribe their way through customs for overinvoicing and underinvoicing. Or there is the anomaly that many Mainland entrepreneurs use Hong Kong’s status as a foreign destination for all kinds of shenanigans. Money secreted outside China is then exchanged with the banks for ren min bao delivered in China for speculation and to await the “inevitable” reevaluation.

That’s why it may be too late for Beijing to take the advice of even their most devoted admirers like Nobel Prize Economist Robert Mundell that they should begin to accommodate Washington and other critics by ending export subsidies, particularly by increasing their undervalued currency if only slowly. But any reevaluation of Chinese currency would have to be massive to compensate for its incredibly undervaluation which have given it enormous competitive advantage over even such low-wage producers such as Mexico and India. On the other hand, many exporters are marginal producers now and more resistance from foreign customers because of higher prices would be catastrophic.

A massive exchange readjustment now would probably set off all kinds of alarm bells, not only for foreign investors and traders, but for the Chinese. A run from the yuan into dollars by all that “hot money” could create a crisis of confidence by that incredible Chinese devoted saver. The memory of runaway inflation – more than events on the battlefield what defeated the Chiang Kai-shek government in its civil war with the Communists – hovers and any currency manipulation would set off panic.

So, just as in the Greek tragedy – not the Chinese opera where virtue is generally rewarded – the events will have to play themselves out with grim ferocity. Brace yourselves: it is going to be a rough ride.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sol W. Sanders, (solsanders@cox.net), is an Asian specialist with more than 25 years in the region, and a former correspondent for Business Week, U.S. News & World Report and United Press International. He writes weekly for World Tribune.com and East-Asia-Intel.com.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: china; geopolitics; globalism; trade
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To: All
Every event in Red China was (is still) a contemporaneous event for me.

In the beginning it was "agrarian" reform today it's "socialism with Chinese characteristics." In between there have been tens of millions of deaths wrought by Red China's masters and modern mandarins.

It's always been about the Party. Today the Dengist control the Party.

The memory of runaway inflation -- more than events on the battlefield what defeated the Chiang Kai-shek government in its civil war with the Communists -- hovers and any currency manipulation would set off panic.

There are the pesky similarities of corruption and the appearance of too much foreign influence -- there are new problems of environmental destruction, factory deaths and injury, counterfeiting that kills, mass population displacement to make room for projects like dams, and all the factors listed in the article.

How much longer can it last?

21 posted on 06/30/2007 4:40:38 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: Clintonfatigued
I've been observing here for some time that China is a false-front economy, largely smoke and mirrors. The ghost skyscrapers of Shanghai, while hundreds of millions live in hovels, are the symbol of the world's largest Potemkin village.
22 posted on 06/30/2007 5:09:01 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: Fee
the Chinese language never developed a verb equivalent to the Indo-European languages’ “to be”.

No wonder "their man in Washington" could assert that "it all depends on what the meaning of 'Is' is."

23 posted on 06/30/2007 5:12:00 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: pacelvi

Unfortunately China signed their own death warrant by pursuing the three nuclear shield strategy (help Pakistan get nukes to counter India, help North Korea get nukes to counter US-Japan, and help Iran get nukes to sap US strength by causing mischief in Middle East). The only reason the US has not taken drastic action on China is because in the last 20 years the US has establish deep commercial relations with China and will need time to unwind. The US has establish agreements with Vietnam as the initial steps of making her the alternative low cost manufacturing center and making overtures to India to make her the low cost hi tech manufacturing alternative to China. Today India is about to make a decision on possibly choosing US fighter to replace her aging MiG-21 fighters. This decision is a very important symbol for it marks the first time India will buy US weapons since the beginning of the Cold War. Vietnam and India will become the alternates to China and possible the military counter balance on the Chinese border. Up to this day, China never had to spend a chunk of her defense budget in fielding a med tech army to guard her borders since her reapproachment with the Russians. This has free up her military resources to research advanced weapons and purchase Russian weapons. IMHO twenty years from now, China will collapse financially because the US will shift their manufacturing and services to India and Vietnam and at the same time the arms race from a US armed India and Vietnam will sap her resources. In the end I think China will become unstable, and the US will support Sanjing, Tibet, Inner Mongolia and Taiwan to declare independence. By the end of the 21st Century, China will lose half of her territory and most of her natural resources and be consigned to a Third World nation with pockets of affluent city states. I predict the US will still be a super power at the end of the 21st Century, India will advance and China will fall.


24 posted on 06/30/2007 6:36:07 PM PDT by Fee ( R)
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To: hardback
Does anyone remember back in the ‘80s when Japan (Japan, inc.) was supposed to take over the world?

What ever happened with that?

25 posted on 06/30/2007 6:40:29 PM PDT by Cowboy Bob (Withhold Taxes - Starve a Liberal)
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To: hardback
I’m no expert on the Chinese economy, but when you start from nothing, you can experience phenomenal growth, but you can’t maintain it.
26 posted on 06/30/2007 6:40:32 PM PDT by ozzymandus
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To: Fee

if the muslims havent nuked us by then.


27 posted on 06/30/2007 6:44:56 PM PDT by pacelvi
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To: Fee

BTTT


28 posted on 06/30/2007 6:52:29 PM PDT by 185JHP ( "The thing thou purposest shall come to pass: And over all thy ways the light shall shine.")
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To: Lurker

I have heard some of the more credible talking heads say that we could have China on its knees in two years by simply removing MFN. Their entire economic growth is tied to trade with the United States.


29 posted on 06/30/2007 6:57:45 PM PDT by nonliberal (Graduate: Curtis E. LeMay School of International Relations)
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To: TBall
those cute little Thomas & Friends toys that American children love so much.

A number of which were recently recalled, as they had lead-based paint used by their Chinese manufacturers. .

30 posted on 06/30/2007 7:14:52 PM PDT by happygrl (Dunderhead for HONOR)
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To: Fee

Good post. Thanks for your insight.


31 posted on 06/30/2007 7:19:24 PM PDT by happygrl (Dunderhead for HONOR)
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To: Fee

Your sceanario is a virtual replay of how the USSR disintegrated. I don’t think it will take 20 years, though. It might happen a lot sooner.


32 posted on 06/30/2007 7:35:38 PM PDT by Former Proud Canadian (How do I change my screen name after Harper's election?)
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To: hardback

Very interesting. Thanks for posting.


33 posted on 06/30/2007 7:36:08 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: hardback

Bump


34 posted on 07/01/2007 5:34:15 AM PDT by uglybiker (relaxing in a luxuriant cloud of quality, aromatic, pre-owned tobacco essence)
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To: hardback

Bump


35 posted on 07/01/2007 7:45:16 AM PDT by painter (Oval Office, Fred. Might be something you ought to think about.)
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To: Cowboy Bob
Does anyone remember back in the ‘80s when Japan (Japan, inc.) was supposed to take over the world?

What ever happened with that?

Well, what happened is that they have a lot of foreign assets; in fact, they have the largest net foreign asset position of any nation, as they have had since 1991.

The Bank of Japan's International Investment Position at Year-End 2005 is here. (I believe that the new one will be out soon.)

36 posted on 07/01/2007 7:56:41 AM PDT by snowsislander
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To: GovernmentIsTheProblem
This article sounds just like a conversation we had circa 2003 or so.

That would've been nice, and I trust I may take it as a compliment, but I am rather afraid you are mistaking either your correspondent or the date...

I joined FR in August 2004. :-)

Cheers!

37 posted on 07/01/2007 2:33:27 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: pacelvi
Does anyone know anyone who is Chinese that exhibits anything that fits the profile of being from a nation bent on world domination?

Are you a troll or are you a Chinese agent?

38 posted on 07/01/2007 2:37:51 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: grey_whiskers

that was rude.


39 posted on 07/01/2007 2:42:23 PM PDT by pacelvi
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To: pacelvi
Yes, it was.
40 posted on 07/01/2007 3:30:45 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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