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2014-01-04

JAN 2, 2014 by George Soros



The major uncertainty facing the world today is not the euro but the future direction of China. The growth model responsible for its rapid rise has run out of steam.


That model depended on financial repression of the household sector, in order to drive the growth of exports and investments. As a result, the household sector has now shrunk to 35% of GDP, and its forced savings are no longer sufficient to finance the current growth model. This has led to an exponential rise in the use of various forms of debt financing.


There are some eerie resemblances with the financial conditions that prevailed in the US in the years preceding the crash of 2008. But there is a significant difference,too. In the US, financial markets tend to dominate politics; in China, the state owns the banks and the bulk of the economy, and the Communist Party controls the state-owned enterprises.


Aware of the dangers, the People’s Bank of China took stepsstarting in 2012 to curb the growth of debt; but when the slowdown started to cause real distress in the economy, the Party asserted its supremacy. In July 2013, the leadership ordered the steel industry to restart the furnaces and the PBOC to ease credit. The economy turned around on a dime. In November, theThird Plenum of the 18th Central Committee announced far-reaching reforms. These developments are largely responsible for the recent improvement in the global outlook.


The Chinese leadership was right to give precedence to economic growth over structural reforms, because structural reforms, when combined with fiscal austerity, push economies into a deflationary tailspin. But there is an unresolved self-contradiction in China’s current policies: restarting the furnaces also reignites exponential debt growth, which cannot be sustained for much longer than a couple of years.


How and when this contradiction will be resolved will have profound consequences for China and the world. A successful transition in China will most likely entail political as well as economic reforms, while failure would undermine still-widespread trust in the country’s political leadership, resulting in repression at home and military confrontation abroad.


Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/george-soros-maps-the-terrain-of-a-global-economy-that-is-increasingly-shaped-by-china#B65PxSsUC4JWiTE1.99





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全部回复
2014-1-4 10:41:15
呵呵,大问题~不过前景光明,或许会有很好的机会出来
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2014-1-4 11:18:00
中国的劳动年龄人口正在减少,有助于改善收入分配,而新一届领导对收入分配
也更重视,收入分配改善可能会远比一般预期来得快,加上计划生育政策的调整
无疑会导致消费在GDP中的比重显著上升,统计局的数据严重低估了消费的比重,
更详细的研究显示消费比重从08年开始已经明显上升,所以中国的转型也许并不会
一帆风顺但也不是外界所想象的那样困难。
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2014-1-4 16:31:00
中国的事你看不懂就对了,看得懂才怪呢!
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