Thursday, June 1, 2023

China Today

Let’s see. A chorus of shrieky schoolgirls, many of whose members belong to Congress, is out front and full throated in their denunciations of China. The Evil Empire, Part II, you might say. 

While it is certainly true that China has done some manifestly bad things, it is also true that we are giving as well as we are receiving. If you imagine that we can sanction and tariff the country, attempt to destroy its businesses, trash its reputation in the world press, and expect that it is not going to respond, then you are thinking like a child. Or like a United States Senator.


The tough-guy macho rhetoric about China is obviously a sign of weakness. Back in the day we were told to speak softly and carry a big stick. Now we speak loudly and leave the stick at home. America behavior, as has been widely reported, is belligerent. In truth, it is just a bit too belligerent, as though macho posturing would win the day.


As everyone knows macho posturing signals weakness.


While our political class, a motley crew of misfits if ever there was one, is ranting about China, one remarks that over the past few days Elon Musk and Jamie Dimon and Steven Ratner were traveling to China. Dimon in particular made a point of saying that decoupling the two economies was not going to happen. He added that Chase was in China for the long term. Musk is more than happy with the production at his Shanghai plants. 


People who function in the real world, who have money at stake, are talking a different talk than are our political class.


And, of course, while we are making noise, China is making important inroads in South America. For instance:


For Latin American leaders trying to curb poverty in their own countries, China is a success story. Having experienced staggering economic growth the past four decades, China has brought an estimated 800 million of its citizens out of poverty. The pandemic hit Latin America harder than any other region in the world, and as countries look to emerge from the economic devastation of lockdowns, China offered the trade and investment that Latin American leaders can’t resist. 


Apparently, the United States has been ignoring its Southern neighbors.


Addison Graham continues his essay:


China’s focus on “commercial diplomacy” has been the catalyst for its burgeoning influence  across the Third World, especially in Latin America. China’s middle class drives demand for soybeans from Brazil, beef from Uruguay and Argentina, oil from Colombia and copper from Peru and Chile. Brazil, the region's largest economy, sends 30% of all exports to China. Even countries that would prefer not to be dependent on exports to China don’t see equally profitable alternatives. China buys in bulk.


Chinese companies also sell in bulk, and Latin American leaders see the value of flooding their own countries with low-cost, manufactured Chinese goods such as cars, semiconductors, computers and other technologies that help stimulate economic growth. 


You will be thinking to yourself: But the Uyghurs! And you might notice that not a single Muslim leader in the world cares a whit for the Uyghurs. We are happy to defame China for committing acts of genocide, but this is not the way to make friends in the world.


If you have outgrown your Gordon Chang-level deficient understanding of China, you might find some value in an essay by Steven Ratner. Again, Ratner is a Democrat, for what that is worth, but he is managing money now. People who manage money tend to be more realistic in their appraisals than are members of Congress who are looking for tabloid exposure.


Besides, Ratner’s view is balanced:


On many levels, China is back. Offices were filled with workers putting in their typically long days. Executives mostly radiated optimism about their businesses. A robust pipeline of exciting start-ups suggested China will continue to be a leader in innovation. And the energy and drive that excited me on my many past visits were abundant.


Yes, China has its share of economic challenges, particularly how much President Xi Jinping remains committed to maintaining the country’s progress toward a market economy. Often he seems to put more emphasis on control than on growth. I oversee significant investments in China, and these signals are a cause of concern.


Ratner continues, with his balanced assessment:


More than in the past, Chinese investors and entrepreneurs are carefully noting — and following — every signal from the government and worrying that Mr. Xi might suddenly announce another capricious and unexpected intervention into the private sector. Starting consumer internet platforms has been de-emphasized; investment in new industries such as energy transition and artificial intelligence appears to be the priority.


In at least some of these areas, China has achieved notable success. It controls 77 percent of the world’s battery manufacturing capacity, and last year nearly 60 percent of global electric vehicle sales were in China. The country produces more than 80 percent of the world’s solar panels, American tariffs notwithstanding.


And Ratner concludes, offering policy prescriptions that feel more Republican than Democratic:


China has proved it can continue to grow faster than we do. We need to outcompete the country by raising our growth rate through initiatives like addressing our imprudently large budget deficit and our stultifying rules on the building of industrial facilities.


And we should buttress our human capital by increasing STEM graduates so that we can maintain our technological edge and by restructuring our immigration policies to attract talented people from all over the world and keep our most promising foreign students here.


Most important, we should not delude ourselves with the fantasy that China is going to fall under its own weight. The question, for America and its adversary, is whether this rivalry need be destructive or if a more prosperous, cooperative future is still possible.


It would be an understatement to say that this is a tall order. And yet, Ratner is surely correct to warn us against the Gordon Chang view that China is going to implode. It is an easy way to avoid the hard decisions that will restore America.


For now, we are not winning the race.


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4 comments:

  1. Your willingness to accept articles favorable to China is commendable but I suggest you look a little further and determine for yourself what is really going on in China. The sources are readily available, not time consuming and interesting in the extreme. I am not a China expert by any means but suggest that if you want to continue to denigrate Gordon Chang, you at least know what you are talking about. Make your posts about China (and Russia) more meaningful by being better informed, just as you are about therapy. What goes on in China is beyond mystifying, due to the craziness of the CCP, so have some fun digging into what is going on in this wonderful country

    When you sugar coat a turd, like a subprime mortgage, you still have a turd. All those turds that we were booking in the USA to house the poor (to meet the requirements of the Federal Community Housing Act of 1979), took down the world's economy in 2008 when they were finally valued for what they were worth (that is, when "mark to market" asset valuation went into effect in late 2007 to bust the housing bubble). What can be said about these turds is that they were at least real. There was a home and often people residing in it to support the mortgage, so the collateral had some value. This is. NOT the case with China.

    The Chinese invest in apartments that they never intend to occupy. Traditionally, a property developer, like Evergrand Development Corp.(which defaulted on debt in excess of $301 billion), would announce the sale of new apartments in a multi-high rise neighborhood somewhere out in the country, hold a sales presentation for a few hours, and sell out all of its new apartments. The buyers, whose annual incomes averaged about $20,000 US, would pay enormous amounts, often $1,000,000 or more, for the remainder of a 70 year land lease on each of these apartments. Chinese banks would require a sizable downpayment and finance the balance, with mortgage payments beginning immediately. (Which raises questions about the value of the assets held by Chinese banks, doesn't it?) But the apartments were not as yet in existence. That is, there was not even a turd to sugar coat. So, the Chinese banks are holding enormous amounts of mortgages on thin air. If the apartments were built, as they were until about four or five years ago, they were most often in high rise buildings with no electricity, plumbing, elevators, windows or any improvements at all. A bare concrete shell that was giving off dust and not maintained. Last year the values of these apartments started to decline for the first time, leading to riots throughout China. Whether these apartments were built or not, their value lay in a willingness of the next fool to invest. Of course, the CCP. which created this monster as a means of enabling local governments to raise cash by selling land to developers to turn into apartments, is doing all that it can to bring this phony business back to life. If they succeed in restoring faith in this Ponzi scheme or not, any valuation placed on these vacant investment apartments, of which there are now in excess of 65,000,000 that are slowly falling apart and hundreds of thousands more awaiting construction, is just inflating the bubble further. The aggregate value of these turdless turds makes up a very good portion of the GDP of China, which several economists have recently opined has been overvalued for years by about 35%.

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  2. The Chinese are not marrying and, in the rare instances when they do, are not having more than one child. The one-child policy was so successful that the number of people of working age is rapidly diminishing and China's population is starting to decline. So, how is China going to afford pensions for the great numbers of people now entering retirement if there are not enough young people to support them?

    Ratner's article is well balanced, in your opinion, only because he agrees with you feelings about China, not your analysis of what is actually going on. There is a wealth of informed economic information reported daily, including on YouTube. Since you are so interested in China and so ready to dismiss criticism of it, I suggest that you spend a few minutes scanning these sources. It's beyond eye-opening. There is so much that goes on in China that makes no sense, from an economic or any other standpoint, that it's well worth the time. And, your blog (and you) would surely gain from the experience.

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  3. So because no Muslim country cares about China committing genocide of the Uyghurs we shouldn't talk about it in polite company because it's no way to make friends.

    Simply amazing.

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  4. Amazing, but also true. It's called Realpolitik. If you keep harping on the Uyghurs, the moment you call Beijing and ask them to intervene with their friend Putin, they will not take your call. The same applies to Saudi Arabia, given the Biden attacks on the crown prince, because of Jamal Khasogghi. Sad to say, but sometimes you need to deal with unsavory characters if you want to practice diplomacy. Keep in mind, Richard Nixon went to Beijing during Mao's cultural revolution.

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