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How China Cooks Its Books

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It's an open secret that China has doctored its economic and financial statistics since the time of Mao. But could it all go south now?

BY JORDAN CALINOFF | SEPTEMBER 3, 2009

In February, local Chinese Labor Ministry officials came to "help" with massive layoffs at an electronics factory in Guangdong province, China. The owner of the factory felt nervous having government officials there, but kept his mouth shut. Who was he to complain that the officials were breaking the law by interfering with the firings, he added. They were the law! And they ordered him to offer his workers what seemed like a pretty good deal: Accept the layoff and receive the legal severance package, or "resign" and get an even larger upfront payment.

"I would estimate around 70 percent of workers took the resignation deal. This is happening all over Guangdong," the factory owner said. "I help the Department of Labor, and they'll help me later on down the line."

Such open-secret programs, writ large, help China manipulate its unemployment rate, because workers who "resign" don't count toward that number. The government estimates that roughly 20 million migrant factory workers have lost their jobs since the downturn started. But, with "resignations" included, the number is likely closer to 40 million or 50 million, according to estimates made by Yiping Huang, chief Asia economist for Citigroup. That is the same size as Germany's entire work force. China similarly distorts everything from its GDP to retail sales figures to production activity. This sort of number-padding isn't just unethical, it's also dangerous: The push to develop rosy economic data could actually lead China's economy over the cliff.

Western media outlets often portray Chinese book-cooking as part and parcel of a monolithic central government and omnipotent Beijing bureaucrats. But the problem is manifold, a product of centralized government as well as decentralized officials.

Pressure to distort or fudge statistics likely comes from up high -- and it's intense. "China announces its annual objective of GDP growth rate each year. In Chinese culture, the government has to reach the objective; otherwise, they will 'lose face,'" said Gary Liu, deputy director of the China Europe International Business School's Lujiazui International Financial Research Center. "For instance, the government announced that it wanted to ensure a GDP growth rate of 8 percent in 2009, and it has become the priority for government officials to meet that objective."

But local and provincial governmental officials are the ones who actually fiddle with the numbers. They retain considerable autonomy and power, and have a self-interested reason to manipulate economic statistics. When they reach or exceed the central government's economic goals, they get rewarded with better jobs or more money. "The higher [their] GDP [figures], the higher the chance will be for local officials to get promoted," explained Liu.

Such statistical creativity is nothing new in China. In 1958, Chairman Mao proclaimed that China would surpass Britain in steel production within 15 years. He mobilized villages throughout China to establish backyard steel furnaces, where in a futile attempt to reach outrageous production goals, villagers could melt down pots and pans and even burn their own furniture for furnace fuel. This effort produced worthless pig iron and diverted enough labor away from agriculture to be a main driver in the devastating famine of the Great Leap Forward.

Last October, Vice Premier Li Keqiang said in a speech after inspecting China's Statistics Bureau, "China's foundation for statistics is still very weak, and the quality of statistics is to be further improved" -- a brutally harsh assessment coming from a top state official.

Indeed, China has predicated its very claim of being the healthiest large economy in the world on faulty statistics. The government insists that even though China's all-important export sector has been devastated -- contracting about 25 percent in the past year -- a massive uptick in domestic consumption has kept factories producing and growth churning along. A close examination of retail sales and GDP growth, however, tells a different story. China's domestic retail sales have risen about 15 percent year on year, but that does not really translate into Chinese consumers purchasing 15 percent more televisions and T-shirts. The country tabulates sales when a factory ships units to a retailer, meaning China includes unused or warehoused inventory in its consumption data. There is ample evidence that state-owned enterprises buy goods from one another, simply shifting products back and forth, and that those transactions count as retail sales in national statistics.

China's retail statistics seem implausible for other reasons, too. They would imply an increase in salaries among Chinese people, allowing them to purchase that extra 15 percent. To be sure, the Statistics Bureau reported salaries had increased 12.9 percent in the first half of 2009. But Chinese netizens complained such numbers were hard to believe -- as did the bureau's chief.

A look at GDP growth also raises serious questions. China's economy grew at an annualized 6.1 percent rate in the first quarter, and 7.9 percent in the second. Yet electricity usage, a key indicator in industrial growth and a harder metric to manipulate, declined 2.2 percent in the first six months of the year. How could an economy largely dependent on manufacturing grow while its industrial sector shrank?

It couldn't; the numbers don't add up. China announced a $600 billion stimulus package (equal to about 14 percent of GDP) last fall. At that point, local governments started counting the dedicated stimulus funds in GDP statistics -- before finding projects to use the funds, and therefore far before the trillions of yuan started trickling into the economy. Local governments keen to raise their growth and production numbers said they spent stimulus money while still deciding on what to spend it, one economist explained. Thus, China's provincial GDP tabulations add up to far more than the countrywide estimate.

Alternative macroeconomic metrics, such as the purchasing managers' index (PMI), which measures output, offer a no more accurate reflection. One private brokerage house, CLSA, compiles its own PMI, suggesting a sharp contraction in industrial output between December 2008 and March 2009. Beijing's PMI data, on the other hand, indicated that industrial output was expanding during that period.

Unfortunately, such obfuscation means China's real economic health is difficult to assess. Most indicators that would help an intrepid economist correct the government numbers -- progress on infrastructure projects, end-user purchases, and the number of "resigned" workers -- are not public.

Still, it is possible to infer the severity of the gap between economic reality and China-on-paper by looking closely at monetary policy. China's state-owned banks dramatically increased lending in the first half of 2009 -- by 34.5 percent year on year, to more than $1 trillion. This move seems intended to keep growth artificially high until exports bounce back. Most analysts agree that it is leading to large bubbles in the stock, real estate, and commodity markets. And the Chinese government recently announced plans to raise capital requirements -- an apparent sign it sees the need to reign in the expansion.

For the long term, China is banking on its main export markets -- in the United States, Europe, and Japan -- recovering and starting to consume again. The hope is that in the meantime, rosy economic figures will placate the masses and stop unrest. But, if the rest of the world does not rebound, China risks the bursting of asset bubbles in property and stocks, declining domestic consumption, and rising unemployment.

That's when the Wile E. Coyote moment could happen. Once Chinese citizens no longer believe that the economy is doing well, social unrest and more widespread worker riots -- already increasing in scope and severity -- are likely. That's something that China will have a harder time hiding. And then we'll know whether China's statistical manipulation was a smart move or a disastrous mistake.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/09/03/how_china_cooks_its_books?page=0,1
 
Hopes this answers your doubts. :) In case you still have doubts, please visit and see for yourself. If the numbers of off it is likely to be UNDERSTATED rather than overstated (if you know what I mean)..... :cheers:


China sees boost in jobs for migrant workers


In another indication of China's improving economic outlook, a record number of migrant workers managed to find jobs by the end of June.

The success of the 150 million migrant workers who found work contrasted sharply with news earlier this year that 20 million unemployed migrant workers had given up on life in the cities and returned to their villages.

The exodus of unemployed migrant workers was caused by the global financial crisis, which hit China's export sector hard and led to the closure of many factories - traditional employers of migrant workers from China's rural areas.

By the half-year point, the trend had reversed and migrant workers were flowing back to the cities, thanks to the efforts of the central government, said Chen Xiwen, director of the office of the central leading group on rural work.

According to the latest statistics, 150 million migrant workers left their home towns and villages to take up work in city factories by the end of June - "the highest in history", said Chen at a news conference.

In 2008, the number was around 130 million.

"Although China was hit by the global financial crisis, it has a larger area and a bigger market, where things can be done to solve problems," Chen said.

Cai Fang, director of the Institute of Population and Labor Economics Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the rebound in the employment prospects of migrant workers was partly due to their adaptability.

"Migrant workers have a strong job flexibility. It makes them able to accept new jobs in the construction industry and the tertiary industry, though many used to work in the manufacturing industry," he said.

That flexibility also manifests itself in their willingness to accept less-well-paid jobs when economic times are not good, Cai said.

The growth in jobs for migrant workers was to be expected following the government's efforts to maintain economic growth at 8 percent, he said.

The government has poured investment into infrastructure and adopted policies to boost domestic demand.

China's economic growth hit 7.9 percent in the second quarter, up from 6.1 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said in July.

Exports, retail sales and factory output also improved in July, according to official statistics.

The improvements were responsible for the additional jobs for migrant workers and "some areas have even faced a shortage of labor recently", Cai added.

The government's massive infrastructure spending has also benefited rural areas, Chen said, with stimulus spending being used to improve rural roads, power grids and water supply.

"There is a possibility that we could turn the crisis into an opportunity in the rural areas, and keep growth in the countryside at an ideal rate," Chen said.

The drought in Northeast, Central and Southwest China will likely lead to a reduction in the yield of corn in the coming months but the nation's stocks will ensure there is enough supply and prices will remain stable, Chen said at the press conference.

(China Daily September 5, 2009)
 
Just a side note, by 2010 China is to produce roughly HALF of the ENTIRE WORLD'S automobiles (both sedans and large trucks). And oh, it's not just autos. China is now THE largest ship builder in the world, not to mention production of ARJ-21 is in progress. Nearly all of the large complex engineering infrastructure projects (such as advanced bridges, skyscrappers, etc) in South America, Africa, Arabs, Asia, Europe are designed and constructed by China. Just think about that.
 
Until China opens up its books and provides a free and fair media to critique the government. No one will no for sure whats happening in China.

China is probably still the fastest growing major economy in the world, but if they don't have anything to hide, they should'nt hide anything.
 
Until China opens up its books and provides a free and fair media to critique the government. No one will no for sure whats happening in China.

In China a state level CCP member generally cooks statistics to show the results.They generally do it their heads do not roll

China is probably still the fastest growing major economy in the world, but if they don't have anything to hide, they should'nt hide anything.

It is growing but no one knows what exactly is the growth rate.It is hard to find out when they are bluffing and when they are not.They may be doing an enron
 
In China a state level CCP member generally cooks statistics to show the results.They generally do it their heads do not roll



It is growing but no one knows what exactly is the growth rate.It is hard to find out when they are bluffing and when they are not.They may be doing an enron

You're referring to India here. :smitten:
 
Okay, I'll give it a shot.

India claims 6-7% yearly growth, yet agricultural production has not been able to keep up with rising population. Worse yet is that it has actually decreased. Now, for a population that is on subsistence living how is it possible for agriculture production to decrease while maintaining 6-7% growth???
 
If china was so bad then how come it bought hundreds of billions of dollar worth US Treasury securities.

US owes china 776.4 Billion $ and increasing.

No country takes that much risk if they don't have a financial cushion to fall back on.

http://www.ustreas.gov/tic/mfh.txt
 
Okay, I'll give it a shot.

India claims 6-7% yearly growth, yet agricultural production has not been able to keep up with rising population. Worse yet is that it has actually decreased. Now, for a population that is on subsistence living how is it possible for agriculture production to decrease while maintaining 6-7% growth???

Agriculture hardly contributes 20% to the GDP
India GDP Composition Sector Wise

GDP of India
The Indian economy is the 12th largest in USD exchange rate terms. India is the second fastest growing economy in the world. India’s GDP has touched US$1.25 trillion. The crossing of Indian GDP over a trillion dollar mark in 2007 puts India in the elite group of 12 countries with trillion dollar economy. The tremendous growth rate has coincided with better macroeconomic stability. India has made remarkable progress in information technology, high end services and knowledge process services.

However cause for concern would be this rapid growth has not been an inclusive in nature, in the sense it has not been accompanied by a just and equitable distribution of wealth among all sections of the population. This economic growth has been location specific and sector specific. For e.g. it has not percolated to sectors were labor is intensive (agriculture) and in states were poverty is acute (Bihar, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh).

Though India has the second highest growth rate in the world, its rank in terms of human development index (which is broadly used has a measure of life expectancy, adult literacy and standard of living) has gone down to 128 among 177 countries in 2007 compared to 126 in 2006.

Indian GDP –Trend Of Growth Rate

1960-1980 : 3.5%
1980-1990 : 5.4%
1990-2000 : 4.4%
2000-2009 : 6.4%

Contribution of Various Sectors in GDP

The contributions of various sectors in the Indian GDP for 1990-1991 are as follows:

Agriculture: - 32%
Industry: - 27%
Service Sector: - 41%

The contributions of various sectors in the Indian GDP for 2005-2006 are as follows:

Agriculture: - 20%
Industry: - 26%
Service Sector: - 54%

The contributions of various sectors in the Indian GDP for 2007-2008 are as follows:

Agriculture: - 17%
Industry: - 29%
Service Sector: - 54%

It is great news that today the service sector is contributing more than half of the Indian GDP. It takes India one step closer to the developed economies of the world. Earlier it was agriculture which mainly contributed to the Indian GDP.

The Indian government is still looking up to improve the GDP of the country and so several steps have been taken to boost the economy. Policies of FDI, SEZs and NRI investment have been framed to give a push to the economy and hence the GDP.

GDP of India - Indian GDP, India Gross Domestic Product, Current GDP

Agriculture is a minor contributor to Indian GDP
 
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If china was so bad then how come it bought hundreds of billions of dollar worth US Treasury securities.

US owes china 776.4 Billion $ and increasing.

No country takes that much risk if they don't have a financial cushion to fall back on.

http://www.ustreas.gov/tic/mfh.txt

They have to keep the Yuan devalued otherwise If the Yuan values rises who is going to buy there exports.It is more a case of necessity

Beijing’s dollar trap

By Peter Garnham

Published: July 30 2009 17:19 | Last updated: July 30 2009 19:00

New role for renminbi?China is caught in a dollar trap that has prompted a concerted effort to “internationalise” the renminbi and promote its use outside the country.

Fears over the value of China’s massive dollar holdings, accumulated over the past decade as the country pursued an aggressive policy of export-led growth, have been the trigger for the move.

The market’s focus thus far during the financial crisis has been on China’s call for less dependence on the dollar as a reserve currency and repeated calls for the US to avoid debasing its currency through aggressive monetary and fiscal easing.

But many analysts believe China’s calls for a change to the international monetary regime – earlier this year it suggested using the International Monetary Fund’s special drawing right as a reserve currency – are merely a distraction.

Indeed, China has little incentive to talk down the dollar and such calls are regarded as little more than pleas to the US authorities to keep their finances in check.

Simon Derrick, at Bank of New York Mellon, says China is not in a position to sell a significant portion of its dollar holdings in the open market without causing considerable damage to itself. This means that it must explore a number of different short- and long-term strategies to deal with the problem.

“Developments this year indicate that China now believes that its best long-term strategy is to increase the international role of the renminbi, including its use as a reserve currency,” he says. “This might be the first signal that China is now considering a potential timetable, presumably over years rather than months, for moving towards capital account convertibility.”

It is no wonder the Chinese are concerned about their exposure to the US.

China announced its foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest, had risen by a record $178.3bn to $2,130bn in the second quarter. Although the exact breakdown of the stockpiles is a secret, analysts estimate that 65-70 per cent are held in dollars.

The largest increase in reserves was in May, when the dollar weakened sharply as Treasury yields in the US rose. Fear of a weaker dollar contributed to inflows to China, sparking offsetting intervention by the Chinese authorities to stem strength in the renminbi.

Clearly more dollar weakness – it hit its lowest level against a basket of six leading currencies this week – is not in China’s interest. Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC, says this has prompted Chinese policymakers to rethink the root causes of the “dollar trap” they find themselves in.

“There is a growing consensus in Beijing that one of the fundamental reasons the country has fallen into this trap is that its own currency is not yet an international currency,” he says.

This means Chinese exporters and importers have to rely on the dollar for invoicing more than 70 per cent of the country’s $2,600bn annual trade flows.

With China’s exports surging nearly 30 per cent annually from 2002 to 2007, and government controls on overseas investment by domestic corporations and households, most of the dollar receipts can be recycled out of the country though just one channel: the central bank’s reserve accumulation.

“To find an ultimate solution to this issue, apart from gradually loosening controls on capital outflows, Beijing has realised that it is time to push the internationalisation of the renminbi,” says Mr Qu.

Mr Qu says this move is long overdue, given China’s rising economic power relative to the limited use of the renminbi overseas.

China’s nominal gross domestic product topped $4,300bn last year and is estimated to reach $4,700bn this year, implying that China may overtake Japan as the world’s second-largest economy in 2010. HSBC says China was already ranked as the world’s third-largest trading country last year, and is likely to overtake Germany as the world’s second-largest trading nation by the end of this year.

In order to kick-start the process of internationalisation, China has begun an ambitious scheme to raise the role of the renminbi in international trade and finance and reduce reliance on the dollar.

Earlier this month, China announced a pilot initiative that expanded settlement agreements between Hong Kong and five big trading cities, including Guangzhou and Shanghai.

On top of this, to provide seed money to its trading partners, this year the People’s Bank of China has signed a total of Rmb650bn ($95bn) in bilateral currency swap agreements with six central banks: South Korea, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Belarus and Argentina.

HSBC says China is still in talks with other central banks to form additional swap agreements and was likely to expand them to cover all the country’s trade with Asia, excluding Japan.

This would be followed by an expansion to take in other emerging market countries, including those in the Middle East and Latin America, that needed renminbi to pay for their imports of Chinese manufactured goods.

Mr Qu believes the process of internationalising the renminbi may be quicker than many expect, estimating that more than half of China’s total trade flows, primarily bilateral trade with emerging market countries, are likely to be settled in renminbi in the next three to five years.

“This means that nearly $2,000bn worth of cross-border trade flows would be settled in renminbi, making it one of the top three currencies used in global trade,” he says.

But not all analysts believe that China can solve its dollar dependency so quickly.

Indeed, Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman describes China’s efforts so far in providing currency swap lines as a “drop in a bucket” compared with its trading volumes.

He says China’s dollar dependency is a problem of its own making, given that its reserve accumulation has sometimes been larger than its trade surplus as it sterilises foreign direct investment and speculative inflows into the country.

“I don’t see how use of the renminbi, even if it could be foisted on other countries would solve any of China’s problems,” says Mr Chandler.

He says a more flexible currency will help the Chinese authorities avoid painting themselves deeper into a corner, but it will not change China’s competitive position very much, given the way it really competes is cheap labour costs. I think the talk of international monetary regime change and the renminbi as an invoicing currency is largely political posturing.”


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You gave that!:rofl: :rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::

It has be an long time since I laughed like this

Please do not delete that post others will enjoy it


Sorry; I never thought its that laughable, to me its kind of sad,

Hard to believe such things could happen in 21 century.

So, you don't agree India failing to control Open defecation Blunts

your Nation Growth? :smitten::pakistan::china:
 
It's an open secret that China has doctored its economic and financial statistics since the time of Mao. But could it all go south now?

BY JORDAN CALINOFF | SEPTEMBER 3, 2009

"China announces its annual objective of GDP growth rate each year. In Chinese culture, the government has to reach the objective; otherwise, they will 'lose face,'" "For instance, the government announced that it wanted to ensure a GDP growth rate of 8 percent in 2009, and it has become the priority for government officials to meet that objective."

Last October, Vice Premier Li Keqiang said in a speech after inspecting China's Statistics Bureau, "China's foundation for statistics is still very weak, and the quality of statistics is to be further improved" -- a brutally harsh assessment coming from a top state official.

The country tabulates sales when a factory ships units to a retailer, meaning China includes unused or warehoused inventory in its consumption data. There is ample evidence that state-owned enterprises buy goods from one another, simply shifting products back and forth, and that those transactions count as retail sales in national statistics.


How China Cooks Its Books | Foreign Policy


Man the above mentioned processes are the classical accounting malpractices...
Companies do that to meet investor consensus by aggressive revenue recognition and increase inventory and creating internal targets which is important for managers compensation package !!! i.e too much variable performance based compensation is supposed to bring unethical practices !!

It reminds me all those gud old accounting classes !!!:sniper::sniper:
 

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