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China's economy grew 3 times faster than the US

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China's economy grew 3 times faster than the US
By John Ross February 2, 2015

The recent publication of China's and the United States' 2014 GDP results has allowed a comparison of the growth of the world's two largest economies, resolving discussion of their relative economic performance with facts and highlighting serious misanalysis of China's economic development in parts of the media.

Taking first the objective data:

· In 2014 China's economy grew by 7.4 percent and the U.S. economy by 2.4 percent (see Figure 1). China's economy therefore grew more than three times as fast as the U.S.

d02788e9b6de16395c1611.jpg


China's GDP increased from 58.8 trillion RMB in 2013 to 63.6 trillion in 2014, i.e., by 4.8 trillion RMB. In dollar terms this was $780 billion measured at the exchange rate of Dec. 31, 2014, and $785 billion at 2014's average exchange rate. The US added $653 billion to GDP. China therefore added approximately $130 billion more to world output than the U.S. at market prices. This is shown in Figure 2.

d02788e9b6de16395c7312.jpg

· In 2014 the RMB's exchange rate fell against the dollar, thereby understating China's real output increase compared to the U.S. If measured at World Bank Parity Purchasing Powers (PPPs), China added approximately $1,300 billion to GDP compared to the $653 billion added by the U.S.

By whatever measure, therefore, China's economy considerably outgrew that of the U.S.

Such factual data is particularly illuminating in light of a consistent misrepresentation in certain parts of the financial media that China's economy is in a "crisis" or "severe slowdown," while the U.S. is undergoing "rapid growth." The data shows that, on the contrary, China not only continued to be the world's most rapidly growing major economy but continued to significantly outgrow the U.S.

A selection of headlines gives the flavor of what facts now show to have been unjustified "scare stories" about China. In January 2014, the Financial Times ran an article headlined "China's debt-fuelled boom is in danger of turning to bust." In April, another Financial Times headline declared "China's crisis is coming - the only question is how big it will be." In October, the American Enterprise Institute announced "An economic mess in China."

American academic Michael Pettis is a favorite source in such articles - the U.S. financial website Zero Hedge featured an article entitled "A Chinese Soft-Landing Will Inevitably Lead To A 'Very Brutal Hard Landing,' Pettis Warns." The Financial Times carried several articles by George Magnus, former Senior Economic Adviser to Swiss bank UBS, who predicts a coming slowdown of China's economic growth to 3.9 percent.

The contrast between such headlines and the actual economic results was therefore striking.

But such inaccurate material recycles a decades-old genre of what may be termed "fictional economics" predicting the coming "crisis" or "drastic slowdown" in China. This was not confined to fringe publications but involved persistently inaccurate projections by major Western media. For example, in 2002 Gordon Chang wrote a book entitled "The Coming Collapse of China," the thesis of which is self-explanatory. Chang argued, "A half-decade ago the leaders of the People's Republic had real choices. Today they do not. They have no exit. They have run out of time." Over a decade later, since time has not yet run out, one might expect that such an author's analysis would be disregarded. But instead, Chang was featured by Forbes and Bloomberg TV as a "China expert."

Another example may be taken from The Economist. In June 2002, the magazine produced a special China supplement called "A Dragon out of Puff." This report said of China, "The economy still relies primarily on domestic engines of growth, which are sputtering. Growth over the last five years has relied heavily on massive government spending. As a result, the government's debt is rising fast. Coupled with the banks' bad loans and the state's huge pension liabilities, this is a financial crisis in the making." The Economist's conclusion in 2002 was, "In the coming decade, therefore, China seems set to become more unstable." In reality, far from entering a crisis, China was about to enter the decade of the fastest growth ever experienced by a major economy in recorded history.

Why does such repeated inaccurate analysis of China's economy continue to appear in the Western media? It is striking that, during its economic reform, China has not underperformed its own ambitious projections but has consistently outperformed them. To graphically illustrate this, Figure 3 compares the Deng Xiaoping's projections for China's economic growth shortly after the start of the reform process with China's actual economic growth.

Deng Xiaoping's first stated target was to increase the size of China's economy by 400 percent between 1981 and 2000; the actual increase was 623 percent. The second goal was to increase China's GDP by a further 400 percent between 2000 and 2050, or a 1,600 percent increase between 1981 and 2050. In reality, China's economy had already grown by over 2,200 percent compared to 1981 by 2014. Deng Xiaoping's target was reached 38 years ahead of schedule! As regards China's latest stated goal - to double GDP between 2010 and 2020 - China is also ahead of its growth target.

d02788e9b6de16395cea15.jpg

Given such a reliable record over more than three and a half decades, China is clearly continuing to develop in line with the key goals officially reiterated by President Xi Jinping: "We have set the goal of completing the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects by the centenary of the Communist Party of China in 2021 and building China into a modern socialist country... by the centenary of the People's Republic of China in 2049."

Outside China, understandably, there is less understanding of the framework of "socialism with Chinese characteristics" within which Chinese economic policy is designed, so it may be useful to use the recent explanation of why China's extremely high growth rate will continue provided by one of China's leading economists, Justin Yifu Lin.

In analyzing domestic China factors, Lin noted, "In 2008, China's per capita income was just over one-fifth that of the United States. This gap is roughly equal to the gap between the U.S. and Japan in 1951, after which Japan grew at an average annual rate of 9.2 percent for the next 20 years, or between the U.S. and South Korea in 1977, after which South Korea grew at 7.6 percent per year for two decades. Singapore in 1967 and Taiwan in 1975 had similar gaps - followed by similar growth rates. By extension, in the 20 years after 2008, China should have a potential growth rate of roughly 8 percent."

While Lin posited that China's average long term growth rate would be around 8 percent, shorter term projections must take external economic factors into account. Lin argued, "The external scenario, however, is gloomier… As a result, Chinese growth is likely to fall below its potential of 8 percent a year. As policymakers plan for the next five years, they should set China's growth targets at 7-7.5 percent, adjusting them within that range as changes in the international climate dictate. Such a growth target can… achieve the country's goal of doubling income by 2020." Indeed, a 7 percent annual growth rate from 2015 would result in China somewhat exceeding its target of doubling the size of its economy from 2010 to 2020.

Lin notes that the reason China can meet such targets also strikes to the core of an elementary economic error that leads to much erroneous media analysis of China. Lin states, "China has the potential to maintain robust growth by relying on domestic demand, and not only household consumption." Economically, in any country, domestic "demand" is not equal to consumption, as writers such as Pettis erroneously state, but is equal to consumption plus investment.

In reality, China has the world's largest investment resources. As Lin noted, "China's investment resources are abundant… private savings in China amount to nearly 50 percent of GDP… Even under comparatively unfavorable external conditions, China can rely on investment to create jobs in the short term; as the number of jobs grows, so will consumption." In a developing economy, investment accounts for 50 percent of economic growth on average, and in an advanced economy it accounts for 57 percent. It is therefore no surprise that China's much greater investment resources are leading its economy to continue to grow much faster than the U.S.

But why is China able to successfully carry out such investment programs, whereas in the U.S. numerous calls for increased investment in areas like infrastructure have not been implemented, even when publicly supported by such leading figures as former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers?

The reason lies in the fact that China is a "socialist market economy" not a "capitalist market economy." China possesses a state sector which does not aim to encompass the whole economy nor to administer it, but which is strong enough to set (and maintain, if required) China's overall investment level. As the Wall Street Journal accurately summarized, "Most economies can pull two levers to bolster growth: fiscal and monetary. China has a third option. The National Development and Reform Commission can accelerate the flow of investment projects."

No capitalist market economy, including the U.S., possesses such a powerful structure as China's "socialist market economy." This is why China's economy has continued to persistently outperform the U.S. and why all media predictions of disaster over several decades, and again in 2014, have invariably turned out to be false.

Another statistic casts further light on the situation. While sections of the media were running inaccurate stories on China's economy, foreign companies increased their investment in China from $123.9 billion in 2013 to $127.6 billion in 2014. As usual, companies - which have to deal with money and not propaganda - were more in step with economic reality than sections of the press.

For many years, I have made my living by supplying companies more accurate analysis of economies such as China than could be found in the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. Such publications have not been able to comprehend the superiority of China's economic structure to that of the West, and have therefore made repeated erroneous predictions. It seems that there are still openings in that field and, in light of the continuing errors in such publications, the factual record for 2014 again clearly shows that those seeking more accurate predictions of what will happen in China's economy will find these in China's media, from China's top economists, and in China's own growth projections.
 
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China's economy grew 3 times faster than the US
By John Ross February 2, 2015

The recent publication of China's and the United States' 2014 GDP results has allowed a comparison of the growth of the world's two largest economies, resolving discussion of their relative economic performance with facts and highlighting serious misanalysis of China's economic development in parts of the media.

Taking first the objective data:

· In 2014 China's economy grew by 7.4 percent and the U.S. economy by 2.4 percent (see Figure 1). China's economy therefore grew more than three times as fast as the U.S.

d02788e9b6de16395c1611.jpg


China's GDP increased from 58.8 trillion RMB in 2013 to 63.6 trillion in 2014, i.e., by 4.8 trillion RMB. In dollar terms this was $780 billion measured at the exchange rate of Dec. 31, 2014, and $785 billion at 2014's average exchange rate. The US added $653 billion to GDP. China therefore added approximately $130 billion more to world output than the U.S. at market prices. This is shown in Figure 2.

d02788e9b6de16395c7312.jpg

· In 2014 the RMB's exchange rate fell against the dollar, thereby understating China's real output increase compared to the U.S. If measured at World Bank Parity Purchasing Powers (PPPs), China added approximately $1,300 billion to GDP compared to the $653 billion added by the U.S.

By whatever measure, therefore, China's economy considerably outgrew that of the U.S.

Such factual data is particularly illuminating in light of a consistent misrepresentation in certain parts of the financial media that China's economy is in a "crisis" or "severe slowdown," while the U.S. is undergoing "rapid growth." The data shows that, on the contrary, China not only continued to be the world's most rapidly growing major economy but continued to significantly outgrow the U.S.

A selection of headlines gives the flavor of what facts now show to have been unjustified "scare stories" about China. In January 2014, the Financial Times ran an article headlined "China's debt-fuelled boom is in danger of turning to bust." In April, another Financial Times headline declared "China's crisis is coming - the only question is how big it will be." In October, the American Enterprise Institute announced "An economic mess in China."

American academic Michael Pettis is a favorite source in such articles - the U.S. financial website Zero Hedge featured an article entitled "A Chinese Soft-Landing Will Inevitably Lead To A 'Very Brutal Hard Landing,' Pettis Warns." The Financial Times carried several articles by George Magnus, former Senior Economic Adviser to Swiss bank UBS, who predicts a coming slowdown of China's economic growth to 3.9 percent.

The contrast between such headlines and the actual economic results was therefore striking.

But such inaccurate material recycles a decades-old genre of what may be termed "fictional economics" predicting the coming "crisis" or "drastic slowdown" in China. This was not confined to fringe publications but involved persistently inaccurate projections by major Western media. For example, in 2002 Gordon Chang wrote a book entitled "The Coming Collapse of China," the thesis of which is self-explanatory. Chang argued, "A half-decade ago the leaders of the People's Republic had real choices. Today they do not. They have no exit. They have run out of time." Over a decade later, since time has not yet run out, one might expect that such an author's analysis would be disregarded. But instead, Chang was featured by Forbes and Bloomberg TV as a "China expert."

Another example may be taken from The Economist. In June 2002, the magazine produced a special China supplement called "A Dragon out of Puff." This report said of China, "The economy still relies primarily on domestic engines of growth, which are sputtering. Growth over the last five years has relied heavily on massive government spending. As a result, the government's debt is rising fast. Coupled with the banks' bad loans and the state's huge pension liabilities, this is a financial crisis in the making." The Economist's conclusion in 2002 was, "In the coming decade, therefore, China seems set to become more unstable." In reality, far from entering a crisis, China was about to enter the decade of the fastest growth ever experienced by a major economy in recorded history.

Why does such repeated inaccurate analysis of China's economy continue to appear in the Western media? It is striking that, during its economic reform, China has not underperformed its own ambitious projections but has consistently outperformed them. To graphically illustrate this, Figure 3 compares the Deng Xiaoping's projections for China's economic growth shortly after the start of the reform process with China's actual economic growth.

Deng Xiaoping's first stated target was to increase the size of China's economy by 400 percent between 1981 and 2000; the actual increase was 623 percent. The second goal was to increase China's GDP by a further 400 percent between 2000 and 2050, or a 1,600 percent increase between 1981 and 2050. In reality, China's economy had already grown by over 2,200 percent compared to 1981 by 2014. Deng Xiaoping's target was reached 38 years ahead of schedule! As regards China's latest stated goal - to double GDP between 2010 and 2020 - China is also ahead of its growth target.

d02788e9b6de16395cea15.jpg

Given such a reliable record over more than three and a half decades, China is clearly continuing to develop in line with the key goals officially reiterated by President Xi Jinping: "We have set the goal of completing the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects by the centenary of the Communist Party of China in 2021 and building China into a modern socialist country... by the centenary of the People's Republic of China in 2049."

Outside China, understandably, there is less understanding of the framework of "socialism with Chinese characteristics" within which Chinese economic policy is designed, so it may be useful to use the recent explanation of why China's extremely high growth rate will continue provided by one of China's leading economists, Justin Yifu Lin.

In analyzing domestic China factors, Lin noted, "In 2008, China's per capita income was just over one-fifth that of the United States. This gap is roughly equal to the gap between the U.S. and Japan in 1951, after which Japan grew at an average annual rate of 9.2 percent for the next 20 years, or between the U.S. and South Korea in 1977, after which South Korea grew at 7.6 percent per year for two decades. Singapore in 1967 and Taiwan in 1975 had similar gaps - followed by similar growth rates. By extension, in the 20 years after 2008, China should have a potential growth rate of roughly 8 percent."

While Lin posited that China's average long term growth rate would be around 8 percent, shorter term projections must take external economic factors into account. Lin argued, "The external scenario, however, is gloomier… As a result, Chinese growth is likely to fall below its potential of 8 percent a year. As policymakers plan for the next five years, they should set China's growth targets at 7-7.5 percent, adjusting them within that range as changes in the international climate dictate. Such a growth target can… achieve the country's goal of doubling income by 2020." Indeed, a 7 percent annual growth rate from 2015 would result in China somewhat exceeding its target of doubling the size of its economy from 2010 to 2020.

Lin notes that the reason China can meet such targets also strikes to the core of an elementary economic error that leads to much erroneous media analysis of China. Lin states, "China has the potential to maintain robust growth by relying on domestic demand, and not only household consumption." Economically, in any country, domestic "demand" is not equal to consumption, as writers such as Pettis erroneously state, but is equal to consumption plus investment.

In reality, China has the world's largest investment resources. As Lin noted, "China's investment resources are abundant… private savings in China amount to nearly 50 percent of GDP… Even under comparatively unfavorable external conditions, China can rely on investment to create jobs in the short term; as the number of jobs grows, so will consumption." In a developing economy, investment accounts for 50 percent of economic growth on average, and in an advanced economy it accounts for 57 percent. It is therefore no surprise that China's much greater investment resources are leading its economy to continue to grow much faster than the U.S.

But why is China able to successfully carry out such investment programs, whereas in the U.S. numerous calls for increased investment in areas like infrastructure have not been implemented, even when publicly supported by such leading figures as former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers?

The reason lies in the fact that China is a "socialist market economy" not a "capitalist market economy." China possesses a state sector which does not aim to encompass the whole economy nor to administer it, but which is strong enough to set (and maintain, if required) China's overall investment level. As the Wall Street Journal accurately summarized, "Most economies can pull two levers to bolster growth: fiscal and monetary. China has a third option. The National Development and Reform Commission can accelerate the flow of investment projects."

No capitalist market economy, including the U.S., possesses such a powerful structure as China's "socialist market economy." This is why China's economy has continued to persistently outperform the U.S. and why all media predictions of disaster over several decades, and again in 2014, have invariably turned out to be false.

Another statistic casts further light on the situation. While sections of the media were running inaccurate stories on China's economy, foreign companies increased their investment in China from $123.9 billion in 2013 to $127.6 billion in 2014. As usual, companies - which have to deal with money and not propaganda - were more in step with economic reality than sections of the press.

For many years, I have made my living by supplying companies more accurate analysis of economies such as China than could be found in the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. Such publications have not been able to comprehend the superiority of China's economic structure to that of the West, and have therefore made repeated erroneous predictions. It seems that there are still openings in that field and, in light of the continuing errors in such publications, the factual record for 2014 again clearly shows that those seeking more accurate predictions of what will happen in China's economy will find these in China's media, from China's top economists, and in China's own growth projections.

Great Going for China!

Also China needs more people like John Ross at its side/
 
. . .
wait a minute, you are telling me the analysts are wrong!? Get me Gordon Chang on the phone, I need to talk to the only man capable of predicting the Chinese economy with a deck of 48 cards, and see what his thoughts are.
Gordon Chang....Hahaha...:omghaha:
He has been predicting for many years,but....:devil:
At least he earned a lot of dollars from the West :hitwall:

China Will Be World’s Largest Economy In 2024: IHS | International Business Times
Chinese are the most hard-working people in the world. I love my nikes.
:lol:Hard-working?
Why?
 
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interesting.
John Ross (Chinese name 罗思义) is a Brit. so is Jim O'Neil.
......British economists are super bullish on China while American ones are usually bearish?
we should have a list of economists of different nationalities and see if there is significant difference.

wait a minute, you are telling me the analysts are wrong!? Get me Gordon Chang on the phone, I need to talk to the only man capable of predicting the Chinese economy with a deck of 48 cards, and see what his thoughts are.
:omghaha::omghaha:.....................:tup:
 
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interesting.
John Ross (Chinese name 罗思义) is a Brit. so is Jim O'Neil.
......British economists are super bullish on China while American ones are usually bearish?
we should have a list of economists of different nationalities and see if there is significant difference.


:omghaha::omghaha:.....................:tup:
Add one more to this list - Martin Jacques.
 
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...This gap is roughly equal to the gap between the U.S. and Japan in 1951, after which Japan grew at an average annual rate of 9.2 percent for the next 20 years, or between the U.S. and South Korea in 1977, after which South Korea grew at 7.6 percent per year for two decades. Singapore in 1967 and Taiwan in 1975 had similar gaps - followed by similar growth rates...

That's why I always says about put aside direct comparison with US, continue to take solid steps just like the other East Asian economies, with which we have a lot more in common.

Another thing is the currency which makes comparison less meaningful. China should continue to improve the current financial order so that say RMB becomes more used in international transactions, only till then a more clear picture about relative sizes of economies is meaningful.
 
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Don't think so. Onlookers, whether bullish or bearish, don't build our economy. We build our own future. We don't really care what other people say about us. The results will speak for itself.

Here you are wrong. Every Brand (China here) needs to take care of its image which has many effects.
 
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wait a minute, you are telling me the analysts are wrong!? Get me Gordon Chang on the phone, I need to talk to the only man capable of predicting the Chinese economy with a deck of 48 cards, and see what his thoughts are.

Better ignore the Indian troll. To hear the Indian opinion on China's affairs should be our last concern.

Ignoring them is the best response to their obsession with China.
 
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That's why I always says about put aside direct comparison with US, continue to take solid steps just like the other East Asian economies, with which we have a lot more in common.

Another thing is the currency which makes comparison less meaningful. China should continue to improve the current financial order so that say RMB becomes more used in international transactions, only till then a more clear picture about relative sizes of economies is meaningful.

So while we are building up HDI hence GDP (measured in RMB) domestically, we should continue to make RMB used in international transactions, ultimately make it reserve currency and then we will see how GDP nominal is affacted by the exchange rate.

@Yizhi @Genesis @Nihonjin1051 @Chinese-Dragon

China's Yuan To Overtake British Pound By 2018? - Forbes
China's Yuan To Overtake British Pound By 2018?
Kenneth Rapoza Contributor
Investing 2/02/2015 @ 5:24PM 3,402 views

In the world of global currencies, the Chinese yuan is the undrafted rookie. And that rookie is now making quite the name for himself, say fixed income analysts at London based Ashmore Group, a $70 billion emerging markets money manager.

Two years ago, the yuan was ranked 13th in the world for global payments, according to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Telecommunication, best known as SWIFT. Last November, the yuan surpassed the Aussie and Canadian dollar to become the fifth largest currency used in international trade.

“At the current pace of growth, the Chinese yuan will easily overtake the Japanese yen as the fourth most used payments currency next year and within three years challenge the pound for third place,” say Ashmore Group economists Jan Dehn and John Sfakianakis in a research note on Monday.

While Ashmore has something to sell in China — they’re one of the only foreign firms currently allowed to invest in mainland Chinese debt – there are some numbers to back up the yuan’s rise.

In December, the Chinese currency reached a record high share of 2.17% in global payments by value compared to the yen’s 2.69%.

“The (yuan) breaking into the top five world payments currencies is an important milestone” says Wim Raymaekers, head of banking markets at SWIFT. “It is a great testimony to the internationalization of the yuan and confirms its transition from an emerging to a business as usual payment currency.”

Raymaekers said that new offshore clearing centers around the world, mainly with British, Hong Kong and Australian banks, helped propel the yuan forward last year.

In percentage terms, China’s currency is growing in use more than the pound and dollar.

Global payments in the Chinese currency increased in value by 20.3% in December 2014, while the growth for payments across all currencies was 14.9%. The yuan has been showing a consistent three digit growth over the past two years with an increase in value of payments by 321%. Over the last year, yuan payments grew in value by 102% compared to an overall yearly growth for all currencies of just 4.4%, SWIFT said in a statement.

Around a thousand international financial institutions in 70 countries are settling trade in yuan. A number of banks – both Chinese and non-Chinese – are pitching for more business in yuan, with the strategic goal of generating a sizeable revenue stream. Ashmore, like other China-bound fund managers at Matthews and Guinness Atkinson, all think that the internationalization of the yuan is an potential boon for investors. China offers potential for fixed income investors, with better yield the core economies, and enough money in foreign reserves to ease bond buyers concerns that the government might miss a debt payment.

China’s yuan is not yet a global reserve currency like the yen, pound, dollar and euro. But the International Monetary Fund is reviewing the possibility in October, Ashmore said. A final decision on the matter won’t come until the end of the year. The IMF only decides on currencies’ reserve status every five years.

“We think China will strive to achieve global reserve currency status this year,” says Dehn. “The major obstacle is likely to come from developed economies that see the arrival of a new global reserve currency as a threat, because it would directly compete with their currencies for a share of global central bank reserves.”

The U.S. and Euro zone might not like the idea. Emerging markets, on the other hand, hold nearly 80% of all global foreign currency reserves. The yuan is diversification, and all of the Asian and Latin American economies are doing business with China. China’s foreign reserves are around $3 trillion (Note by Shotgunner51: 3.945932 trillion as of Sep 2014). Brazil, Russia and India combined equal close to another trillion dollars.

For Ashmore, an emerging market currency bull, the central bankers of those countries have strong incentives to support China’s bid for reserve currency status at the IMF. The most obvious reason is that the U.S., Europe, Japan and the U.K. have huge debt and fiscal liabilities and have printed huge quantities of paper money to re-inflate their bubbles instead of reforming or deleveraging.

Whether or not it becomes a reserve currency, the Chinese yuan is set to outflank the British pound in the years ahead. China is in the slow process of reforming its capital markets, enticing more foreign money into China’s financial system, which will make the yuan more attractive to portfolio investors. Judging by SWIFT, the yuan is already of interest to multinationals trading with Chinese companies on a daily basis.
 
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Don't think so. Onlookers, whether bullish or bearish, don't build our economy. We build our own future. We don't really care what other people say about us. The results will speak for itself.

The Indian is sore because he is being ignored. Fallow his posts, and you will notice his constant attempt to poke his nose into China's internal affairs.

Let's wish he does not care about China's economics as much as we do not care about Indian economics.

GDP: How far can it fall?
February 3, 2015


e89a8f5fc4c2163a5de701.jpg

A worker checks an elebator component at a high tech industry zone in Yichang, Hubei province. China's manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index in January weakened to a 28-month low of 49.8 from 50.1 in December. [China Daily]

An unexpected contraction of manufacturing in January has raised speculation about the bottom line of GDP growth that the government can tolerate, given the "new normal" situation confronting China.

The manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index in January weakened to a 28-month low of 49.8 from 50.1 in December, the National Bureau of Statistics reported on Sunday.

Economic expansion of 6 to 7 percent in 2015 and the coming years will be enough to achieve the long-term target in 2020: an economy of more than 80 trillion yuan ($12.9 trillion at current exchange rates) or double the size in 2010, said Yu Bin, director of the department of macroeconomic research at the State Council's Development Research Center.

He discussed the "bottom line" on Monday at a news conference in Beijing, stressing that the government can stabilize growth within a reasonable range this year.

According to Yu, this year and next will be the optimum period to improve structural reforms and make the growth pattern of the world's second-largest economy more sustainable.

"China's high-speed growth era is over. Limited resources and a polluted environment have left less room for policy to pursue high-speed development," said Yu.

Given the downside risks, an increasing number of economists believe that the government may cut this year's growth target to 7 percent from 7.5 percent.

Last month's PMI contraction was worse than the market had expected. Most sub-components showed signs of a cyclical slowdown.

"The fall in the official PMI is consistent with our expectations that growth in the first quarter will likely be weak," said Song Yu, an economist at the Goldman Sachs Group Inc. "The likelihood of further loosening measures has increased."

HSBC Holdings Plc reported its own manufacturing PMI on Monday, which showed a reading of 49.7 in January, down slightly from the flash reading of 49.8 but up fractionally from 49.6 in December.

"Although output rose slightly and new orders broadly stabilized, staffing levels were cut for the 15th successive month," said a report from the bank.

Qu Hongbin, chief economist in China and the co-head of Asian Economic Research at HSBC, said: "We think demand in the manufacturing sector remains weak and more aggressive monetary and fiscal easing will be needed to prevent another sharp slowdown in growth".

Liu Qian, deputy director of the China Service Department at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said that a sharp growth deceleration is impossible this year, but deflationary pressure is increasing in the manufacturing sector as overcapacity persists.
 
. . .

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