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Fading Economy and Graft Crackdown Rattle China’s Leaders

F-22Raptor

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HONG KONG — It was hardly an unusual start to the day for a senior Chinese leader in a country grappling with an economic slowdown. On the morning of July 24, Zhou Benshun attended a meeting to promote one of President Xi Jinping’s signature projects, a plan to boost growth by building a “supercity” that would integrate Beijing with the region around it.

But by 6:10 p.m. that day, Mr. Zhou’s career was over, and he faced years in prison.

The Communist Party’s anticorruption agency announced it was investigating him on “suspicion of serious violations of party discipline and the law,” signaling his ouster as the party chief of Hebei Province, one of the nation’s most populous.

Mr. Zhou’s sudden downfall — he is the first sitting provincial party chief to be purged by Mr. Xi — underscores the uncertainty that permeates the Communist elite as they contend with two unnerving developments beyond their control: an economic slowdown that appears to be worse than officials had anticipated and that could mark the end of China’s era of fast growth, and a campaign against official corruption that has continued longer and reached higher than most had expected.

Driving decisions on both issues is Mr. Xi, who took the party’s helm nearly three years ago and has pursued an ambitious agenda fraught with political risk. Now, weeks before a summit meeting in Washington with President Obama, those risks appear to be growing, and there are signs that Mr. Xi and his strong-willed leadership style face increasingly bold resistance inside the party that could limit his ability to pursue his goals.

Mr. Xi has positioned himself as the chief architect of economic policy — usually the prime minister’s job — and has vowed to reshape the economy, exposing himself to blame if growth continues to sputter. At the same time, Mr. Xi is making enemies with an anticorruption drive that has taken down some of the most powerful men in the country and sidelined more than a hundred thousand lower-ranking officials.

Senior party officials are said to be alarmed by the state of the economy, which grew at the slowest pace in a quarter century during the first half of the year, and now seems to be decelerating further. In a sign of its anxiety, the leadership this month implemented the biggest devaluation of the Chinese currency in more than two decades, sending global markets into plunges.

Mr. Xi’s reputation was also dented this summer by panicked official efforts to prop up the Chinese stock market after a sharp dive in share prices. His government had promoted the market as a good investment to the public for months.

Even before these episodes, early this year a number of party elders had quietly urged Mr. Xi to focus more on reinvigorating the economy, according to an adviser to senior party and government leaders and an editor at a party media outlet, both of whom requested anonymity to describe internal discussions.

The advice was viewed as a sign of their dissatisfaction with Mr. Xi’s management of the economy but also as implicit criticism of his pursuit of high-profile corruption cases that had tarnished their legacies and targeted their protégés, the adviser and the editor said. “Right now, the economic situation is not good, so the core of the party’s work should be shifted more toward the economy,” the adviser said, paraphrasing the message communicated to Mr. Xi.

Among those brought down by Mr. Xi are his predecessor’s former chief of staff, Ling Jihua; the party heavyweight who once controlled the internal security forces, Zhou Yongkang; and two generals who once ranked second only to the party leader in commanding the Chinese armed forces, Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou. Mr. Ling was a protégé of the former president and party chief, Hu Jintao, while Mr. Zhou and the generals owed their rise to Mr. Hu’s predecessor, Jiang Zemin, now 89. General Xu died in March while awaiting court-martial on bribery charges. Zhou Benshun, the Hebei party chief, is considered a protégé of Zhou Yongkang and once worked as an aide to him. The two men are not related.

The campaign has also stoked resentment among the party rank and file and set the bureaucracy on edge, with wary officials afraid to move forward on important projects, the party media editor and others said.

Retired party leaders can wield significant influence in China because of their networks of supporters across the apparatus. But Mr. Xi appears to have consolidated power faster than his immediate predecessors when they took office and there has been no suggestion that his leadership of the party might be challenged.

In the past two weeks, though, two leading official news outlets have published unusual editorials hinting at internal turmoil.

The first, which appeared in the party’s flagship People’s Daily on Aug. 10, warned bluntly that retired leaders should stay out of politics and “cool off” like a cup of a tea after a guest has left. Without identifying anyone, it accused “some leading cadres” of posing a “quandary for new leaders, fettering their hands from doing bold work” and “undermining party cohesion and fighting strength.”

Another commentary published Wednesday on the website of the state broadcaster China Central Television described fierce resistance to Mr. Xi’s agenda and called on his supporters to step up their efforts to carry out his policies. The article, which was widely distributed on popular Chinese websites, was notable not only because it openly acknowledged the opposition to Mr. Xi but also because of its strident language.

“The stubbornness, ferocity, complexity and weirdness of those who haven’t adapted to reform or are even opposed to reform may go beyond what people imagine,” it said.

Mr. Xi has pledged sweeping market-oriented reforms to overhaul the Chinese economy for long-term growth, including plans to weaken monopolies enjoyed by state enterprises, to wean the economy from its dependence on inefficient state-directed investment, and to liberalize the nation’s financial markets, with the aim of making the country’s currency, the renminbi, a strong competitor to the dollar on world markets.

But there has been little progress toward these goals, and as growth has begun to stall, the government has adopted measures that run counter to Mr. Xi’s call to allow market forces to play the “decisive role” in the economy, including aggressive intervention to prop up the stock market last month and policies encouraging state banks to lend money.

Behind the scramble is a deep-rooted anxiety within the leadership about possible social instability if the age of supercharged growth in China ends. China’s gross domestic product grew more than 26-fold in the 37 years since the country began to open up its economy, bolstering the party’s authoritarian rule and lifting more than 600 million people out of poverty.

“Everyone understands that the economy is the biggest pillar of the Chinese government’s legitimacy to govern and win over popular sentiment,” said Chen Jieren, a well-known Beijing-based commentator on politics. “If the economy falters, the political power of the Chinese Communist Party will be confronted with more real challenges, social stability in China will be endangered tremendously, and Xi Jinping’s administration will suffer even more criticism.”

Some have asked whether the party leadership and its technocrat advisers are up to the task of managing a slowing economy after decades of experience with one that has only soared, fueled in large part by mass migration from the countryside to the cities. Even neutral observers warn that Mr. Xi may be promising too much.

“The Xi generation of leaders has lofty ambitions and resolve that are bigger and broader than their predecessors, and their objectives are even greater, so he can’t spend as much energy on specific economic issues as in the past,” said Li Daokui, director of the Center for China in the World Economy at Beijing’s Tsinghua University and a former member of the monetary policy committee for China’s central bank. “Whether such lofty ambitions and objectives can be realized remains to be seen,” he said in an interview.

One concern is the way the government has handled the stock market. In the first part of the year, state news outlets cheered as the market climbed to new heights and helped reduce debt burdens for Chinese firms. People’s Daily declared on April 21 that the bull market had “just begun.”

But share prices in Shanghai peaked on June 12, then fell by almost a third in less than a month, wiping out the accounts of countless small investors who had borrowed to invest. Before that, the authorities did nothing to disabuse the investing public of the notion that a rising stock market was a state-backed goal and integral to Mr. Xi’s promise to build “the China dream.”

“To allow such an idea to spread among China’s investment community, at a time when China has still not yet managed to establish a healthy functioning stock market, was deeply irresponsible,” writes Barry Naughton, a professor at the University of California, San Diego, in a forthcoming paper.

Professor Naughton said in an interview that Mr. Xi’s penchant for putting himself in charge of policy-setting committees — called “leading small groups” by the Chinese — has upended the way China usually shapes economic policy. It may also have contributed to recent missteps and led to more abrupt, ad hoc policy shifts. Mr. Xi chairs at least six such committees, including one on finance and economics and a new one on restructuring the economy.

But these committees under Mr. Xi have not fully succeeded in taking control of economic policy, Professor Naughton said, and that has resulted at times in bureaucratic confusion.

That may have been the case this month, when China’s central bank altered the way it sets the trading range for the renminbi and made it more responsive to domestic and global currency markets. The move was welcomed by the International Monetary Fund and may help the renminbi win inclusion in the fund’s basket of global reserve currencies.

But it also spooked investors around the world who interpreted the 4.4-percent devaluation that resulted as a desperate bid to help China’s flagging export sector by a government more worried than it is letting on. Exports fell more than 8 percent in July.

The policy adviser to senior party and government leaders said fears that the slowing economy could lead to social unrest prompted the Politburo in a July 30 meeting to approve a raft of measures to bolster growth, including the decision to devalue the currency. Other steps will follow, the person said.

Mr. Xi’s campaign against corruption enjoys broad support in a nation where the widening gap between rich and poor is attributed to the ability of a small minority to prosper by abusing government positions or using political connections. As the economy falters, though, the risks for Mr. Xi multiply, said one retired party think tank official.

“The main thing is the economy. As long as the economy continues to decline, people will have more and more objections, and there will be more and more pressure on the leadership,” said the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to freely discuss internal party politics. “And right now, the fact is that the economy is in decline.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/23/w...-and-graft-crackdown-rattle-leaders.html?_r=0
 
I rather have slower growth rate than an economic boom filled with bubbles and corruption. At this point, any growth above 5% a year would be good, as long as wealth gap and corruption are reduced. Real estate was the main driving force for growth in the last 10 years, which was an absolute mistake. Higher prices forced people to take ever increasing mortgage loans and save too much of their income to buy their homes, reducing their available spending money which could be use to stimulate other sectors.
 
Last 2 day US stock market lost more than a trillions dollars in effect of China economy down turn, Apple share plunge more than 150 billions in 2 days, and negative China economy can seriously hurt the US economy.
 
Accordinng to forbes " While China reported that its GDP grew exactly in line with its growth target of 7% in the first and second quarters this year, all other independent data, from electricity production to car sales, indicate the economy is growing closer to 5%."

China's Problems And Missteps Provoke Global Recession Concerns


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7% growth to a $10 TRILLION economy is 'China collapse' in the eyes of the desperate and declining 'superpower' and its worshippers.

Every country in the world is slowing down.

US economy has been in a depression since the 2008 crash. It STILL needs 0% in interest rates, trillions upon trillions in stimulus to get 2% 'growth'. That's a dead economy. You don't need 0% interest rates (which are emergency measures) and trillions in quantitative easing if your economy is actually healthy. I doubt the US economy is even growing at all considering the numbers of people dropping out of the labour force.

Europe is in a depression with the disasters in Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal which are effecting other European countries. Japan has had a dead economy since about 1990 with 0% interest rates and 200%+ in debt to GDP.

US, EU and Japan in depression will also hurt China and other economies.

Despite the slowdown in China, China remains BY FAR, the biggest contributor to global growth.
 
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1. Title attempt to tie economy and anti-graft movements together. They are only loosely connected.
2. The structure transition of Chinese economy has been repeated reported and discussed on CCTV-1. It is pretty 1/6 of the news everyday. Duh, a 9 trillion USD economy is not going to grow at the same rate as a a few hundred billion one. Alert the press. :crazy:
3. Attempting to link Chinese stock market with Chinese economy. Anyone with the faintest understanding of Chinese market knows Chinese economy and stock are disconnected. If you are not aware fundamentals like this, then please do us a favor and avoid topics you have no understanding.
4. Here is also my take on the whole "fading" thing, we don't have to hold us up against some imaginary bar set by random strangers, we just have to do better than the rest of you.
 
Last 2 day US stock market lost more than a trillions dollars in effect of China economy down turn, Apple share plunge more than 150 billions in 2 days, and negative China economy can seriously hurt the US economy.
HOLY SHIT!. Apple Stock just got down to $105. It is dropping like apple.
 
BUT BUT BUT INDIA is doing fine

KOLKATA: At the pace at which India's GDP is growing, the country can double the same over the next three- to-three-and-a-half years propelled by the efforts being made by the Narendra Modi government, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu said here today.

"To reach one trillion (USD) GDP mark, it took India 20 years, but it added the next trillion in just seven years. With investors having tremendous respect for the efforts of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Indian economy can double its size in the next three-to-three-and-a-half years," he said.

Prabhu was optimistic about India's long-term growth to the tune of a USD 20 trillion economy in the next 20 years.

An International Monetary Fund study in 2014 had said that India's GDP would cross USD 3 trillion after five years in 2019.

The minister said that what with the inflation staying down and a conducive environment being created, the economy was looking up and foreign direct investments were increasing.

"There is a tremendous respect among investors for the efforts of the prime minister (and they) are eager to invest in India," Prabhu said.

Addressing a regional meet of Chartered Accountants, he said that, despite alternative views in a democracy, "we should pursue growth to eradicate poverty".

"In a democracy, alternatives should be discussed but, at the end, a final decision has to be arrived at," he said.

"We cannot be ambiguous about our goals. It is essential that concerted efforts are made and we have a comprehensive strategy to reach our goal, which is achieving inclusive growth coupled with elimination of poverty and corruption," the minister added.

Indian economy can double in three years: Suresh Prabhu - The Economic Times
 
BUT BUT BUT INDIA is doing fine

KOLKATA: At the pace at which India's GDP is growing, the country can double the same over the next three- to-three-and-a-half years propelled by the efforts being made by the Narendra Modi government, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu said here today.

"To reach one trillion (USD) GDP mark, it took India 20 years, but it added the next trillion in just seven years. With investors having tremendous respect for the efforts of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Indian economy can double its size in the next three-to-three-and-a-half years," he said.

Prabhu was optimistic about India's long-term growth to the tune of a USD 20 trillion economy in the next 20 years.

An International Monetary Fund study in 2014 had said that India's GDP would cross USD 3 trillion after five years in 2019.

The minister said that what with the inflation staying down and a conducive environment being created, the economy was looking up and foreign direct investments were increasing.

"There is a tremendous respect among investors for the efforts of the prime minister (and they) are eager to invest in India," Prabhu said.

Addressing a regional meet of Chartered Accountants, he said that, despite alternative views in a democracy, "we should pursue growth to eradicate poverty".

"In a democracy, alternatives should be discussed but, at the end, a final decision has to be arrived at," he said.

"We cannot be ambiguous about our goals. It is essential that concerted efforts are made and we have a comprehensive strategy to reach our goal, which is achieving inclusive growth coupled with elimination of poverty and corruption," the minister added.

Indian economy can double in three years: Suresh Prabhu - The Economic Times
Brilliant!
Congrats!
@Bussard Ramjet

KOLKATA: At the pace at which India's GDP is growing, the country can double the same over the next three- to-three-and-a-half years propelled by the efforts being made by the Narendra Modi government, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu said here today.
25% annual growth?:enjoy:
Modi is begging for investment everywhere.
Modi is also exchanging benefits for a permanant member in UNSC.
Modi's India soon becomes the biggest contributor of world economy.
He will do it!
@Bussard Ramjet
 
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I think the global economy is in deep trouble. All the engines of the global economy are in trouble. US, Europe, China and Japan are weakening significantly. This could be a temporary downturn or the start of some big economic disaster. The stimulus measures are wearing off from 2009 and even with more stimulus the effects are not big as it used to be. Demand is collapsing which is causing havoc for global corporations. Western demand is falling which is causing Chinese demand for commodities to fall. The falling demand for commodities is causing commodity prices to fall which is hurting commodity-driven countries and their economies. Global corporations are dependent on global demand for its goods are starting to get hurt and investors are starting to sell their shares as they think the stocks have peaked. Confidence is being destroyed all over the world and everyone is holding the dollar fearing a global recession which is increasing the value of the dollar and weakening other currencies and causing local companies holding dollar-denominated debt to be in big trouble. It's all interconnected and it's like a vicious circle.
 
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