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China-Japan-Koreas
ChinaÂ’s Ticking Debt Bomb
2011-07-06
China’s remarkable economic rebound after the global economic crisis in 2008-2009 has been a source of envy and puzzlement for the rest of the world. Instead of recession, the Chinese economy has recorded double-digit growth, and is actually showing signs of overheating – a sharp contrast with the stagnation in most Western countries. How did the Chinese do it? Perhaps advocates of ‘Chinese exceptionalism’ are right after all: Beijing has found a secret formula of economic success that has eluded the West.

Part of the answer to this mystery was given in late June by the Chinese government. It turns out that Beijing has managed to keep its economy growing during the global slump by resorting to massive bank lending to local governments, which then went on an infrastructure spending binge that’s certain to haunt the country for years to come. If we remember the causes of the economic crisis that has ravaged the United States and Western Europe, the most important one is something euphemistically termed ‘credit boom’ – excessive lending and borrowing that fuelled housing bubbles and unsustainable consumption. China seems to have been afflicted with the same disease, with only one major variation: much of the debt incurred in China has gone into the infrastructure sector, not consumption. So much for Chinese exceptionalism.

Based on the figure released by the National Audit Office (NAO) at the end of June, local governments have accumulated debts totalling 10.7 trillion renminbi (RMB) or $1.65 trillion – about 27 percent of China’s GDP in 2010. Because the NAO’s figure was based on a sampling of 6,500 local government-backed financial vehicles (out of more than 10,000 such vehicles nationwide), the actual magnitude of local government indebtedness is much greater. The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, recently estimated that local government debt totalled 14 trillion RMB (most of which was owed to banks), almost 30 percent higher than the NAO figure.

Rest of the interesting numbers at link. I know I have been and several other people here as well that have been warning that China is having its own bubble and it will pop. Their banks are highly insolvent and the only thing that has kept them from going into a recession is the fact they have so much of our money. They will come crashing down and the only question is how hard and how bad will it be to the rest of the world? The world is broke. I think it is far past time the citizens of the world have an adult conversation about debt and social benefits as we are all getting fucked.
Posted by:DarthVader

#1  Printing money has it's unintended consequences.
Brazil is one I have been watching. Some say it's like our 50's there. Others "We have our own oil, we've got natural resources - I believe we're living a cycle of growth like the US lived in the 1960s". Why these countries including our own print money to spent. The results are being seen here now. Everything will just cost more. As long as government spends all the money we will get the short end of it.
Posted by: Dale   2011-07-06 22:03  

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