You are such a fool...
I have a checking account when I was 14 yrs old -- in 1977 -- with Bank of Hawaii. What were
YOU doing in 1977 ? I have my first credit card at 18 yrs old, also with BankoH, right before I joined the USAF. What were
YOU doing in 1983 ?
Wait a sec...You were not even a gleam of lust in your father's eye...
My point is this...Since then, just like other Americans in this capitalist country, I lived in a cyclical economy. Ups and downs. Just like other Americans and Europeans who lives the in same kind of cyclical capitalist economy, we adjust our spending habits according to our economies.
So what do you think you and your fellow Chinese are going to do, assuming there is a trade war between US and China, and that indicators tells you that millions of Chinese jobs are at stake, that American investors are either declining their investments in China or stay out of China completely, and/or that other countries like Viet Nam and South Korea are capable of taking up the slack ?
You and your fellow Chinese, just like me and my fellow Americans in our past, are going to adjust your spending/consumption patterns, as in decreasing.
- Your China have no social safety net and that means everyone in all working age groups, are going to hoard as much cash as possible, potentially depriving your banks of much needed cash to fund investments, civilian and government.
- Your China is starting to pay for the one-child policy and please do not tell us how that policy is being eased or even rescinded. The effects of that easement are not going to be apparent for at least 30 yrs, but the effects of a trade war are going to be apparent quite immediately with the end of that war unknown. That mean it is going to be even more imperative for parents to hoard cash to raise children, not child, but children.
- Your fellow middle class Chinese who are currently drunk on a rising economy will be in a massive hangover and that will put them into a scare that will last for decades. They will be fearful. The more educated among them will realize that the depression came from deliberate actions and not of the natural cycles in a capitalist economy. This will condition the middle class to save and to moderate their consumption in the future, making it more difficult for China to recover from the trade war.
- Your China's housing economy will collapse because the middle class are too fearful to invest.
Right now, a lot of my clothes have 'Made in Pakistan' or 'Made in Bangladesh' or 'Made in Vietnam' labels on them. Wal-Mart and Apple do not need China when there are equally motivated and reasonably educated people in Viet Nam, South Korea, or Taiwan to make what middle class Americans like me want. The CEOs of these companies have been and always looks for alternatives to China, including the option of returning to the US. You think those home made luxury Chinese automobiles that are trying to break into foreign markets are going to survive with African and Middle East buyers ?
YOU personally have never lived thru a recession so you do not know what is it like to get up everyday wondering if you are going to have a job today. I have lived thru such. A trade war will hurt both US and China but it will be worse for China and the psychological effects will last longer for China simply because of your collective inexperience at living thru the typical cyclical capitalist economy.
So instead of imagining how China will take over the US...etc...etc...You might want to imagine what is it like to be without a job, without unemployment insurance, and without the luxuries you once took for granted. All the while your one-percenters live it up in American and European resorts because they have the connections and the inside knowledge to take care of themselves.
Rich Chinese line up to leave China - Craig Stephen's This Week in China - MarketWatch
Take note of the word 'finally'. It means these people either know or is 99.999% confident that an appreciation of the yuan is coming -- as in inevitable.
Like I said...A bunch of Internet Chinese who can barely balance a checkbook or qualify for a credit card are hilariously making pronouncements on global economic issues.