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China Rural-Income Gains Aid Shift Toward Consumption

By Bloomberg News - Jan 29, 2013 8:47 PM ET

Chinese incomes rose faster in the countryside than in cities for a third straight year in 2012 :yahoo: as migrant workers boosted their pay and the government strengthened the social safety net.

Rural per-capita net income advanced 10.7 percent, compared with 9.6 percent for urban dwellers, partly on the rise in migrant laborers and their wages, the National Bureau of Statistics said Jan. 18. Rural residents’ income from benefits payments rose 21.9 percent, almost double the urban pace, as the government boosted its budget for health-care handouts.

Rural spending power has been lifted by wages earned by peasants working in cities, underscoring the broader benefits of the urbanization drive championed by incoming Premier Li Keqiang. Spreading gains in consumption would help sustain a growth rebound and reduce the economy’s reliance on exports, which rose last year at less than half 2011’s pace.

“Rising rural incomes should definitely help boost consumption and aid rebalancing,” said Zhang Zhiwei, chief China economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong. “Growth will gear down a bit as rising labor costs diminish investment incentives, but such consumption-led expansion will be more sustainable.”

The trend may persist for a while as a declining working- age population helps push up migrant laborers’ pay and the government keeps improving social safety-net funds including for health care in the countryside, said Zhang, who previously worked for the International Monetary Fund.

Retail Sales

Rural per-capita net income, which includes migrant workers’ pay, rose more than that of urban residents in 2010 for the first time since 1997. Retail sales in rural regions rose 14.5 percent last year, exceeding the gain in urban areas, which increased 14.3 percent, for the first time in three years. That compares with 17.2 percent growth for urban consumption in 2011 and a 16.7 percent advance for rural dwellers.

Rural spending, at 2.78 trillion yuan ($447 billion) last year, was still less than one-fifth of what urban households spent. Urbanites account for about 52.6 percent of China’s population of 1.35 billion, according to the statistics bureau.

The central government’s transfer-payment budget for rural health-care coverage in 2012 increased 36 percent to 106.3 billion yuan, according to the Ministry of Finance.

“Income and wealth reallocation favoring rural households should definitely help boost consumption, as the lower-income households normally have higher propensity to consume,” said Ren Xianfang, a Beijing-based analyst with researcher IHS Inc. “This should help rebalancing.”

Registration System

The situation highlights the urgency of measures such as overhauling a household-registration system that keeps 642 million rural dwellers from permanently joining the urban workforce, limiting their ability to contribute to the economy.

The State Council, or cabinet, said in February 2012 it will implement a policy of helping people register as urban residents in small and medium-sized cities and small townships and ensure equal benefits for countryside residents who have an urban registration. At the same time, the government will continue to “reasonably control” the population of bigger cities including Beijing and Shanghai.

China had about 230 million people by the end of 2011 who lived in cities without permanent residence, Chen Xiwen, China’s top rural-policy adviser, said Nov. 29. The Chinese government has a huge challenge in providing education, health care and jobs for these people, Chen said.

Major Tasks

Strengthening consumption’s role in boosting economic growth is one of the major tasks this year, the government said after the annual central economic work conference in December.

A resurgence in optimism for China’s economy has given stocks a boost. The Shanghai Composite Index, the nation’s benchmark gauge, advanced 20 percent through yesterday since its 2012 low on Dec. 3, a threshold used by some investors to signal a bull market. The index (SHCOMP) was little changed at 9:33 a.m. local time today.

While economic growth for the full year was the weakest since 1999, expansion rebounded in the fourth quarter to a 7.9 percent year-on-year pace following a seven-quarter slowdown.

Gree Electric Appliances Inc. (000651), China’s biggest air- conditioner maker, may benefit from growing sales in the countryside, China International Capital Corp. analysts said in a Jan. 21 note. Gree said Jan. 18 that its 2012 profit may have increased 41 percent.

Japan Sales

Elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region, Japan’s retail sales rose 0.1 percent last month from November, less than economists forecast, a report showed today. South Korea’s industrial production unexpectedly expanded in December from November as domestic demand offset weakness in exports. New Zealand building approvals surged to a 4 1/2-year high in December, adding to signs of a revival in the property market.

In Europe, Spain will release gross domestic product data today, with a Bloomberg survey showing the economy contracted last quarter. GDP reports are also due in Belgium and Lithuania, as are reports on Italian business confidence, euro-area consumer confidence and U.K. mortgage approvals.

The U.S. economy probably expanded at a 1.1 percent annualized rate in the fourth quarter, the weakest in almost two years, a Bloomberg survey showed before figures due today.

Bigger Cake

Even with the gains in China, per capita rural net income last year was 7,917 yuan, less than a third of per capita urban disposable income of 24,565 yuan, statistics bureau data showed. Ma Jiantang, head of the agency, said Jan. 18 that China must on one hand, “make the cake bigger, and on the other hand, we must do a better job in sharing the cake.”

Under President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, both set to retire in March, the government since 2003 has abolished agriculture taxes, expanded health-care coverage and increased minimum purchase prices of grains under efforts to boost rural development.

The difference between rural and urban income growth was smaller in 2012 than the 3 percentage-point gap in 2011.

“As the narrowing of the gap in the pace of gains shows, more needs to be done to reduce income disparities, and I expect the new government to move in this direction,” said Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist and strategist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong.

--Zheng Lifei. With assistance from Zhou Xin in Beijing and Stephanie Phang in Singapore. Editors: Scott Lanman, Rina Chandran

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zheng Lifei in Beijing at lzheng32@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net

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Looks like China is constantly moving towards the right direction: reducing the income disparity and shifting to a less export-oriented economy. :tup:
 
China Rural-Income Gains Aid Shift Toward Consumption

Looks like China is constantly moving towards the right direction: reducing the income disparity and shifting to a less export-oriented economy. :tup:

i believe for forseable time, the income-disparity will get worse, as there are end-less opportunities in China for those already riches and skilled to make more money, and for those poor and unskilled's fates are depending more on government welfare policies
 
Yuan Daily Swaps in London Jump 240% in Year to $3.1 Billion



By Lyubov Pronina - Jan 31, 2013 10:12 AM ET




Trading of yuan-currency swaps from London jumped 240 percent in the first half of 2012 from a year earlier to $3.1 billion a day as the offshore market for China’s currency expands, the City of London Corp. said.

“Transaction volumes in London are growing strongly which reflects a growing confidence in London as a center of renminbi business,” Mark Boleat, policy chairman for the City of London Corp., said in an e-mailed statement today.

Daily spot foreign-exchange trading increased 150 percent to $1.7 billion year-on-year, according to the statement. Trade- related services provided by London banks such as import-export financing rose almost five-fold to 2.2 billion yuan ($350 million).

U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne is pushing for London to become an offshore center for yuan trading to deepen links with the world’s second-largest economy. The Bank of England is ready “in principle” for a currency-swap agreement with the People’s Bank of China, Chief Cashier Chris Salmon said Jan. 25.

Cross-border trading of yuan has expanded four-fold since August 2010 to almost 200 billion yuan in October last year, Euroclear Bank SA said in a statement last month, citing the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s figures.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lyubov Pronina in London at lpronina@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gavin Serkin at gserkin@bloomberg.net

Yuan Daily Swaps in London Jump 240% in Year to $3.1 Billion - Bloomberg
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Very interesting...
 
U166P5029T2D554444F24DT20130128150838.jpg

wow,Sanya phoenix island,beautiful. the first item i joined in when graduate from school.
Mjkw1351823509280.jpg
 
China HSBC final PMI jumps to two-year high

BEIJING | Thu Jan 31, 2013 8:49pm EST

(Reuters) - Growth in China's giant manufacturing sector hit a two-year high in January as domestic demand strengthened, a private survey showed, underlining hopes the nation's economic recovery is slowly gaining momentum.

The final HSBC purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 52.3 in January, the highest since January 2011 and a shade above last week's flash, or preliminary, reading of 51.9.

A revival in factory production would cement hopes that China's economic growth is picking up after suffering its weakest pace last year in 13 years. Economists expect any recovery to be modest, in part because the euro zone is in recession.

Backing expectations a rebound will be led by domestic demand rather than exports, the PMI data showed new orders running at a two-year high and markedly stronger than new export orders.

"We see increasing signals of a sustained growth recovery in coming months," said Qu Hongbin, a HSBC economist.

"The steady investment growth led by infrastructure projects, improving labor market conditions boosting consumer spending, and the ongoing re-stocking process to lift production growth."

In line with busier production, the input prices sub-index jumped to its highest since September 2011 to be well above the 50-point level demarcating growth and contraction compared with the previous month. Manufacturers said higher raw material costs had driven up inflation.

The new orders sub-index -- which has the biggest weighting in the PMI at 30 percent -- climbed to 53.7 in January, a level last seen in January 2011.

The new export orders sub-index rose to hover just above 50.


Markit Group, which compiles the PMI, said the marginal improvement in new export orders reflected the fact that just 11 percent of those surveyed reported healthier demand. But U.S. and European markets, the two biggest buyers of Chinese goods respectively, showed firmer demand.

Lunar New Year holidays often make reading economic data difficult because the break falls at different times of the year. The holiday falls in February this year but was in January last year.

A comparison of average January and February PMI readings for 2012 and 2013 suggests this year's pick-up could be more enduring than a seasonal blip.

Over the two months, the PMI averaged 49.2 last year. That means the February 2013 PMI need only be higher than 46.1 for this year's average to handily surpass last year's.


Analysts polled by Reuters in January forecast China's economy would grow 8.1 percent this year and next, above 7.8 percent in 2012, the lowest pace since 1999.

China HSBC final PMI jumps to two-year high | Reuters
 
China Trade Tops Forecasts in Holiday-Distorted Month: Economy

By Bloomberg News - 2013-02-08T03:29:52Z

China’s exports and imports rose more than estimated in a January that had five more working days than last year, helping sustain a growth rebound in the world’s second-biggest economy.

Overseas shipments increased 25 percent from a year earlier, the customs administration said today, compared with the 17.5 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. Imports rose 28.8 percent, exceeding the 23.5 percent median forecast of analysts. Separately, Japan posted back-to-back monthly current- account deficits for the first time since 1981.

China’s data may indicate a strengthening economy, according to Nomura Holdings Inc., even as indicators in the first two months are distorted by the weeklong Lunar New Year holiday that was in January in 2012 and starts tomorrow for 2013. The new leadership, headed by Xi Jinping, is seeking to sustain a recovery without fueling inflation or spurring excessive financial risks from shadow banking and local-authority debt.

“This strong export number cannot be fully explained by the Chinese New Year effect alone,” Zhang Zhiwei, chief China economist at Nomura in Hong Kong, said in a note. “These data suggest that external and domestic demand are both strong, which supports our view that the economy is on track for a cyclical recovery” in the first half.

The Shanghai Composite Index, China’s benchmark stock gauge, rose 0.4 percent as of 11:13 a.m. local time. It had gained 24 percent from Dec. 3 through yesterday. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index of stocks fell 0.3 percent as of 12:13 p.m. in Tokyo.

Calendar Adjustment

Adjusted for the number of working days, exports rose 12.4 percent in January from a year earlier while imports increased 3.4 percent, the customs administration said. The agency said last month that exports increased 14.1 percent in December and imports gained 6 percent.

Estimates for export gains from 33 analysts ranged from 8.1 percent to 31 percent. Import growth compared with a 23 percent median estimate in the Bloomberg survey, out of a range of 8.5 percent to 39.6 percent. The trade surplus of $29.15 billion was above the $24.7 billion median projection and compares with a $27.1 billion excess a year ago.

The customs administration today introduced an export managers’ index based on data from an online survey. The gauge was 37.5 in January, 3.3 points higher than in December and the second increase in a row, according to a statement which did not provide details about methodology. The rise in the gauge indicates a “relatively optimistic” outlook for foreign trade in the first quarter, the agency said.

Growth Pickup

Economic expansion is likely to pick up to 8.1 percent this quarter from 7.9 percent in the previous three months, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts in January. The central bank said in its fourth-quarter monetary-policy report released Feb. 6 that growth momentum is “relatively strong” while highlighting concern that inflation risks will increase.

Chinese authorities have shown intention to prevent overheating and overinvestment:coffee:, and the central bank’s next interest-rate move is likely to be an increase, Lu Ting, head of Greater China economics at Bank of America Corp. in Hong Kong, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today.

At the same time, there will be “very impressive macro data for the first quarter:azn:,” Lu said.

Japan’s current-account deficits highlight challenges for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s campaign to revive the economy. The shortfall in the widest measure of the nation’s trade was 264.1 billion yen ($2.8 billion) in December, the Ministry of Finance said in Tokyo today.

Australia Forecast

Elsewhere today, the Reserve Bank of Australia cut its estimate for economic growth this year, estimating a “below trend” pace of about 2.5 percent for the nation, compared with around 2.75 percent forecast in November. Consumer prices will rise 3 percent in the year through June 2013, compared with the 3.25 percent increase forecast three months earlier, the central bank said.

Germany and the U.S. will give trade data today and Italy reports industrial production. The U.S. trade deficit shrank to $46 billion in December from $48.7 billion the prior month, according to the median forecast of economists.

In China, a government-backed survey of purchasing managers released Feb. 1 showed manufacturing expanded for a fourth month in January and a separate gauge from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics rose to the highest level in two years, signs the growth recovery may be gaining strength.

The National Bureau of Statistics will release January inflation data at 1:30 p.m. Consumer-price gains may have slowed to 2 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 2.5 percent pace in December, based on the median analyst projection. Factory-gate prices probably declined for an 11th month.

Data Combined

Industrial production, retail sales and fixed-asset investment numbers for January will be combined with February data and published in March.

The People’s Bank of China may also report January bank loans, aggregate financing and money supply as early as today. Lenders probably issued 1 trillion yuan of new credit, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey, compared with 738.1 billion yuan in January 2012 and 454.3 billion yuan in December.

Industrial activity normally slows around the holiday, also known as Spring Festival, as factories close, while prices and retail sales may accelerate on festival-related spending, Chang said.

Loans tend to rise sharply in January as banks start using their new annual quotas and are normally eager to lend as soon as possible to generate interest income, according to Shen Jianguang, Hong Kong-based chief Asia economist at Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.

The January data on inflation, trade and money supply are likely to be distorted by holiday effects and should be interpreted with caution, Ding Shuang, a Hong Kong-based senior China economist with Citigroup Inc., said in a note before the reports.
 
are you ready to prepare your money burning in this island? :welcome:
Is it going to be a casino? Cool!
Actually you are the first one who burns - no, I mean - spends money in Vietnam :D

00221917dead1272931703.jpg


China's first luxury cruise liner ready to make waves |Society |chinadaily.com.cn
Updated: 2013-01-30 04:12
By HUANG YIMINGand WANG QIAN in Sanya, Hainan ()

The three-day, two-night voyage saw the vessel travel from Sanya Phoenix Island International Port to Halong Bay in Vietnam.

A further 39 voyages to Vietnam are planned for its first cruise season, from January to April.
 
Is it going to be a casino? Cool!
Actually you are the first one who burns - no, I mean - spends money in Vietnam :D

So you'd better play nice to us,for otherwise we could cut off your lifeline any time we please。:azn:
 
So SAIC's joint venture(manufacturing) with GM alone is now worth 11.9 billion dollars。

GM paid $119 million for 1 percent stake in China joint venture: filing

Fri Feb 15, 2013 1:37pm EST

(Reuters) - General Motors Co (GM.N) paid $119 million in September to buy back a 1 percent stake in its joint venture with its top Chinese partner SAIC Motor Corp (600104.SS), which it had given up ahead of its 2009 bankruptcy.

The deal pushed GM's ownership in Shanghai GM back to 50 percent, the U.S. automaker disclosed in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday. However, SAIC retains a 51 percent share in the sales side of the business.

In the run-up to its 2009 bankruptcy filing, GM sold the 1 percent share to SAIC for $85 million.

On Thursday, GM Chief Financial officer Dan Ammann told reporters that the Detroit company had completed the repurchase of the 1 percent stake in Shanghai GM and the Chinese government approved the purchase last year.

(Reporting By Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)
 
So you'd better play nice to us,for otherwise we could cut off your lifeline any time we please。:azn:
You sound like a blackmailer. Pls elaborate a bit what you mean playing "nice"?
 
Retail sales surge during China's Lunar New Year holiday

(Xinhua)08:37, February 16, 2013

BEIJING, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- Holiday shopping spree significantly boosted China's retail sales during the week-long Lunar New Year festival, data released Friday by the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) showed.

Shops and restaurants across the country earned 539 billion yuan (85.5 billion U.S. dollars) in the past week, an increase of 14.7 percent in comparison with that in the previous year. The sales volume of food was up 9.8 percent, jewelry up 38.1 percent and garment up 6.3 percent. The sales of digital products also jumped.

The Spring Festival, which fell on Feb. 9 this year, is traditionally a time for family reunions in the nation. Businesses usually experience a boom during the period as people swarm to shops and restaurants.

Amid the hot sales in general, luxurious restaurants saw business dwindle remarkably, partly due to a nation-wide campaign against extravagance and call for frugal lifestyle.

Data showed the high-end restaurants in the better-off Zhejiang Province in east China saw business revenue decline at least 20 percent.

In order to conserve food, many restaurants in major cities provided dishes based on customers' specific needs and offered free packaging of the leftovers.

According to the MOC, food supply and prices remained steady during the holiday. The price of mutton rose 1.9 percent, and that of beef up 1.3 percent, pork up 0.9 percent.

Retail sales surge during China's Lunar New Year holiday - People's Daily Online
 
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