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China Economy Forum

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WE? are you still of the thought that folks have not figured you out yet? one has to just go through your posts here. Putting an " Indian " flag on does not guarantee a good cover.

Yeah, Czar786 is a reasonable poster, with a grasp of reality, which is a good guarantee that he is NOT an Indian. :lol:
 
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China's dorm room discontent emerges as new labor flashpoint

TAIYUAN, China (Reuters) - Twenty-three-year old factory worker Wang spends up to 12 hours a day making iPhone components in China, but his major complaint is not about the monotony of the production line - it is about his degrading worker-bee life inside the dormitory.

Wang, who did not want his full name published, is among thousands of workers housed in a vast complex where tensions aggravated by regimented and cramped living conditions boiled over on Sunday into a violent mass riot.
"The bathrooms are simply disgusting and people are constantly stealing things," Wang said as he stood outside of the factory in the northern city of Taiyuan, owned by Apple Inc's largest contract manufacturer, Taiwan firm Foxconn.

(contd) --> China's dorm room discontent emerges as new labor flashpoint - Yahoo! News
 
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China underestimated global slowdown, key to rates: central bank adviser

2012-09-27T104911Z_1_CBRE88Q0U2200_RTROPTP_2_CBUSINESS-US-CHINA-ECONOMY-RATES.JPG



BEIJING (Reuters) - China severely underestimated this year's global economic slowdown and further cuts to Chinese interest rates or bank reserve requirements hinge on any new deterioration in the external environment, a central bank adviser said on Thursday.
Chen Yulu, a professor at China's Renmin University and an academic adviser to the monetary policy committee of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a conference in the capital on global economic conditions and capital flows.

"We have indeed underestimated the severity of the external economic situation," Chen said, adding that the global economy could remain sluggish for an extended period.
Asked whether the PBOC would opt to boost the economy by further cutting interest rates or required reserve ratios (RRR) for banks to spur commercial lending, Chen said: "It will hinge on the degree of deterioration of the external situation."
The PBOC cut interest rates twice in June and July and lowered RRR three times since late 2011 freeing an estimated 1.2 trillion yuan ($190 billion) for new lending.

But it has held off on more aggressive easing measures since then, despite further signs of cooling demand at home and abroad. Instead, it has opted to pump short-term cash into money markets to ease credit strains, a move analysts say reflects Beijing's concerns about renewed property and inflation risks.

The central bank said on Tuesday that it will "fine tune" policy to cushion the economy against global risks while closely watching the possible impact from recent policy loosening in the United States and Europe.

REFORM, INFLATION RISKS

PBOC Vice-governor Liu Shiyu, speaking at the same event as Chen, said support for economic growth must be balanced by the need to curb inflation.
Chen reiterated the point, saying that policymakers were acutely aware of the risk of loosening policy too far and setting off another round of house price inflation in China.

"Monetary policy faces a dilemma. On the one hand it (the central bank) needs to stabilize economic growth and on the other hand, it's very worried about the problem of property prices," Chen said.
Chen said the use of money market operations was more reflective of the PBOC's push for financial sector reforms that let the markets take a more active role in setting the price of capital, saying the central bank could not simply loosen policy to boost the economy as it needed also to spur structural change.

"The adoption of reverse repos reflect this policy consideration," he said.
China's central bank injected a net 365 billion yuan into money markets this week, traders said, the largest-ever weekly injection, as regulators struggle to maintain liquidity without producing inflation as forex inflows slow.
Investors broadly welcome Beijing's plans for reform, but are concerned that the government's timing is off and that the economy could be derailed by a global economic downturn that has sapped overseas orders for exports from China's factories.
Liu sought to play down the risks facing China's economy, saying slowing growth this year was a desirable outcome of macroeconomic adjustments.

China's government has said repeatedly that it wants to steer growth lower to complete structural economic reforms after three decades of breakneck development that has seen annual growth average 10 percent.
Export growth this year is averaging around 7.8 percent versus 2011. August's growth slumped to 2.7 percent compared with a year ago and the Commerce Ministry sees a risk that things could get worse in the months ahead, jeopardizing the official target of a 10 percent year-on-year expansion of trade.

Exports generated 31 percent of gross domestic product in 2011 and supported an estimated 200 million jobs.
China's annual economic growth could ease to 7.4 percent in the third quarter - the seventh consecutive quarter of slowdown, before picking up to 7.6 percent in the final three months, according to the latest Reuters poll.

China underestimated global slowdown, key to rates: central bank adviser - Yahoo! News
 
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80% of Chinese steel and 70% of concrete goes to infrastructure.

China in last 3 yrs constructed over 15 billion sq m of office space. They are done with that and now off to new cons. This doesn't even include the rails and other things they are building. Half of this could be office space while other half could be residential. This is more that what they will need in next 30 yrs. Anyone who thinks this is a sustainable is crazy according to me.

Their cons activity and short selling will make rest of world combined look like a kid. If their cons activity stops, their steel and concrete markets will go with it. Don't know how long they can play this game.

I don't care about rise of China, I welcome it. I have to agree the new cities they have built are amazingly beautifull and prolly will the best cities of 21st century if those.
 
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Hu Songshan pal, are you going to keep letting JayAtl to post garbage from "Epoch time"?
 
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^^^good ,i hope there are more ghost cities.then i can buy more apartments in a low price.The reason there are ghost cities maybe is that people prefer to live in slums.
 
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Hu Songshan pal, are you going to keep letting JayAtl to post garbage from "Epoch time"?

feel free to dispute their content , which you guys never do- just that it is not state run propaganda media. Just because you guys hate them - does not change the veracity of the articles posted. and I post articles from all media not just epoch...

I posted that foxconn was having yet another riot ( true) but you hated that it was from epoch. I posted that steel mills are having trouble selling ( true) but you hated it because it was from epoch. I posted first about your scandal with BO (true) but you hated that it was from epoch. I posted way back that an real estate buble was coming(true) but you hated it was from epoch. Challenge the assertion not which site posted it.
 
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