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According to the statistics issued on Feb. 15, by the national holiday tourism office for coordination meeting of inter-ministry and department, the total number of people touring 39 major resort and tourist cities of China reached 76,000,000 during this year's seven-day Spring Festival holiday, up 15 percent year on year. And the number of tourists visiting 33 popular scenic spots across China increased by 20 percent year on year.

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Photo taken on Feb. 13 shows people touring Nanjing Confucius Temple.

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Photo taken on Feb. 11 shows visitors playing on the seashore in Sanya.

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Photo taken on Feb. 11 shows visitors dancing with a Li ethnic girl in Sanya.

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Photo taken on Feb. 12 shows visitors from home and abroad seeing lanterns in Shanghai's Yuyuan Gardens.

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Photo taken on Feb. 13 shows visitors touring West Lake in Hangzhou.

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Photo taken on Feb. 15 shows tourists walking on the Traditional Culture Pedestrian Street in Tianjin.

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Photo taken on Feb. 12 shows tourists walking into the Gate of Heavenly Peace in Beijing.
 
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China to build earthquake warning system

Xinhua | 2013-2-20 9:06:17

By Agencies

China is planning to build a national earthquake monitoring and warning system in five years.

While the system would never be able to forecast an earthquake, it could detect quakes and notify people within seconds before seismic waves actually hit them, according to an anonymous official with the China Earthquake Administration (CEA).

Timely warnings may effectively reduce casualties and economic losses resulting from earthquakes, the official said on Tuesday.

He also said the development of the system was launched in 2009 and is expected to be verified this March.

The project has been filed with the country's top economic planner for approval and includes the establishment of some 5,000 stations across the country with funds of 2 billion yuan (320.4 million US dollars), according to the official.

A trial program including nearly 100 monitoring stations is currently being carried out in southeast China's Fujian Province and has proven successful, he added.
 
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Hangzhou-Huangshan HSR route confirmed

The new HSR will be 265.244km, cost of 36.793 bln yuan with design speed of 250km/h. The construction date is yet to be released.

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Xiamen-Shenzhen HSR to open in 2013

Per schedule the 502km Xiamen-Shenzhen HSR will finish track laying in June and start trial-run in September. It's planned to open by the end of 2013. The 1st class ticket will be 190 yuan and 2nd class 160 yuan.

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When the Hangzhou-Ningbo section completes sometime in 2013, it will be HSR(Coastal)all the way from Shanghai To Shenzhen,another 2000km stretch。:coffee:
 
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NUDT Achieves China's Sub-Nanometer Accuracy
NUDT achieves China's sub-nanometer accuracy - People's Daily Online
Here is website of Report Video:
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The magneto-rheology ultra-precision polishing equipment and the ion beam ultra-precision polishing equipment independently developed by the Precision Engineering Innovation Team under the National University of Defense Technology (NUDT) of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) achieved the sub-nanometer accuracy in the field of optical element processing and passed the check and the acceptance by national authoritative department in mid-January 2013.

According to experts, the achievement has made China the third country worldwide to master the high-precision optical element manufacturing and processing technology following the United States and Germany, and also the one and the only country in the world to have the capability to develop magneto-rheology polishing equipment and ion beam polishing equipment at the same time.

Nanometer accuracy is hailed as a "crown jewel" of ultra-precision processing technology. In the past 20-odd years, under the leadership of Professor Li Shengyi, the Precision Engineering Innovation Team under the NUDT of the PLA has broken through technical bottlenecks and developed independently magneto-rheology ultra-precision polishing equipment and ion beam ultra-precision polishing equipment, achieving China's sub-nanometer accuracy in the field of optical element processing.

In the past three years, in cooperation with such organizations as the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASTC), the team has promoted the development of China's space optics and high-end equipment manufacturing and developed independently seven types of magneto-rheology polishing machine tools and ion beam polishing machine tools, obtaining significant economic and social benefits.
 
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Six years ago, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao cautioned that China's economy is "unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable." China has since doubled down on the economic model that prompted his concern.

Mr. Wen spoke out in an attempt to change the course of an economy dangerously dependent on one lever to generate growth: heavy investment in the roads, factories and other infrastructure that have helped make China a manufacturing superpower. Then along came the 2008 global financial crisis. To keep China's economy growing, panicked officials launched a half-trillion-dollar stimulus and ordered banks to fund a new wave of investment. Investment has risen as a share of gross domestic product to 48%—a record for any large country—from 43%.

Even more staggering is the amount of credit that China unleashed to finance this investment boom. Since 2007, the amount of new credit generated annually has more than quadrupled to $2.75 trillion in the 12 months through January this year. Last year, roughly half of the new loans came from the "shadow banking system," private lenders and credit suppliers outside formal lending channels. These outfits lend to borrowers—often local governments pushing increasingly low-quality infrastructure projects—who have run into trouble paying their bank loans.

Since 2008, China's total public and private debt has exploded to more than 200% of GDP—an unprecedented level for any developing country. Yet the overwhelming consensus still sees little risk to the financial system or to economic growth in China.

That view ignores the strong evidence of studies launched since 2008 in a belated attempt by the major global financial institutions to understand the origin of financial crises. The key, more than the level of debt, is the rate of increase in debt—particularly private debt. (Private debt in China includes all kinds of quasi-state borrowers, such as local governments and state-owned corporations.)

On the most important measures of this rate, China is now in the flashing-red zone. The first measure comes from the Bank of International Settlements, which found that if private debt as a share of GDP accelerates to a level 6% higher than its trend over the previous decade, the acceleration is an early warning of serious financial distress. In China, private debt as a share of GDP is now 12% above its previous trend, and above the peak levels seen before credit crises hit Japan in 1989, Korea in 1997, the U.S. in 2007 and Spain in 2008.

The second measure comes from the International Monetary Fund, which found that if private credit grows faster than the economy for three to five years, the increasing ratio of private credit to GDP usually signals financial distress. In China, private credit has been growing much faster than the economy since 2008, and the ratio of private credit to GDP has risen by 50 percentage points to 180%, an increase similar to what the U.S. and Japan witnessed before their most recent financial woes.

The bullish consensus seems to think these laws of financial gravity don't apply to China. The bulls say that bank crises typically begin when foreign creditors start to demand their money, and China owes very little to foreigners. Yet in an August 2012 National Bureau of Economic Research paper titled "The Great Leveraging," University of Virginia economist Alan Taylor examined the 79 major financial crises in advanced economies over the past 140 years and found that they are just as likely in countries that rely on domestic savings and owe little to foreign creditors.

The bulls also argue that China can afford to write off bad debts because it sits on more than $3 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves as well as huge domestic savings. However, while some other Asian nations with high savings and few foreign liabilities did avoid bank crises following credit booms, they nonetheless saw economic growth slow sharply.

Following credit booms in the early 1970s and the late 1980s, Japan used its vast financial resources to put troubled lenders on life support. Debt clogged the system and productivity declined. Once the increase in credit peaked, growth fell sharply over the next five years: to 3% from 8% in the 1970s and to 1% from 4% in the 1980s. In Taiwan, following a similar cycle in the early 1990s, the average annual growth rate fell to 6%.

Even if China dodges a financial crisis, then, it is not likely to dodge a slowdown in its increasingly debt-clogged economy. Through 2007, creating a dollar of economic growth in China required just over a dollar of debt. Since then it has taken three dollars of debt to generate a dollar of growth. This is what you normally see in the late stages of a credit binge, as more debt goes to increasingly less productive investments. In China, exports and manufacturing are slowing as more money flows into real-estate speculation. About a third of the bank loans in China are now for real estate, or are backed by real estate, roughly similar to U.S. levels in 2007.

For China to find a more stable growth model, most experts agree that the country needs to balance its investments by promoting greater consumption. The catch is that consumption has been growing at 8% a year for the past decade—faster than in previous miracle economies like Japan's and as fast as it can grow without triggering inflation. Yet consumption is still falling as a share of GDP because investment has been growing even faster.

So rebalancing requires China to cut back on investment and on the rate of increase in debt, which would mean accepting a rate of growth as low as 5% to 6%, well below the current official rate of 8%. In other investment-led, high-growth nations, from Brazil in the 1970s to Malaysia in the 1990s, economic growth typically fell by half in the decade after investment peaked. The alternative is that China tries to sustain an unrealistic growth target, by piling more debt on an already powerful debt bomb.


Ruchir Sharma: China Has Its Own Debt Bomb - WSJ.com

Its interesting that consumption is increasing but its still slower than investment. Also, before anyone talking about how China will collapse because of this article, save it. It just means that China has issues that it must overcome.
 
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well no offence to the op,but we see many such articles on many countries,so far no country has exploded from this bomb.

anyways,thanks for the info.
 
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well no offence to the op,but we see many such articles on many countries,so far no country has exploded from this bomb.

anyways,thanks for the info.

Yes, this article just bring caution to the investors. But China is not going to collapse any time soon. As I stated while opening the thread. The term "debt bomb" is over exaggerated.
 
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China's total public and private debt has exploded to more than 200% of GDP—Japan is 230 %. I don't think china is collapse hereof.
 
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China has been walking on thin ice for many years,full of difficulties and obstacles along the way, but no one can stop us.
 
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The urge to maintain high growth ates prompts China to pump in huge investments in real estate and infra causing bad debt all around. Its not the end of the economy as such, it needs to regulate lendings and cut down on bad investments and let domestic consumption to even out the clog. It may have to bear lesser growth rate but it will prevent the economy being debt ridden.
 
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