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China Was the World's Biggest Economic Miracle and It Will Be Again

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China Was the World's Biggest Economic Miracle and It Will Be Again​

DAVID P. GOLDMAN
ON 7/31/23 AT 8:03 AM EDT

According to the World Bank, China's real per capita GDP rose from $404 in 1979—the year Deng Xiaoping opened the economy to private enterprise—to $11,560 in 2022 in constant 2015 U.S. dollars. It jumped five-fold since 2001. By contrast, India's real per capita GDP rose from $373 in 1979 to just $2,085 in 2022. By comparison, you can see what a success story China has been, one unique in economic activity.

This is not to say Deng's trajectory is still at play. Deng Xiaoping's economy, which turned subsistence farmers into semi-skilled industrial workers, surely has peaked. The great migration from country to city is slowing, and China's workforce is slowly shrinking.

But China is building a new digital economy powered by AI and high-speed broadband, with 2.3 million of the world's 3 million 5G base stations and download speeds double ours. It has automated ports that can empty a container ship in 45 minutes rather than the 48 hours required at our port of Long Beach. It's also automated mines where no worker goes underground, factories controlled by AI, and warehouses in which robots do the sorting and packaging.

Most of all, nearly two-thirds of Chinese citizens have an education beyond high school, compared to just 3 percent who had one in 1979. China graduates more engineers than the rest of the world combined, and Chinese universities teach at world standards.

China has also extended its economic reach to developing economies. It now exports more to the Global South than to developed markets, doubling its exports to ASEAN and tripling its exports to Central Asia after 2020. It builds broadband, railroads, and ports from Africa to South America, promoting a permanent market for its exports.

China's new digital economy is in early days, to be sure, and a lot can go wrong. But some things are going right. China overtook Japan as the world's largest auto exporter this year, thanks in part to Tesla's mega-plant in Shanghai. China now makes the 21st century equivalent of the Model T in the form of EVs with a $10,000 price tag.

Demographic doomsayers are simply wrong. A declining workforce doesn't necessarily mean a declining economy. South Korea quintupled industrial production between 1990 and 2010 while its factory workforce fell by a fifth. It moved up the value-added chain to make high-end electronics, cars and computer chips. Higher education transformed South Korea from a cheap-labor venue to a high-tech contender.

China is on the same path. In 1994, just before the "Asian tigers" took off, Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman derided "the myth of Asia's miracle," claiming that the "tigers" had exhausted their reserves of cheap labor. He missed the jump in productivity to come, just as "peak China" pundits do today.

China is determined to lead the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The Chinese telecom giant Huawei claims to have 6,000 contracts to build enterprise 5G networks to support factory AI applications, as I reported in a March commentary for Newsweek. Huawei offers a Cloud-based AI system to enable firms to create their own applications. China is now the world's largest market for industrial robots. If what we have already seen in the EV sector propagates through the rest of the economy, China will gain an insurmountable lead in industry. U.S. tech controls don't have much impact. Industrial applications of AI run well enough on the older chips that China makes at home. Without access to the newest chips, Huawei can't sell a competitive 5G smartphone, but its AI apps can run factories, ports, and mines.

China has made missteps, to be sure. Last year's COVID lockdowns in Chinese cities were a blunder that continues to depress consumer spending. Beijing's crackdown on China's top tech companies has left China's stock market lagging the rest of the world, and raises the cost of capital for China's emerging tech companies. China's universities are graduating STEM majors faster than the tech sector can hire them, and youth unemployment is at a record 21 percent. In the long run, that's a high-class problem to have. In the short run, it's painful.

Predictions of China's imminent collapse, though, are as misguided now as they were 20 years ago. China's debt-to-GDP ratio is 3:1, a bit higher than America's 2.5:1 ratio, but much lower than 4:1 in Japan. The Chinese sovereign borrows 10-year money at 2.6 percent, compared to 4.1 percent for the U.S. China's local governments carry RMB about $5 trillion in debt, but they have almost $30 trillion in assets behind it.

We can't afford to get the China story wrong again. China may succeed or fail in its high-tech transformation, but waiting for China to crash isn't a policy. We need a crash program to rebuild industry and regain our technological edge, on the scale of JFK's Moonshot or Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative.


 
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This is what the Americans are worried about. This is what the war threats from Washington are based on. China will be the new global power, and the US want to stop it before it gets there.

China's growth is such that after 2018/2020 it will not be possible to stop China.
 
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This is what the Americans are worried about. This is what the war threats from Washington are based on. China will be the new global power, and the US want to stop it before it gets there.

China's growth is such that after 2018/2020 it will not be possible to stop China.
If US tries to stop China, it needs to be able to replace China's in the global economy, which US can't, no one now can. So , yes, it's too late for the west to stop China.
 
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If US tries to stop China, it needs to be able to replace China's in the global economy, which US can't, no one now can. So , yes, it's too late for the west to stop China.
Not sure. The Rand corporation report says China will be unassailable by a certain date, I think 2018 or after. The window for action by the Americans is closing. This is why two US generals have openly stated that they expect to be at war with China by 2015.

Either way, it seems that the decision for war has been taken.
 
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This is what the Americans are worried about. This is what the war threats from Washington are based on. China will be the new global power, and the US want to stop it before it gets there.

China's growth is such that after 2018/2020 it will not be possible to stop China.


US and China are unlikely to fight a war. Mostly sabre-rattling.
 
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This is what the Americans are worried about. This is what the war threats from Washington are based on. China will be the new global power, and the US want to stop it before it gets there.

China's growth is such that after 2018/2020 it will not be possible to stop China.

Chinese growth is decelerating and if not for the Covid base, Chinese growth would be around 3% this year.

The gap with US GDP will widen once again this year. The government projects US GDP to reach $40T in a decade.

3E2FEBD9-961F-40F1-8A2A-08818EB0A654.jpeg
 
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Not sure. The Rand corporation report says China will be unassailable by a certain date, I think 2018 or after. The window for action by the Americans is closing. This is why two US generals have openly stated that they expect to be at war with China by 2015.

Either way, it seems that the decision for war has been taken.
That's why they are grooming and preping India..
 
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That's why they are grooming and preping India..
They definitely want India on their side, but the Indians are nobody's fools. They will pursue their own interests and I can't believe that they will get involved in a hot war on behalf of the US.
 
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They definitely want India on their side, but the Indians are nobody's fools. They will pursue their own interests and I can't believe that they will get involved in a hot war on behalf of the US.

US/West are masters of love/hate relationships - They have a PhD in divide and rule.. India is already part of the game.
 
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Well I hope China becomes the world's largest economy. The American century is over now or the President Bush era is over now.
 
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The GDP gap is going to widen again this year.
fvck off americunt. No era lasts forever.

The President 2001 Bush era is over now.

China will be the largest economy in Nominal GDP in a matter of years.
 
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Chinese growth is decelerating and if not for the Covid base, Chinese growth would be around 3% this year.

The gap with US GDP will widen once again this year. The government projects US GDP to reach $40T in a decade.

View attachment 943027

In H1 of 2023, China's GDP growth was 5.5%. where did you get 3% number from?
 
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Ain't gonna be no miracle unless these things happen:

1. Lower housing prices.
2. Improve working conditions and hours.
3. Xi goes away.
 
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