Black Alloy
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"Markets are well aware that China's exceptional growth rate is finally slackening but economists are increasingly cognisant of this slowing could turn into a crash for the world's second largest economy.
Concerns are beginning to rise about China's future economic prospects. While the International Monetary Fund chose not to downgrade its economic forecasts for the country's GDP, Citi's chief economist Willem Buiter has warned China will drag the rest of the world into a global recession.
China was the main driver behind Australia's mining boom but times have changed. Photo: Bloomberg
"We consider China to be at high and rapidly rising risk of a cyclical hard landing," Mr Buiter and his economist colleagues said in a report. "The reasons behind China's downturn and likely recession are familiar: rising excess capacity in a growing number of sectors, excessive leverage in the private sector and episodes of irrational exuberance in asset markets.
Deutsche Bank research has joined the ranks with a new report that analyses the potential for a hard landing and economic crash in the economy that powered much of Australia's mining boom prosperity.
"Market commentary continues to point to uncertainty about the Chinese economy as an important source of negative sentiment. 'Hard landing' fears, it seems, also persuaded the US Federal Reserve not to raise rates last month," chief economist Peter Hooper said."
Is China's economy heading for a crash?
Concerns are beginning to rise about China's future economic prospects. While the International Monetary Fund chose not to downgrade its economic forecasts for the country's GDP, Citi's chief economist Willem Buiter has warned China will drag the rest of the world into a global recession.
China was the main driver behind Australia's mining boom but times have changed. Photo: Bloomberg
"We consider China to be at high and rapidly rising risk of a cyclical hard landing," Mr Buiter and his economist colleagues said in a report. "The reasons behind China's downturn and likely recession are familiar: rising excess capacity in a growing number of sectors, excessive leverage in the private sector and episodes of irrational exuberance in asset markets.
Deutsche Bank research has joined the ranks with a new report that analyses the potential for a hard landing and economic crash in the economy that powered much of Australia's mining boom prosperity.
"Market commentary continues to point to uncertainty about the Chinese economy as an important source of negative sentiment. 'Hard landing' fears, it seems, also persuaded the US Federal Reserve not to raise rates last month," chief economist Peter Hooper said."
Is China's economy heading for a crash?