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The collapse of 'the coming collapse of China' theory

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Opinion: The collapse of 'the coming collapse of China' theory

Updated 21:56, 24-Jan-2019
John Gong


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Editor's note: Dr. John Gong is a research fellow at Charhar Institute and professor at the University of International Business and Economics. The article reflects the author's opinion, and not necessarily the views of CGTN.


About 20 years ago, there was a lawyer from Los Angles by the name of Gordon Chang, who wrote a book, “The coming collapse of China.” Chang's main theme in the book is that the hidden nonperforming loans of the Chinese state-owned banks would likely bring down China's financial system and the governing regime.

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The People's Bank of China headquarters in Beijing, China, January 7, 2019. /VCG Photo

He then repeatedly called the same lunatic shot in 2006, 2011, 2012, 2016 and 2017, and they were so painfully wrong that the humiliation in public has already dwarfed the credibility he still had left.

With the official 2018 GDP figure in China released just a few days ago, I guess Chang got one more shot in the arm. Aside from him, there are plenty of pundits around to carry on his baton. The business of the coming collapse of China is far from over, and is certainly not collapsing any time soon.

Many Western media outlets have called the 6.6-percent GDP growth rate the slowest growth in China in the past 20 years. And there are plenty of risks in China's financial markets, as the government economics conference official document openly admitted a few weeks ago.

'Stop freaking out about our economy!'

That is the headline CNN ran this week about Vice President Wang Qishan's speech at the World Economic Forum, which is a resounding rebuttal to those naysayers. He said that growth remains substantial, and that it's important for China to focus on the long term.

Let me further put things into perspective. A 6.6-percent growth rate in 2018 puts China in the 12th fastest economy in the world, only after India and Vietnam, if excluding the rest of the world's minor economies. China's economic size this year stands at about 13 trillion U.S. dollars, making it the second largest economy in the world in nominal terms, and the largest economy in terms of purchasing power parity.

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VCG Photo‍


At 6.6-percent growth, China essentially created a new economy the size of the Netherlands last year, which is the world's 17th largest economy. And to defy the naysayers' dubious wishes, let's suppose we are so creative and business is so great here that we can keep growing at this pace for another five years. That would be like creating another five-trillion-U.S.-dollar economy in just over five years, which is the size of Japan, the third largest economy in the world!

As we grow bigger and bigger, the old adage that the sky is the limit eventually applies. Slowed growth is simply inevitable. This is basically due to the law of diminishing returns.

That is why economists have developed the beta-convergence theory to postulate that poor economies growing faster than rich ones will eventually they all converge to some steady state where growth is going to be very moderate, like two to three percent, currently the rate in Europe and the U.S.

I for one believe that we are very close to the five-percent growth territory. We would be lucky to keep growing above six percent for another two more years. Within a decade, China's economy would be very much like America's developed country status where three-to-four percent growth a year is considered an exceptionally good year.

Now I do concede the economy is slowing down aside from the larger historic trend delineated above. The GDP growth figures in the last four quarters declined consecutively. But this is mostly against the backdrop of the global macro environment and the trade war imposed on China by Washington. But recession or not, China's economy is not going to slide down into a disastrous collapsing scenario purveyed by Chang and the like.

And besides not all GDP are created equal. China is now focused on quality growth, which emphasizes more on efficient, balanced, equitable, and sustainable growth in the future. Keep your fingers crossed that China and the U.S. will reach a trade agreement by March 1, and the reform and opening-up process will continue to accelerate.

(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at opinions@cgtn.com.)

VCG Photo‍

https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d414e79516a4d32457a6333566d54/index.html
 
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Yea. China has proved naysayers wrong and been an economic miracle - it deserves kudos for getting millions out of poverty. I had read about a middle income trap - maybe someone can shed light on that.
 
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Yea. China has proved naysayers wrong and been an economic miracle - it deserves kudos for getting millions out of poverty. I had read about a middle income trap - maybe someone can shed light on that.

China is going to get stuck in said trap and remain there forever because of one party rule, lack of freedom, lack of free speech, low TFR, missing women, demographic catastrophe, emperor Xi, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet and India.
 
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What does that even mean?
Maid: Income is growing, we will soon become rich,
Master: You will fall into the trap.
Maid: Why? You are a liar!
Master: You are really ignorant, this kind of thinking is the devil.
Maid: Yes! Master!
 
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I for one believe that we are very close to the five-percent growth territory. We would be lucky to keep growing above six percent for another two more years. Within a decade, China's economy would be very much like America's developed country status where three-to-four percent growth a year is considered an exceptionally good year.

No, it's not. China has much more potential than that.

After catching up to the world's average, the Four Asian Tigers continued to grow at an average of 8-10% for the next 2 decades. This is the Asian economic miracle people are talking about: using 1 generation to catch up to Western developed economies in per capita terms. I believe China has the same potential as other East Asian developed economies in per capita terms.

GDP per capita, PPP, constant 2000 US$
singapore-gdp.png


But even within a decade, China's projected GDP PPP per capita would just catch up to Argentina's.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_...er_capita#PwC_estimates_between_2020_and_2050

China has ambitions to catch up to Western developed countries in per capita terms, and a 3-4% growth a year at that level won't be enough.

Don't be contented with slowing growth at this current stage of development because the average Chinese people has more potential than that.
But of course, the key to long-term economic development is productivity and reform. Don't get freak out by short-term economic cyclical fluctuations and lose sight of your long-term economic objectives. Some economic pains are necessary to secure long-term growth.
 
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Found our own Gordon Singh
ahahahhahahah this is damn funny. Gordon Singh. :rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:. I would be more worried about the environmental collapse India is facing due to overpopulation.:enjoy:

Maid: Income is growing, we will soon become rich,
Master: You will fall into the trap.
Maid: Why? You are a liar!
Master: You are really ignorant, this kind of thinking is the devil.
Maid: Yes! Master!
A better word would be slave. Indians thrive in a western dominated world. They will fall into anarchy if fully governed by Indians.
 
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China has reached the end of the boom. The next growth phase will require a major retooling of society. Unfortunately, most of the upper class and upper middle class are complete morons. Thanks to Deng, Jiang and Hu for that.

If these upper class and upper middle class morons can be reformed in re-education camps, then they won't derail China's progress to the next growth phase. Right now they are being curtailed but a heavy crackdown has not happened yet. If the problem persists or worsens, economic, social, technological and political stagnation is definitely China's near future.
 
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China has reached the end of the boom. The next growth phase will require a major retooling of society. Unfortunately, most of the upper class and upper middle class are complete morons. Thanks to Deng, Jiang and Hu for that.

If these upper class and upper middle class morons can be reformed in re-education camps, then they won't derail China's progress to the next growth phase. Right now they are being curtailed but a heavy crackdown has not happened yet. If the problem persists or worsens, economic, social, technological and political stagnation is definitely China's near future.
Well, now its time for quality, clean up the environment, there is no point accumulating money if the earth is destroyed. India will be the case study if she doesn't learn from our experience.
 
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I had read about a middle income trap
It's a situation when a country reaches a middle income status, the growth slows down and by then cheap labor will not be available any more and manufacturing starts shifting to other places. Then they will have to innovate, find new ways to generate more revenue through exports, manufacture high end goods and move forward.

Countries like Brazil, Argentina, Mexico are in what's called the middle income trap. China just reached middle income status and the growth starts showing signs of slowing. Not sure how the situation is, given no data is available and they have to rely one consumption. The local government data cannot be trusted given they have fudged data to meet targets. There may or may not be a slow down, but only time will tell. The lack of enough data makes it difficult to put an exact marker.
 
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