Hehe, they can not even tell the difference between "Chinese exports decreased" and "Chinese export growth decreased."
BTW, the October Chinese export increased by about 17.5%.

VikramS wrote:What I find funny is the name Hilead.
There is a US Biotech named Gilead. The CCP decides to be one-up and names their shop Hilead, since H follows G.
It could also be read as Hi-Lead, which might be closer to the truth.
wong: UW-Milwaukee is a big enough campus in its own right. BTW, why do you defend the CCP so much. It is one thing to be proud of being Chinese and Chinese people; but why defend the CCP even when it indulges in such a blatant theft. We have had many proud posters from China before, but your single-minded devotion to the CCP is rather unique.
wong wrote:
Where does this article implicate the CCP of any wrongdoing? This is a trade secret case. It looks like some underpaid, disgruntled employees stole some trade secrets (innocent until proven guilty) and started a competitor. Hardly unique to China. This happens a lot in the US, especially with the H1Bs since they think they can always flee home. There was the high frequency trading code theft at SocGen and the logic bomb at Fannie.
Court documents show that Hilead was set up with the help of the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences. And because the project fit national and local government policy goals, Hilead received a $300 million loan from the national government’s China Development Bank. The loan came after the company won the approval of the party secretary of Shandong Province, one of the country’s highest-ranking public officials.
China’s economy has a reputation for being strong and prosperous, but according to a well-known Chinese television personality the country’s Gross Domestic Product is going in reverse.
Larry Lang, chair professor of Finance at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said in a lecture that he didn’t think was being recorded that the Chinese regime is in a serious economic crisis—on the brink of bankruptcy. He coined the phrase: “In China, every province is a Greece.”
The restrictions Lang placed on the Oct. 22 speech in Shenyang City, in northern China’s Liaoning Province, included no audio or video recording, and no media. He can be heard saying that people should not post his speech online, or “everyone will look bad,” in the audio that is now on Youtube.
In the unusual, closed-door lecture, Lang gave a frank analysis of the Chinese economy and the censorship that is placed on intellectuals and public figures. “What I’m about to say is all true. But under this system, we are not allowed to speak the truth,” he said.
Lang’s assessment that the regime is bankrupt was based on five conjectures.
Firstly, that the regime’s debt sits at about 36 trillion yuan (US$5.68 trillion). This calculation is arrived at by adding up Chinese local government debt (between 16 trillion and 19.5 trillion yuan, or US$2.5 trillion and US$3 trillion), and the debt owed by state-owned enterprises (another 16 trillion, he said). But with interest of two trillion per year, he thinks things will unravel quickly.
Secondly, that the regime’s officially published inflation rate of 6.2 percent is fabricated. The real inflation rate is 16 percent, according to Lang.
Thirdly, that there is serious excess capacity in the economy, and that private consumption is only 30 percent of economic activity. Lang said that beginning this July, the Purchasing Managers Index, a measure of the manufacturing industry, plunged to a new low of 50.7. This is an indication, in his view, that China’s economy is in recession.
Fourthly, that the regime’s officially published GDP of 9 percent is also fabricated. According to Lang’s data, China’s GDP has decreased 10 percent. He said that the bloated figures come from the dramatic increase in infrastructure construction, including real estate development, railways, and highways each year (accounting for up to 70 percent of GDP in 2010).
Fifthly, that taxes are too high. Last year, the taxes on Chinese businesses (including direct and indirect taxes) were at 70 percent of earnings. The individual tax rate sits at 51.6 percent, Lang said.
Once the “economic tsunami” starts, the regime will lose credibility and China will become the poorest country in the world, Lang said.
Few scholars inside the country dare to speak as Lang has, Cheng said. And that’s probably because he has a professorship in Hong Kong.
Larry Lang inspires people in China to seek the truth
Most recently, on Oct. 22 in Shenyang, China, Lang told a closed-door seminar that China’s economy was already bankrupt. His remarks set off a “Lang cyclone” on Internet forums in mainland China, and netizens speculated on what the secret of the Lang phenomenon might be. Why did his remarks have such an impact?
Lang earned a Ph.D. in finance from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 1986. In the last 10 years, Lang has published in-depth analyses of China’s economy.
In 2006, China Youth conducted an online survey titled “Which mainstream economist do you trust?” Lang was voted as the most trusted Chinese economist by the public and gained many more votes than the second-place Wu Jinglian.
At that time, though, other mainstream Chinese economists blamed him for arousing public sentiment against the loss of state assets, acting, the other economists said, like a bull in a china shop.
But even if some economists have sometimes disapproved of Lang, they can’t dismiss him. Lang has often written in narrow and difficult financial fields, and his publications are among the most frequently cited of all Chinese economists.
Lang’s reputation is of a scholar with a conscience, and he stands apart from those intellectuals who choose to safeguard the Beijing regime.
Lang is often referred to as a new-left-socialist economist. In judging the results of the reforms of state-owned enterprises, whether the analysis is based on GDP or the Gini Index (a measure of the economic inequality in a society), Lang believes that while the reforms have improved efficiency through layoffs, buyouts that terminate the employee’s service, and shifting the costs of retirees to the whole society, the method cannot be called successful because it’s not a fair and harmonious solution.
Lang attributed all the problems of the Chinese economy to a conspiracy theory that blames the United States. Some people think that only by doing so could he see his statements spread in China. Saying that the source of disaster is the communist regime’s totalitarian rule is not allowed.
Vikram they are doing that already.VikramS wrote:TF:
Those 200 million women less males is what worries me too. It was not very long ago that Mao offered to ship Chinese women to the West, as if they are cattle to be traded. What if the CCP decides that the best way to keep the angst is to create a situation where these millions can find land (and wives) in the rest of the world; very much like the Ghazis who plundered the sub-continent during the past millenium.
SHANGHAI (AP) — China's exports rose 13.8 percent to $174.5 billion in November, a decline from 15.9 percent growth in October, while China's overall trade surplus plunged 35 percent from a year earlier, to $14.5 billion, Customs statistics said. Imports gained 22.1 percent to $159.9 billion, down from the previous month's 28.7 percent rise.
VikramS wrote:wong wrote:
Where does this article implicate the CCP of any wrongdoing? This is a trade secret case. It looks like some underpaid, disgruntled employees stole some trade secrets (innocent until proven guilty) and started a competitor. Hardly unique to China. This happens a lot in the US, especially with the H1Bs since they think they can always flee home. There was the high frequency trading code theft at SocGen and the logic bomb at Fannie.Court documents show that Hilead was set up with the help of the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences. And because the project fit national and local government policy goals, Hilead received a $300 million loan from the national government’s China Development Bank. The loan came after the company won the approval of the party secretary of Shandong Province, one of the country’s highest-ranking public officials.
Agree. What goes up must come down.wong wrote:That's why China will continue to move in a different trajectory from India.
Theo Sir....I don't create the video.....only link it!Theo_Fidel wrote: ^^^^
Re: 0.44 you can't be serious.![]()
What the hell is MasterBeef.
And?wong wrote:Of course you left out this paragraph.
"It is unclear whether the government at this point knew about Cathay’s patent or that Mr. Wang had come from Cathay. Analysts say that rather than being a target of government animus, Cathay may have simply been an unintended victim — collateral damage — of the Chinese government’s drive to bolster state partners like Hilead."
Soon PRC will be named UN-tied states of Chinaanishns wrote:The Supel Powel![]()
[youtube]vPQHpHvVWH8
Check out @0:44![]()
![]()
![]()
BTW they despise the Japanese so much, yet most of their counterfeit copies are of Japanese brands. Also, they seem to have special love for Adidas
Of course the gender imbalance is even worst in India, yet you worry about China.Hari Seldon wrote:^^^So the gender imbalance de facto seen in PRC is not a negative for PRC? Interesting, if true.
VikramS wrote:And?wong wrote:Of course you left out this paragraph.
"It is unclear whether the government at this point knew about Cathay’s patent or that Mr. Wang had come from Cathay. Analysts say that rather than being a target of government animus, Cathay may have simply been an unintended victim — collateral damage — of the Chinese government’s drive to bolster state partners like Hilead."
What did they do to fix the situation AFTER they found out that there was a problem and there was an "unintended" victim.
On what basis did the government approve Mr. Wang's proposal if they had not known his background, capabilities and knowledge? I guess it is only in China that a $300Mventure investment is made with no due diligence about the founders. If that is an indication about the quality of thought behind investment decisions in China, then perhaps all that Western talk about a huge amount of bad loans is grounded in reality.
BTW, most Indians are not hoping for a collapse in China; if the world's second largest economy collapses it will have negative effects on everyone. A natural slowdown in the growth rates consistent with the demographics is normal and as you mentioned not all that bad a thing. By the same logic the Indian economy will also likely do better within the context of the way the two countries operate. So why do you talk about capitulation and what not? Why the need for everyone to pay homage to your schlong? Why that insecurity?
What bothers me is that there are few checks and balances in the system and a history of boorish behavior which gets amplified if there is internal stress.
I do not know what kind of satisfaction you get defending the CCP but if you are any indication of thinking of the new generation of Chinese, the future can not be very bright.
Some logic you have there. Even if what you wrote is true, which it isn't, we are talking about Chinese people in China, not Chinese people in the West. In the West the women (not all, but many) covet you for your money and how big your wallet is. I know this from personal experience. The other silly stereotypes you wrote, I won't even address.chola wrote:I would say it is patently worse for China since in addition to the gender imbalance Chinese females are particularly coveted in the West while the Chinese male is universally unwanted for being effeminate.
Yes, we are talking about the Chinese people in China. There are two parallel cottage industries in China decreasing the amount of females in a society already seriously short of females: one -- Westerners are adopting thousands of little Chinese girls since this sick society doesn't want them (witness the little girl being run over repeatedly without anyone caring to stop and help) and two, white and foreign males of all stripes including overseas Chinese export thousands of Chinese females back to the West as wives, mistresses and concubines.wong wrote:Some logic you have there. Even if what you wrote is true, which it isn't, we are talking about Chinese people in China, not Chinese people in the West. In the West the women (not all, but many) covet you for your money and how big your wallet is. I know this from personal experience. The other silly stereotypes you wrote, I won't even address.chola wrote:I would say it is patently worse for China since in addition to the gender imbalance Chinese females are particularly coveted in the West while the Chinese male is universally unwanted for being effeminate.
wong wrote:Every major private equity firm and venture capital firm (Warburg Pincus, KKR, Kleiner Perkins) has been in China for over 10 to 20 years. They compete with the state for both deals and talent. I would not worry about the efficiency of Chinese venture funding. They have been some of the most profitable deals in the world in the past 10 years. What I found interesting from reading about the Rajat Gupta insider trading case was that he couldn' make money in India with his venture capital firm. If he can't, who can ???
As for this demographic dividend you are hoping for, it may or may not happen. It takes more than just bodies. All the other ingredients will have to be in place.
Ah, now this gets interesting. Can you elaborate more about the other ingredients which need to be in place? That will shed more light.wong wrote: As for this demographic dividend you are hoping for, it may or may not happen. It takes more than just bodies. All the other ingredients will have to be in place.
About 45 minutes outside of Beijing are the deserted ruins of what was supposed to be the world's largest amusement park. Instead, farmers have reclaimed the land planting corn and digging wells next to spires modeled after Disneyland.
The government has become so concerned about deepening debt that it has ordered banks to cut off loans to certain local projects, including a highway that is supposed to stretch more than 60 miles in western China's Shaanxi province.
A short drive from the city of Yan'an, a 100-yard elevated section of that highway stands dormant with nothing on either side.
"From April until now, the subcontractors on this road haven't been paid any money," says Cui Jinmin, who ran a crew of about 15 workers here. "There's nothing we can do. The road's owner [the local government] has no money; we can only wait." Cui lives in a shack with his wife, Li Na, in a muddy work camp on the edge of the orphaned stretch of highway. He says the government stopped paying his crew back in April and his workers finally gave up and left in July. "Right now, they owe our team at least $300,000," says Cui, who watches over the heavy machinery and rusting construction materials. "Almost the entire project is halted. We've worked for so many years, this is the worst project we've ever worked on." In fact, one worker at another section of highway became so desperate for his wages, he climbed up on a bridge pillar and threatened to jump, according to a local newspaper. Officials here refused to discuss the project, which is supposed to connect Yan'an, the cradle of China's Communist revolution, with Wuqi, a Shaanxi county.
China's Stimulus Plan
The highway is part of a massive stimulus program China's government launched in 2008 to cushion the economy from the effects of the global financial crisis. The strategy worked, but many local governments racked up huge debts along the way. Local governments in western China's Gansu province owe $22 billion, or 1 1/2 times their annual revenue, according to a provincial report. Next door in Inner Mongolia, the tab is $44 billion — or about 90 percent of local revenue. How many projects have crashed like the highway in Shaanxi is unclear.
Cui Jinmin oversees an abandoned strip of unfinished highway in western China's Shaanxi province. Cui says the government stopped paying his workers in April and they went home in July.
"We don't really know, which is the scary thing," says Stephen Green, who heads research on Greater China at Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong. Green says most projects won't be able to pay for themselves. Most highways just don't earn enough money in tolls.
Roads aren't the only problem. China's high-speed rail system has run up more than $300 billion of debt, according to China's Rail Ministry. "The banks have stopped lending money — more or less — to the Ministry of Railways," says Green, "which means hundreds of projects around the country for high-speed rail have been slowed down or stopped."
Two years ago famed hedge fund short seller Jim Chanos made waves by predicting a real estate collapse for China. He proclaimed that China was like "Dubai times 1000, or worse." His predictions have not been proven right.
Now, Chanos seems to be backtracking on his dire predictions. He told CNBC last week in an interview that, "China's going to survive all this. This is not the end of the next Middle Kingdom" but that China is facing a "pretty big speed bump." A speed bump, no matter how big, is quite different from Chanos’ earlier gloomy predictions.
There has been a slowdown in manufacturing and housing prices. A closer look at the economy actually shows that Chanos is correct this time – there is a serious speed bump in China’s economic future but that a soft landing is the likely scenario.
Looking ahead China’s consumer sector should continue to soar while the road ahead for the real estate and manufacturing sectors looks bumpy.
I wish China all the best in its efforts to transform into a consumption led economy from an export led economy. Let us see if you can actually pull it off.ashi wrote:Is Chanos Finally Getting It Right on China?
Looking ahead China’s consumer sector should continue to soar while the road ahead for the real estate and manufacturing sectors looks bumpy.