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the japan example is a good one...

  1. cya
    3,836 Posts.
    the japan example is a good one

    http://www.postcarbon.org/article/340001-the-china-bubble-an-export-led-development

    those willing to look at little deeper and not just take the media stories of their continued grwoth as gospel will find some very large structural faults in the Chinese economy

    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/09/30/the_japan_syndrome?page=full

    "Bulging foreign exchange reserves don't only irritate trading partners; they also stoke inflation pressures at home. Inflation is dangerous in a still-poor country where much of the population cannot tolerate higher prices for basic essentials, but it is a natural consequence of an undervalued currency. When Chinese exporters give their dollars to the Chinese central bank (PBOC), the renminbi they receive in exchange increase the domestic money supply and cause inflation. Official inflation statistics are rising, but they only tell part of the story. Massive liquidity in the system has caused a number of mini-bubbles such as garlic's hundredfold price increase over the last two years.

    Giving exporters four renminbi per dollar instead of six would be the quickest fix, but China prefers "sterilization" instead of currency appreciation. In sterilization, the central bank issues bonds to soak up the extra renminbi. The catch is that China's dollar reserves earn dollar interest rates, so if the PBOC pays a higher rate on its own bonds, it pays out more interest than it earns. To keep from hemorrhaging money, the PBOC must keep China's interest rates close to U.S. rates. But U.S. rates are far too low for China, particularly with food prices rising and assets looking bubbly. The government has tried targeted policies such as price controls on certain foodstuffs and restricted lending to asset speculators, but the inflationary pressures are so great that this piecemeal policy resembles a game of whack-a-mole."

    We only find about when recessions start 6 months after the point they start. China is in a very difficult fix its made some of the silliest central banking decisions in the last 50 years, they make Beranke look prudent, eventually all these monetary roosters will come home to roost.
 
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