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From Japanese Bubble to Chinese Time Bomb — An Interview with Walden Bello

Summary:
China is a prime candidate to be the site of the next financial crisis. Speculation in real estate and the stock market has been a favoured activity among people who feel they are getting very little interest from their savings in the banks owing to the policy of limiting interest to depositors in order to subsidize the influential export-oriented manufacturing lobby. The Shanghai stock market lost 40 per cent of its value in 2015, bankrupting many investors. That event led many to shift to real estate speculation, with the property sector now overheating in key Chinese cities, like Beijing, which has also translated into a social problem since housing for workers are becoming less and less affordable. Though many local governments are said to be taking measures to dampen housing prices,

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China is a prime candidate to be the site of the next financial crisis. Speculation in real estate and the stock market has been a favoured activity among people who feel they are getting very little interest from their savings in the banks owing to the policy of limiting interest to depositors in order to subsidize the influential export-oriented manufacturing lobby. The Shanghai stock market lost 40 per cent of its value in 2015, bankrupting many investors. That event led many to shift to real estate speculation, with the property sector now overheating in key Chinese cities, like Beijing, which has also translated into a social problem since housing for workers are becoming less and less affordable. Though many local governments are said to be taking measures to dampen housing prices, the speculative fever continues and prices continue to rise.

Speculation in real estate and the stock market is one threat. Another big threat is posed by the rise of shadow banking, which has grown to meet demand for credit that cannot be met by the formal banking institutions, which are tied to privileged borrowers in the export sector. By the end of 2013, the assets of the shadow banking sector came to 51 per cent of GDP. A large part of shadow banking loans was invested in the property sector, so that the bursting of the property bubble could bring down the shadow banking sector. And if the shadow banking sector were to collapse, this would likely bring down the formal banking system as well since many of the creditors in the shadow banking sector have built up their financial resources by borrowing from the formal banking sector....
Another article analyzing China as if a Western capitalist country or a Western colony. I cite it as an example of how the West in general gets China wrong, although this is much more reasonable article than most on the subject.

China is not a capitalist county. As President Xi just emphasized to make perfectly clear to all, the official philosophy of the People's Republic of China is Marxism. albeit with Chinese (Confucian) characteristics and updated for contemporary conditions. While China allows a veneer of capitalism to "fit in," it would be a mistake to view China and its economy as resembling the West closely enough to apply Western standards and Western analysis. Indeed, the Western approach to economics is Anglo-American and it doesn't even completely fit the Europe, which is less individualistic and more socially aware than America and Britain, let alone China, where harmony and place in society are prioritized.

China is not a market state. When there is a crisis in China the government steps in with it enormous power of dictat and the knowledge and tools to deal with it. China has yet to float the currency, for example, and Western analysts were surprised when Russia did in order to deal with sanctions, saving Russia from the corner that the West was attempting to put it into.

The debate in China is over the amount of influence "capitalist" principles have and how much China needs to "fit in." In the case of a crisis that the existing government failed to deal with promptly and effectively enough, hard liners would take over.

The West needs to get over the notion that "the markets" rule China. China is not going to fall apart for economics reasons based on Western bourgeois liberal economics.

Similar speculation is bandied about regarding "Russian banks." Recently, a moderate size privately held Russian bank did "fail." It was immediately nationalized and folded into the state system. No problem.

As Bill Black point out, according to US law, the TBTF banks should have been put into resolution ("nationalized") if they were insolvent, which many analysts believe to have been the case. Instead, the banks were saved and the people were left hung out to dry. Result? Rising social unrest in the US and the election of a populist candidate that ran on "draining the swamp."

This doesn't mean that China (and Russia) won't have economic problems. It just means that they will affect these countries differently than the West surmised and the government will deal with them differently than Western countries do. This is already shown by recent events on those countries, the outcomes of which surprised Western analysts.

Triple Crisis
From Japanese Bubble to Chinese Time Bomb

An Interview with Walden Bello
Mike Norman
Mike Norman is an economist and veteran trader whose career has spanned over 30 years on Wall Street. He is a former member and trader on the CME, NYMEX, COMEX and NYFE and he managed money for one of the largest hedge funds and ran a prop trading desk for Credit Suisse.

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