Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts

17 December 2018

YOU ARE WELCOME: ASIA'S GIFT TO AMERICA

By Bian-lian Huang

Image result for cute asian couple
The current trade war with the People's Republic of China, which will conclude amicably, underscores the epic and historic rise of Asia over the last 40 years, particularly the last 20, when China officially joined the World Trade Organization.  No economist or sinologist in 1978 dared to dream that China would become the world's largest economy (in PPP terms) 36 years later.  More broadly, the Asian-Pacific region accounts for the largest portion of the global gross domestic product.

Asia's rise to economic superpower status was undergirded by one main factor:  its human resources.  Asians are the hardest working and smartest people in the world.  With this asset, it is inevitable that Asian dominance of the world economy will remain the order of the day for many decades to come.

Yet, Asians have generously shared their number one asset with the United States.  Every year, Asia sends its best and brightest to Silicon Valley, medical hubs, financial beachheads, and other key economic realms that define the American economy.  And of course, native-born Asian-Americans (children of the various immigration waves) provide the much needed natural replenishment of this precious resource.

Natural replenishment is key for the United States continued success.   One day, in the near future, Asia will stop sending its talents abroad because of its aging population and because local opportunities and living standards will outshine those offered overseas.  (We are already seeing this phenomenon.  Of the hundreds of thousands of Mainland Chinese students studying in Europe and the United States, the vast majority choose to pursue their careers in their motherland.)  American innovation and productivity may suffer as a consequence, depending on whether the Asian-American population is large enough to reasonably shoulder this burden.

Of course, there will be no shortage of other peoples wishing to come into the United States to reap economic fruit. But it's just not the same without the dual characteristics embedded in the Asian DNA -- intellect and diligence.




04 August 2011

NASDAQ DOWN 5%; DOW JONES DOWN 4.3%; S&P DOWN 5%

11,383.68 -512.76 -4.31%




Nasdaq 2,556.39 -136.68 -5.08%



S&P 500 1,200.07 -60.27 -4.78%



10 Yr Bond(%) 2.4580% -0.1410



Oil 86.44 -5.49 -5.97%



Gold 1,650.80 -12.60 -0.76%





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22 January 2011

China -- the economic Sputnik?

from the New York Times


Maybe Japan Was Just a Warm-Up

IN the 1980s, the United States faced an unnerving challenge from a rising economic powerhouse and export dynamo. It was an impressive challenger, to be sure, but one that often bent rules of global competition unfairly to its advantage by handing out financial subsidies to domestic companies, discriminating against foreign suppliers in government contracts, pilfering Western technology and keeping its currency cheap.

A General Electric engine in China. Tensions over America’s trade gap recall the debate about Japanese competition in the 1980s.

Pool photo by Alex Wong

President Obama and President Hu Jintao, in background, met with executives last week. China has done more than Japan to invite investment.

Toru Hanai/Reuters

I.B.M.’s offices in Tokyo. Because technology was seen as such a crucial sector, Washington stepped up efforts in the 1980s to help companies compete.

Three decades later, Americans are hearing an echo of the past. Yet this time, the object of admiration and angst is not Japan Inc., but China Inc.

“We’ve seen this movie before,” says Clyde V. Prestowitz Jr., president of the Economic Strategy Institute and a former United States trade negotiator with Japan in the 1980s. “Like Japan, China is climbing up the ladder of economic and technological development, and using every means at its disposal to do so.”

China, of course, is different from Japan in the 1980s in many ways — larger, less affluent, ruled by a Communist government and yet in some respects culturally more entrepreneurial. Silicon Valley venture capitalists, for example, have begun setting up offices in China to forge links with entrepreneurs there, as they never really did in Japan.

Economic events and market trends are notoriously unpredictable. In the early 1980s, the Japanese high-technology assault on the American computer and semiconductor industry seemed scary. “What are our kids supposed to do?” asked Walter F. Mondale, the former vice president, speaking to a group of electrical workers. “Sweep up around the Japanese computers?” It captured the economic pessimism of the time, even if it serves as a laugh line today because, after all, how often do you see a Japanese computer?

So, applying equal doses of humility and hindsight, a look anew at the economic challenge symbolized by Japan — and the American response — might offer perspective on the China challenge today.

First, a reality check on Japan. Yes, that nation’s big-business culture missed the personal computer revolution and the Internet, producing no rivals to Microsoft, Apple,Google or Facebook. But Japan is no basket case. It is a world leader in autos, machine tools, flat-panel displays and other parts of the consumer electronics industry. Some of Japan’s policies did indeed prevail, and America still runs a sizable trade deficit with the country.

Japan, which lacks natural-resource wealth like oil, has a per-capita income of more than $42,000, compared with about $47,000 for the United States, according to theInternational Monetary Fund. China’s per-capita income is less than $4,300.

In America, the 1980s were Ronald Reagan’s decade, a time that celebrated free markets, free trade and tax cuts. “Government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem” was his famous distillation. Yet, for certain industries, the Reagan administration took steps that amounted to a measured approach to industrial policy. Washington negotiated so-called voluntary export restraints with the Japanese in the automobile industry. That forced Japanese automakers to build factories in the United States that now employ many thousands of American workers. And a semiconductor trade agreement helped pry open the Japanese market.

“People often forget that we did a lot of things to address the Japanese challenge,” says Robert D. Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a nonpartisan research group in Washington.

IN the 1980s, the United States government’s semiconductor policy focused the minds of industry leaders facing the demise of their industry. There is still considerable debate over the effectiveness of a consortium, created by the federal government and several companies. Called Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology, or Sematech, it shared the costs and risks of developing computer chip-making skills. But the partial lifting of antitrust and collusion restrictions gave companies a chance to innovate.

I.B.M., for its part, was worried that a vital supplier, the chipmaker Intel, was in danger, so it invested in it. That gave Intel — under siege from Japanese companies in the market for memory chips, which store data temporarily — the breathing room to risk making the jump to microprocessors, which process data and serve as the brains of personal computers. Intel made the move to the more profitable chips before the PC industry really took off — but when it did, Intel never looked back. The Japanese didn’t make that innovative leap and became stuck in a commodity business that South Korean and Taiwanese companies eventually dominated.

“In semiconductors, we got organized to defend and stay ahead,” says William A. Reinsch, a foreign trade expert and the chairman of the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, a bipartisan advisory group to Congress. “In that industry, there was a considerable amount of cooperation between the U.S. government and business. The computer chip industry was deemed too important to lose, not least because of all the military applications of computer chip technology.”

One big reason that Japan posed a threat in the 1980s in computer chips and large computers was the technology transfer that had occurred years before. In order to sell in the Japanese market and repatriate profits, I.B.M. and Texas Instruments, an early leader in chips, had to share technology with the Japanese. They set up factories there, too.

In China these days, the details may differ, but the government imposes the same kind of requirements to share technology and set up manufacturing plants in joint ventures for preferred access to the domestic market.

China has a lengthy list of industries where it has long-term ambitions. They include commercial aircraft, telecommunications equipment, high-speed trains, clean-energy goods like solar panels and wind turbines, and even automobiles.

“The bet for I.B.M. in Japan, as it is for companies like Boeing and General Electric today in China, is that they can stay ahead, innovate faster than the potential competitors they are helping,” says Edward J. Lincoln, professor of economics at the Stern School of Business at New York University, and director of its Japan-U.S. Center for Business and Economic Studies.

In China, however, American companies are making a much larger bet that they can stay ahead in the intellectual property race. In some fields, particularly computer software, China has a well-earned reputation for theft, though Beijing has pledged to curb the practice in government agencies and state-owned companies. And in China, many more Western companies are engaged in technology-sharing joint ventures than was ever the case in Japan.

Japan sharply limited direct investment by foreign companies, while China has welcomed it. And in China, the terms and conditions of investment have evolved over the years. Beginning in the 1980s, China opened up “special economic zones,” mainly in the southern part of the country, where foreign companies could set up factories and export goods. In the 1990s, China opened up more broadly to foreign investment, allowing companies to sell in the domestic market.

In the last couple of years, the Chinese government, analysts and executives say, has prodded foreign companies to transfer more advanced technology for the inside track in its market. The government effort to accelerate China’s technological climb is called “indigenous innovation.”

“The campaign is focused on employing China’s fast-growing domestic market and powerful regulatory regime to decrease reliance on foreign technology and develop indigenous technologies,” explains a report on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Web site.

C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, says: “China was much more clever than Japan with its investment policies. It invited foreign direct investment and then took the American corporations hostage.”

The lure of tapping the fast-growing Chinese market — far larger than Japan’s — gives China a lot of leverage with American companies, which mutes complaints in Washington, Mr. Bergsten says. Most American corporations, he says, have resisted trade restrictions on China because they hope to tap the Chinese market and produce goods there.

Yet American corporations are worried about China’s innovation policy, since it means potentially jump-starting Chinese rivals. Business leaders pushed that to the top of the agenda for President Hu Jintao’s trip to the United States last week, Mr. Bergsten says. And, indeed, in meetings during the week, the Chinese delegation gave American executives assurances that China would be flexible in pursuing its innovation initiative.

The Chinese currency, the renminbi, took a back seat as an issue during the state visit. But Mr. Bergsten estimates that the renminbi is undervalued by 20 percent or more — the Chinese central bank’s purchases of dollars depress the Chinese exchange rate and the subsequent lower value of the renminbi makes Chinese exports less costly abroad. “It’s an across-the-board export subsidy,” he says.

THERE will be ceaseless currency and trade issues with China, as there were with Japan. Still, as China grows wealthier, economists predict, it will buy more of the high-value, high-technology products and services at which the United States excels.

The real answer to the China challenge, like the competition from Japan in the 1980s, must come from the United States, the industrial policy thinkers say. A mix of several ingredients will undoubtedly be sought: skillful government policy, smart private-sector strategies, national investment in research and development for long-term innovation, and improved performance of the American education system. In short, all the things the United States should be doing anyway, but with an added measure of urgency because of the global competition that China epitomizes — an economic Sputnik.

23 December 2010

The West Making Love to China




Is China being recklessly generous to the West or just being strategic?

Here's the story about China's bailing out the EU with $$$. The Chinaman's burden?

Interestingly, we have been featuring stories of abject penury in China, like the AIDS orphan who lives by himself in a miserable hut in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Can't the Chinese government spend some small portion of its massive $2.5 TRILLION in reserve to assist its poor instead of buying junk bonds from the USA and the EU????!!!

18 December 2010

The Definition of Exponential Growth


This is why PR China is the de facto global super-power. It will, likely, overtake the US as the largest economy by 2015. I am China; hear me ROAR...

13 September 2010

The Fairbank Report is Five Years Young


On September 15, we mark our Fifth Anniversary as the world's most interesting, most eclectic and most incisive blog...What an interesting five-year period!!! Lots of ups and downs, mainly downs like the US economy.

28 January 2010

Hope & Change One Year Later

When Hope & Change took office 373 days ago, the unemployment rate was 8 percent. Today it stands at 10.1%. 'nuf said...

18 January 2010

China in 2040


http://www.dnaindia.com/money/report_will-china-be-a-monster-economy-by-2040_1105092

Will China be a monster economy by 2040?

Venkatesan Vembu
Friday, June 22, 2007 5:16 IST
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A new study says the country will go from 'poor' to 'super rich'


HONG KONG: A noted China-watcher at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace once said that the "only thing rising faster than China is the hype about China".

A recent research study published by the US National Bureau of Economic Research, America's premier economic research organisation, seems to confirm that sobering statement.

The research paper, authored by Robert Fogel, director of the Center for Population Economics at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, makes some breath-taking, mind-numbing projections. Sample these:

*Fogel says that, by 2040, China's GDP (in purchasing power parity terms) will be $123 trillion - or about 40% of global GDP that year - and nearly three times the total output of the entire world in 2000. That figure represents a 2,400% GDP growth since 2000. In fact, says Fogel, in 2040, the Chinese market "will probably be larger than the combined markets of the US, the European Union, India, and Japan." How's that for a monster economy!

*By 2040, reckons Fogel, China's per capita income will reach $85,000 - about twice the projected figure in respect of the European Union! That's a 23-fold increase in 40 years (starting 2000 when the per capita income was about $3,616)!

*In other words, says Fogel, in 40 years (starting 2000), China will have raced right across the economic spectrum from being a 'poor' country to a 'super rich' one!

Fogel's study is also remarkable for one other projection: the decline of Europe. The European Union's share of global GDP will decline from 21% in 2000 to about 5% in 2040, he prophesies. The relative decline of the European Union, implied by its stagnation in population and its modest growth in GDP, is the "most unsettling of the forecasts," says Fogel.

But it is Fogel's projections in respect of China that are the "most provocative", as he himself acknowledges. He then goes on to explain the basis for "so optimistic a view".

One of the critical drivers of China's economic growth over the next generation, argues Fogel, will be the growth in labour productivity that comes of workers shifting from agriculture to other sectors of the economy, such as industry or services. In his estimation, such an inter-industry shift added 3 percentage points to the annual national growth rate from 1978 to 2003. "I expect inter-industry shifts to continue to be an important element in China's growth."

A second reason for Fogel's projection of this meteoric rise is that China is investing heavily in human capital, which, he says, will act as an engine of high economic growth. China, he notes, has invested heavily in rapidly expanding enrolment ratios in both secondary and tertiary education. "Increasing the enrolment ratio in high school to 100% and in college to 50% over the next generation would, by itself, add over 6 percentage points to the annual growth rate," says Fogel.

In making these rosy projections, Fogel airily dismisses fears articulated by other analysts of an economic breakdown or social unrest. Conceding that the inefficiency of many state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in China may be a drag on the economy, Fogel, however, says that "the idea that these inefficient firms will suddenly go bankrupt is far-fetched."

Not only does the government have the finances needed to continue subsidising inefficient firms if it chooses to do so for economic or political reasons, but the burden of these subsidies will also gradually diminish because the share of the industrial output supplied by these underperforming SOEs will gradually decline, he argues.

Additionally, in Fogel's estimation, China's political leaders have a strategy in place for the devolution of power and for co-opting elites. "The government's responsiveness to popular concerns indicates that political stability is likely to remain at the level required for continued long-term economic growth," he concludes.

And what of India? Fogel's straight-line projection of economic growth is somewhat flattering to India as well (but not quite as flattering as it is to China). By 2040, India's GDP (in PPP terms) will be $36,528 billion, which will account for 12% of global economic output. That figure represents a 1,400% increase over GDP in 2000. India's per-capita income too will rise from $2,370 in 2000 to about $24,000 in 2040, according to Fogel's projection.

Fogel explains why he feels more optimistic about China's economic growth than India's. For one, he says, although India has an excellent system of higher education, it lags substantially behind China, South Korea and Asean countries in educational achievement.

Over 40% of the population is still illiterate and gross secondary school enrolment rates in 2002 were less than half the numbers in China.And even the enrolment rate in higher education in India lags behind China's, he points out. Agricultural labour productivity growth rates in India are half that of in China, and given that two-thirds of India's labour force is still in agriculture, this hinders growth of the overall economy, say Fogel.

China's meteoric rise of the past three decades has, of course, proved countless Cassandras wrong. Even so, Fogel's linear extrapolation of human capital trends and his broad-sweep delineation of China's future seem overly optimistic.

As George Mason University professor of economics Tyler Cowen, author of Discover Your Inner Economist, notes half in jest: "Repeat after me: 'China in the 20th century had two major revolutions, a civil war, the Great Leap Forward, mass starvation, the Cultural Revolution, arguably the most tyrannical dictator ever... And now they will go from rags to riches without even a business cycle burp.' I don't think you can do it with a straight face!"


21 September 2008

Bail-out Nation

1. Bear Stearns
2. Bail out of unworthy homeowners to the tune of $300 billion
3. Fannie Mae
4. Freddie Mac
5. AIG

See/search for our piece on the phenomenon of "moral hazard."

21 May 2008

Gas to Rise to $7 per Gallon

We told you so two years ago. Search the archives of the Fairbank Report for "$3 Gas is Cheap."

There is NO supply issue. OPEC is holding back on production and reaping huge profits. It seems that economic axioms are falling every day. Classical economics argues that cartels are inherently unstable and unsustainable. So far, the oil cartel has proven quite robust as the price per barrel of oil has rocketed to an all-time high of $132; it was $11 per barrel in 1999!!