Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

China: President tells party "Get ready for a rough ride from world recession"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • China: President tells party "Get ready for a rough ride from world recession"

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle5263907.ece

    From The Times
    December 1, 2008
    Get ready for a rough ride from world recession, Chinese President tells party
    Jane Macartney in Beijing

    The Chinese President has issued a rare warning to the ruling Communist Party, telling his officials that the global economic downturn is so severe that it could shake its 59-year grip on power.

    President Hu Jintao's remarks, at a weekend meeting of the ruling 25-member Politburo, appeared on the front page of the party's official mouthpiece, the People's Daily. It was his bluntest message yet delivered on the crisis to China's 1.3 billion people and more than 70 million members of the party.

    The subtext of his speech was the increasing risk of social unrest caused by China's rising unemployment, as a slump in exports leads to factory closures and a fall in property sales results in abandoned construction projects.

    The President, who is also the head of the Communist Party, said: “In this coming period, we will starkly confront the effects of the sustained deepening of the international financial crisis and pressure as global economic growth clearly slows.” He said that the slowdown would “steadily weaken our country's traditional competitive advantages”.

    The speech is the most authoritative warning yet of the blow dealt to the world's fourth-largest economy by the international financial crisis. Tens of thousands of migrant workers at failed factories are already heading back to their farms, and economists say that the real drop in export orders may not be felt until early next year.

    Mr Hu said: “Whether we can turn this pressure into momentum, turn challenges into opportunities, and maintain steady and relatively fast economic development ... is a test of our Party's capacity to govern.”

    It is unlikely that the President expects a challenge serious enough to force the party from power. But his warning is evidence of anxiety over a threat to social stability, and is almost certainly a reminder to regional authorities that they must maintain order by stepping in to resolve popular grievances. Protests over factory closures, particularly in the most developed southern coastal zone, have erupted in recent weeks.

    Most have involved enraged workers, as their employers skip town and leave their wages unpaid. But the tens of thousands of others heading back to their rural homes for the Chinese new year in late January could add to the threat if they cannot find new jobs in the cities on their return. China's top economic planner, the chairman of the Cabinet's National Development and Reform Commission, gave warning last week that the impact of the global financial crisis was worsening and that rising job losses could fuel instability.

    China's leadership has said on several occasions over the past decade that popular anger over official corruption poses the most serious threat to continued party rule. It is unusual for a government that has placed the economy above ideology for three decades and which has ensured sharply rising incomes to issue such a stark alert over living standards.

    The message that people may not be able to expect greater prosperity with each passing year is a particularly unpalatable one for the party to deliver. Since the death of Chairman Mao and the end of the ultra-leftist chaotic Cultural Revolution in 1976, the party has effectively based its legitimacy on its ability to guarantee growth. The urban middle class has largely focused on Deng Xiaoping's exhortation that “to get rich is glorious”, setting aside any demands for more checks and balances on Communist Party rule.

    The party had begun to shift its focus towards more equitable growth and greater environmental sustainability, but this shift may face pressure as officials scramble to shore up growth - and jobs. The Government has unveiled a 4 trillion yuan (£381billion) fiscal stimulus package to counter the global financial crisis. Some of those funds - pre-allocated under other programmes - are already flowing into the economy.

    President Hu said that it was now more urgent than ever to transform China's export-driven, resourceirresponsible development, although growth was also more crucial than ever. “Under current conditions, we must keep an even tighter focus on economic development,” he said.

    Knowing that China can no longer rely on exports, the Government is eager to boost the domestic consumer demand that was a major engine of growth in the 1990s. A nationwide rebate scheme to encourage rural residents to buy more refrigerators, washing machines, colour televisions and other domestic appliances will be expanded to 14 provinces from today and nationwide from February.
    !!!

  • #2
    BBC: China factory output down sharply

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7758216.stm

    China's manufacturing output fell sharply in November, just the latest sign that the global economic slowdown is impacting on its economy.

    The official purchasing managers' index declined to 38.8 in November, from 44.6 in October, with any figure under 50 indicating a contraction.

    The fall was caused by a sharp drop in new orders, especially from abroad.

    ...

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: China: President tells party "Get ready for a rough ride from world recession"

      Should China raise wages?
      PrintShare
      Michael Pettis | Dec 2, 2008
      `
      There is a very interesting graph on page 14 of the World Bank’s December 2008 Quarterly Update on China. I am not smart enough to figure out how to reproduce the graph but I will describe it. It shows private consumption and wage share in China as a function of China’s GDP, from 1993 to 2007. From 1993 to 1996, wages rose from 50% of GDP to 54%. During that same period private consumption rose from 47% to 49% of GDP.


      Both remained more or less stable for the next three years, but then beginning in 1999 and over the next eight years wages declined from 52% to 40% of GDP. During that time private consumption declined from 47% to 37% of GDP. In almost every year except two both figures move in the same direction.

      Over the last fifteen year, in other words, private consumption as a share of GDP has been very highly correlated with the level of wages. China has very weak labor unions and worker representation, so in the fight between workers and capitalists for a share of the economic pie, workers have been on the losing end, and it is hard to see how they will do much better in the future, but it is probably in China’s best long-term interest that they do. As wages have risen and fallen as a share of GDP, so has private consumption. This isn’t a surprise, but the relationship is pretty dramatic.

      ....

      http://www.rgemonitor.com/asia-monit...na_raise_wages

      good luck with that

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: China: President tells party "Get ready for a rough ride from world recession"

        Wages have risen some 30 odd percent across China this year. More accurately "wage costs' have risen with payment of Superannuation, insurance etc as well as some actual wage rises. My impression however is that most of the rise is in forms that do not flow back into the domestic economy in the short term.

        Comment

        Working...
        X