15 enero 2015

alcistas en China en 2015

Tiene muy buena pinta:

Three good reasons to be bullish on China in 2015

- when China chairs the Group of 20 nations in 2016, it can do so as a fully engaged member of the global economy.

by Jim O‘Neill 

Shutterstock/Kalinin
Halfway through a decade in which China set out to rebalance its economy, it is poised to drastically enlarge its role in the world. Let me explain why.
Back at the start of the decade, I made certain assumptions about how the so-called BRIC economies -- Brazil, Russia, India and China -- would perform in the 10 years ahead. Five years on, China is the only one of the four to have either met or possibly slightly surpassed my expectations. Assuming that China's soon- to-be-published fourth-quarter gross domestic product number will come in at or close to 7.3 percent, as many experts assume, then from 2011 to 2014, China will have averaged real GDP growth of just less than 8 percent. I had assumed it would be 7.5 percent for the full decade (as did Chinese leaders back in 2011), and China could achieve this if its economy continues to grow by 7 percent for the next five years.
If so, it will have become a $10 trillion economy in current nominal U.S. dollars, well more than half the size of the U.S. (probably even bigger, adjusting for purchasing power), twice the size of Japan, bigger than Germany, France and Italy put together and not far off one and half times the size of the other three BRIC economies put together.
Brazil and Russia, for their part, have significantly disappointed my expectations. Indeed, their economic performance supports skeptics of their long-term potential, who attributed earlier growth primarily to high commodity prices. India also disappointed, but its growth rate accelerated in 2014. With the election of Narendra Modi as prime minister and the large drop in oil prices, India still has an outside chance of meeting my expectations for the full decade. It could even grow more than China in the second half.
Many international commentators remain bearish about China, expecting real GDP growth to slip significantly below 7 percent.
The reasons cited usually involve some combination of excessive debt, inefficient lending, weaker export markets and consumers' ongoing inability to play a bigger role in the economy. All of these things are relevant, but they are challenges that Chinese policy makers are familiar with and seem eager to overcome.
What has become especially intriguing, in contrast to this pessimism, is how strongly Chinese equity markets have performed since early November. For the past few months, the Shanghai index has been the top-performing market. What happened to all those claims that Chinese equities never rise? The eternal bears now say the Chinese market is an unsustainable bubble and/or that local buyers have been essentially press-ganged into buying equities in order to make the economy look good. Perhaps illiquidity is playing some role, but it seems unlikely to be much of the story.
I can think of at least three basic reasons to be bullish on China: First, the collapse of crude oil prices will boost consumers' real incomes, helping them play a larger role in the economy.
Second, even though property prices have recently stalled and begun to fall, China will probably avoid a serious credit crunch, partly because Chinese policy makers have been more serious about restraining prices before they can collapse.
Moreover, the price decline has made real estate affordable for more Chinese.
A third reason to be optimistic is the subdued nature of inflation in China. This allows for more accommodative monetary policy going forward.
Taken together, these factors will make it easier for China to rebalance its economy -- by raising wages, increasing property-ownership rights for urban migrants and reforming pension systems.
In 2016, when China -- with its economy growing at 6 to 7 percent -- chairs the Group of 20 nations, it can do so as a fully engaged member of the global economy.
Abrazos,
PD1: 23.5 millones de automóviles se vendieron en China durante 2014, frente a los 22 millones de 2013. En 2015 se espera un incremento de ventas de un 7%... Es la nueva sociedad de consumo. No tenían de nada y la creciente clase media ya se ha comprado el teléfono móvil, ha abierto una cuenta corriente, ha empezado a hacer turismo y, por supuesto, necesita el utilitario como todo el mundo… Quedan muchos años hasta que se acabe el empuje de modernización de este poblado país…
PD2: Y muchos se equivocan en China. A los chinos les gusta lo extranjero, pero prefieren si es más barato y chino… Dunkin' Donuts will open 1,400 restaurants in China… Me recuerda cuando todas las empresas extranjeras se lanzaban a invertir en España…
PD3: GDP growth (2000-14, %)
Japón 50
Francia 55
Alemania 57
RU 67
EEUU 71
En otros países emergentes:
Brasil 103
Indonesia 176
India 238
China 386
Y en Europa, desde el inicio de la crisis: GDP Since 2008
Germany +4%
France +2%
Ireland -4%
Spain -5%
Portugal -8%
Italy -9%
Greece -25%
Overall -2%
PD4: Te he hablado varias veces del carisma de los líderes chinos, de su capacidad negociadora, de su vocación comercial… Se van de gira a cerrar acuerdos con grandes y pequeños… Tienen una clara visión global. Se abastecen de materias primas que no tienen, con acuerdos comerciales… Y usan sus excedentes de dinero para comprar por ahí fuera. Los líderes políticos apoyan todo este proceso. Nunca he visto ningún político tan volcado a realizar su cometido…

Here Is Xi’s China: Get Used To It

The prevailing mood among China-watchers in 2014 was one of anxiety and skepticism. The year began in the shadow of Chinese assertiveness in the East and South China Seas. Economic concerns quickly took over: by February the property market seemed on the verge of an epic collapse thanks to the previous year’s sharp monetary tightening. At midyear the worry was that an endless anti-corruption campaign had caused government sclerosis, making it impossible to get anything done. And by October, as the Communist Party held its law-focused Fourth Plenum, many bemoaned both the lack of evident progress on the economic reforms outlined at the prior year’s Third Plenum and the Party’s unwillingness to let its power be constrained by Western-style rule of law. All in all, one might conclude that the main quality of Xi Jinping’s government was looking tough. Achievements were sparse.
This popular reading is unduly negative. Here is another that fits the facts at least as well: After a brief scare, the property market stabilized, in large measure thanks to the removal of unreasonable restrictions on house purchases, rather than an unsustainable blowout in credit growth. By the end of the year the economy was still growing at the fastest pace of any major economy (7.3 percent), although a slowdown next year seems likely given the apparent intention to constrain credit growth. In June the Politburo approved the biggest fiscal reform in 20 years, which aims to restructure troublesome local-government debts and revamp the tax structure to cut back on perverse incentives. November saw a significant opening of the capital account, as the “Hong Kong-Shanghai Stock Connect” program permitted investors in those two financial hubs to put money directly in each others’ stock markets. Partly in anticipation of this event, Chinese stocks staged a big rally in the second half of the year which made Shanghai the world’s second best performing market in 2014. And in December the People’s Bank of China released draft rules for deposit insurance, setting limits on the government’s unlimited guarantee of the financial system and setting the stage for full deposit-rate liberalization in the next year or two.
Politically, the anti-corruption campaign did not stop with the public fingering of former security boss Zhou Yongkangbut instead shifted its focus to the People’s Liberation Army, which has a well-earned reputation as a noisome sewer of graft. While it remains hard for Xi to shake the impression that he is pursuing a vendetta against political enemies, each month that the campaign continues, and each new institution that falls prey, strengthen the argument that the anti-corruption drive is a broader effort to remake the nation’s governance structure. Another big political challenge came with the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong following the publication of rules by the National People’s Congress permitting universal suffrage in the city’s 2017 chief executive election, but with restrictive nomination rules ensuring the victor will be compliant with the Party. Despite fears of a PLA crackdown, Beijing chose restraint and let the local government handle the matter; the protests gradually faded with little impact on either business or China’s international reputation.
Last, the external front saw a string of diplomatic successes. Tensions with Japan and Southeast Asian neighbors which rose dangerously high in 2013 were dialed down and disappeared from the headlines. A landmark gas pipeline deal was concluded with Russia, on apparently excellent terms for China, ending a decade of dithering. Three large new multilateral financial institutions sprang up under Chinese leadership, with a combined capitalization of U.S.$240 billion: the New Development Bank (originally the BRICS development bank), the Silk Road infrastructure fund, and the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB). And in November Beijing hosted an impressive Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum meeting, which together with an almost simultaneous summit between Xi and President Obama resulted in a breakthrough on the Information Technology Agreement (an international high-tech free trade deal previously stymied by Chinese intransigence), a politically pivotal U.S.-China pact to cooperate on climate change, and two U.S.-China military agreements designed to reduce the risk of an accident in the East or South China Seas leading to armed conflict.
Name One Leader With a Better Record
This record is stronger than that of any other major world leader in the last two years. Even if one conservatively reckons the true growth rate at 6.5 percent or so, China’s economy is expanding at three times the rate of the healthiest developed economy, the U.S., and faster than the other big high-growth countries in Asia, India, and Indonesia. China has done far better with both cyclical and structural economic management than its rival Japan. Shinzo Abe has talked a brave game about his “three arrows,” but has delivered only one: aggressive monetary easing. Structural reform is absent and fiscal policy was disastrously captured by Ministry of Finance hawks, whose consumption-tax increase drove the country into a needless recession. Xi and his premier Li Keqiang by contrast have done a neat job of running monetary and fiscal policies that are expansive enough to promote growth, but disciplined enough (so far) to limit the excesses that nearly took the economy off the rails in the previous administration.
Diplomatically, Xi stacks up well. Early this year, pundits made much of Vladimir Putin’s geopolitical brilliance as he destabilized Ukraine and seized Crimea. This so-called brilliance was nothing more than the success of a bully who wins a bar fight because he is sober and wields a knife while his opponents are drunk and unarmed. Within weeks of this supposed triumph he was scurrying to Beijing to offer up natural gas on the cheap. Xi meanwhile has crystallized a strategy of patiently building up influence throughout Asia by big investments in infrastructure that will boost trade and economic growth. His task is a hard one: to increase China’s geopolitical reach while allaying fears that China seeks to subjugate its neighbors or disrupt the American-led international order. His solution, as illustrated by the flurry of announcements around the carefully orchestrated APEC summit, is a two-track policy that positions the nation both as a cooperative player in the existing order (ITA, climate change) and as the leader of an emergent one (AIIB, New Development Bank).
Writing the Authoritarian Playbook
Such a scorecard would earn most leaders accolades; why then does so much commentary suggest that economic reform is at a standstill, the anti-corruption campaign is nothing more than a series of gangland rubouts, that China’s diplomacy is bellicose and disruptive—in other words, that Xi is not much more than a Putin with Chinese characteristics? There are two broad reasons.
First, Xi is playing a long game, and long games are hard to read. Because so much of the foreign interest in China is economic, Western analysts habitually construe reforms in narrow economic terms; but Xi’s ambitions are far loftier and involve remaking the entire Chinese system of governance. Accepting this premise makes it easier to understand the anti-corruption campaign as a crucial first step in the reshaping of political institutions, rather than as a crude power-grab. An authoritarian reformer, Xi draws on precedents from regional history. Anti-corruption drives were central early-stage tactics for Park Chung-hee (who brutally converted South Korea from crony-capitalist basket case to developmental success story in the 1960s and ’70s) and Chiang Ching-kuo (who in the 1980s reined in the epic corruption of his Guomindang party and set Taiwan on a course for democracy and high-technology prowess). This stance also explains the primacy of fiscal reforms—essential for adjusting the balance of power between central and local governments—over the financial reforms that mesmerize the foreign business press.
As a nationalist, Xi wants a reform program whose economic beneficiaries will mainly be domestic firms. This makes him not a crony capitalist, but an ordinary political leader. Outside analysts accustomed to measuring China’s economic progress by how many benefits it grants to foreign companies, though, are naturally disappointed. Finally, most of the reforms outlined at the Third Plenum had an explicit or implicit target date for completion of 2020. (Fiscal reform, timed for completion in 2016, is a notable exception.) Given this time scale—an appropriate one for far-reaching structural adjustment—it is a bit premature to fret when none of the goals has been met in the first year. The direction is clear and concrete steps have been taken in almost every major reform area, which is quite a bit more than could be said about the aimless second term of the previous government.
At Bottom, We Just Don’t Like Commies
The other, profounder reason for enduring skepticism is the conviction among outsiders that the Chinese Communist Party runs an illegitimate regime. The assumption of illegitimacy leads to a presumption of fragility. Because China’s leaders have no electoral mandate, the story goes, they must keep economic growth running at some arbitrarily high rate (eight percent? seven percent? six percent?), or the regime will collapse. Failure to contain environmental damage will lead to protests that will cause the regime to collapse; fixing environmental damage may slow the economy to such a degree that the regime will collapse. Failure to adopt Western-style rule of law will lead to social discontent that will cause the regime to collapse. No problem can simply be a problem; it must be an existential crisis.
Here’s the truth: the Chinese state is not fragile. The regime is strong, increasingly self-confident, and without organized opposition. Its economic management is competent and pragmatic. Its responsiveness to social pressures on issues such as the environment is imperfect, but well-informed by research and public opinion surveys. It derives real legitimacy from its consistent demonstrated ability to raise living standards, provide a growing range of public goods, and maintain a high level of order while mostly letting people do what they want in their daily lives (unless what they want is to organize against the government). Like any large state, China has large problems, but the Party’s rule is not threatened by umbrella-wielding students in Hong Kong or strikingschoolteachers in Heilongjiang, any more than the American regime is threatened by rioters in Ferguson.
In short, China is a successful authoritarian developmental state which is now rich enough to start setting its own rules rather than just accepting other peoples’. That is the Xi project. To recognize this fact does not require one to celebrate it, or to ignore the costs of the authoritarian strategy. So long as it insists on clamping down on information networks, China can never become a global technological leader or anything close to it. So long as it deprives citizens of political and civil rights considered basic in virtually every other middle- or upper-income country in the world, it will remain a cultural desert and its “soft power” will be stunted. These are real costs, and big ones. But they are costs the leadership has decided to bear, and it is a fantasy to think they will be punished for this decision not to emulate the liberal democratic ideal. China, to steal John Connally’s famous phrase about the dollar, is its own country, and other people’s problem. It will develop in its own way, on its own terms, and others will just have to work with it as best they can.
PD5: China sigue haciéndose un hueco en el mundo, con mucha fuerza. Más si cabe dada la debilidad de sus competidores que pierden cuota de mercado en su favor:
PD6: Hay muchas obras públicas planteadas en China. Un ejemplo de las más gordas:
PD7: A china le viene muy bien la bajada del petróleo, le va a liberar muchos billones de yuanes al año para otras cosas:
Y sin embargo, no se debe fiar de que el precio del petróleo esté tan bajo, ya que ha salido comprando para hacerse con muchas reservas…
PD8: En China hay 3.000.000 de divorcios al año. Terrorífico. El propio Gobierno ha puesto un plan para evitar que haya tantas rupturas. El mecanismo: muchos abrazos, cuantos más mejor, si se aprieta mejor, y si se da un pellizco en el tras, pues mucho mejor…
¿Y si se pudiera recuperar el amor de algún modo y evitar el divorcio?
Ya está todo hablado con el abogado para el divorcio. Está decidido. Desde hace tiempo el matrimonio ya no funciona y parece que el divorcio será la mejor solución para los dos. O quizá no. ¿Y si se pudiera recuperar el amor de algún modo? Una campaña publicitaria en China nos cuenta cómo a veces la ruptura del matrimonio y optar por el divorcio no es la única solución. A través del lema #ibelieveinloveagain y usando el blanco y negro, este vídeo nos propone una segunda oportunidad para los matrimonios de China, y que sirve también para todos aquellos matrimonios que se estén planteando darse por vencidos.
La pareja del vídeo decide divorciarse en un mes, pero la chica pone una condición: que la abrace todos los días hasta que llegue el día de la separación. Su marido está de acuerdo y comienzan un reto al que se enfrentan casi sin saberlo: salvar su matrimonio del divorcio.
VER VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uM--u08fE0Q y quizás se debería aplicar este singular y barato método en el resto del mundo y en España en particular y tal…