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Monday, July 5, 2010

The Chinese economy’s secret recipe

Comment by FAN GANG

CHINA’S GDP growth this year may approach 10%. While some countries are still dealing with economic crisis or its aftermath, China’s challenge is – once again – how to manage a boom.

Thanks to decisive policy moves to pre-empt a housing bubble, the real estate market has stabilised, and further corrections are expected soon.

This is good news for China’s economy, but disappointing, perhaps, to those who assumed that the government would allow the bubble to grow bigger and bigger, eventually precipitating a crash.

Whether or not the housing correction will hit overall growth depends on how one defines “hit.” Lower asset prices may slow total investment growth and GDP, but if the slowdown is (supposedly) from 11% to 9%, China will avoid economic over-heating yet still enjoy sustainable high growth. Indeed, for China, the current annualised growth rate of 37% in housing investment is very negative. Ideally, it would slow to, say, 27% this year!

China has sustained rapid economic growth for 30 years without significant fluctuations or interruption – so far. Excluding the 1989-1990 slowdown that followed the Tiananmen crisis, average annual growth over this period was 9.45%, with a peak of 14.2% in 1994 and 2007, and a nadir of 7.6% in 1999.

While most major economies in their early stages of growth suffered crises, China’s story seems abnormal (or accidental), and has elicited periodic predictions of an “upcoming crash.” All such predictions have proved wrong, but the longer the story lasts, the more people forecast a bad end.

For me, there is nothing more abnormal about China’s unbroken pattern of growth than effective macroeconomic intervention in boom times.

To be sure, both economic development and institutional reforms may cause instability. Indeed, the type of central government inherited from the old planned economy, with its overstretched growth plans, causes fluctuations, and contributed significantly to instability in the early 1980s.

But the central government must be responsible for inflation in times of overheating, lest a bursting bubble fuel unemployment. Local governments and state-owned enterprises do not necessarily have those concerns. They want high GDP growth, without worrying much about the macroeconomic consequences.

They want to borrow as much as possible to finance ambitious investment projects, without worrying much about either repayment or inflation.

Indeed, the main cause of overheating in the early 1990s was over-borrowing by local governments. Inflation soared to 21% in 1994 – its highest level over the past 30 years – and a great deal of local debt ended up as non-performing loans, which amounted to 40% of total credits in the state banking sector in the mid-1990s.

This source of vulnerability has become less important, owing to tight restrictions imposed since the 1990s on local governments’ borrowing capacity.

Now, however, the so-called “animal spirits” of China’s first generation of entrepreneurs have become another source of overheating risk. The economy has been booming, income has been rising, and markets have been expanding: all this creates high potential for enterprises to grow; all want to seize new opportunities, and every investor wants to get rich fast.

They have been successful and, so far, have not experienced bad times. So they invest and speculate fiercely without much consideration of risk.

The relatively high inflation of the early 1990s was a warning to central government policymakers about the macroeconomic risks posed by fast growth. The bubble bursts in Japan’s economy in the early 1990s, and the South East Asian economies later in the decade, provided a neighbourly lesson to stop believing that bubbles never burst.

Since then, the central government’s policy stance has been to put brakes on the economy whenever there is a tendency toward overheating. Stringent measures were implemented in the early 1990s to reduce the money supply and stop over-investment, thereby heading off hyperinflation.

In the recent cycle, the authorities began cooling down the economy as early as 2004, when China had just emerged from the downturn caused by the SARS scare in 2003. In late-2007, when GDP growth hit 13%, the government adopted more restrictive anti-bubble policies in industries (steel, for example) and asset markets (real estate), which set the stage for an early correction.

Economic theory holds that all crises are caused by bubbles or over-heating, so if you can manage to prevent bubbles, you can prevent crises. The most important thing for “ironing out cycles” is not the stimulus policy implemented after a crash has already occurred, but to be proactive in boom times and stop bubbles in their early stages.

I am not quite sure whether all Chinese policymakers are good students of modern economics. But it seems that what they have been doing in practice happened to be better than what their counterparts in some other countries were doing – a lot on “de-regulation,” but too little on cooling things down when the economy was booming and bubbles were forming.

The problem for the world economy is that everybody remembered Keynes’ lesson about the need for countercyclical policies only when the crisis erupted, after demanding to be left alone – with no symmetric policy intervention – during the preceding boom. But managing the boom is more important, because it addresses what causes crises in the first place.

In a sense, what China has been doing seems to me to be the creation of a true “Keynesian world” – more private business and freer price competition at the micro level, and active countercyclical policy intervention at the macro level.

There may be other factors that could slow down or interrupt China’s growth. I only hope that policymakers’ vigilance will prevail (and be improved upon), enabling China’s high-growth story to continue for another 10, 20 or 30 years. – © Project Syndicate

Fan Gang is Professor of Economics at
Beijing University and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, director of China’s National Economic Research Institute, Secretary-General of the China Reform Foundation, and a member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China.

Migrants from new EU states increase London homeless tally

• UK capital's homeless now 4,000, from 2,500 three years ago
• Growth in new rough sleepers attributed to economic tailspin

Rough sleeper, London
 
Rough sleeping in central London. Photograph: Martin Godwin for the Guardian

Almost a quarter of London's rough sleepers are from new EU states, a trend exacerbated by rising unemployment that is reversing a decline in homelessness in the capital, a report says .

Most of those sleeping on the streets come for a better life but many find limited opportunities, and, in some cases, become destitute. While the number of homeless British nationals in the capital has stabilised at about 2,500, citizens of the 10 central and eastern European states account for hundreds more added to the most authoritative tally of rough sleepers. The database Chain, or Combined Homeless and Information Network, which is maintained by Broadway, a homeless charity, tomorrow publishes figures showing that London ‑ the location of more than half of the country's rough sleepers ‑ has almost 4,000 homeless people, a figure up from the 2,500 listed three years ago.

The biggest single factor contributing to growth in the newly homeless is the tiny fraction of 1.5 million migrants who came in search of work from the EU's new border regions but who ended up on the streets as the economy went into a tailspin.

These people are often left to fend for themselves; unless they have worked full-time for a year, migrants from former eastern bloc countries that joined the EU in 2004 and 2007 have no right to public funds and only limited access to services. The outcome is often isolation and homelessness.

British charities say that while the tide of largescale migration from eastern Europe has largely reversed, many people are staying on thinking there is a only a limited safety net in their own country.

This assertion has been denied by Krzysztof Lisek, a Polish MEP who has helped homeless Poles in the UK. He said that if it were a question of social security then "the migrants would probably choose the Nordic countries".

Last week during a series of interviews in London where homeless people queued for breakfast provided by charities, many of those on the streets shrugged off the hardships. Most sleep outside, often on church steps. They scavenge at markets because "so much good food is thrown away", and their days are spent traipsing between shelters or begging; an hour seems to yield a less than a pound.

"You can buy a baguette after a few hours of begging," said Roman Maciejewski, a 39-year-old former hospital porter from Poznan, west Poland, who arrived this year looking for work but ended up sleeping under a tarpaulin. "It is a open air apartment by the Thames. The weather is much harder in Poland than here."
Broadway's chief executive, Howard Sinclair, said: "Clients live on bendy buses, scrounge for scraps, have to endure snow and rain. The life expectancy of a homeless person on London streets is 42. That is not something that should be happening in 21st century London."

Sinclair said that if the problem were not tackled, Boris Johnson, London's mayor, would find it "very difficult" to make good his promise that by 2013 that no one would be living on the city's streets. Unlike the government figures, which count the number on the streets on one night of the year, and which have been criticised by some homeless charities for providing only a partial snapshot of the problem, Chain tallies the homeless throughout the year.

The spurt in rough sleeping has led to some radical measures. Since June 2007 more than 1,000 eastern and central Europeans have been flown home, at taxpayer expense. Many flock to the capital's most prosperous parts; the City of London "reconnected" 130 people with their families last year.

Ewa Sadowska, chief executive of Barka UK, a project that aims to help European migrants, said that those arriving here did not realise that their own governments now helped homeless people. She said that in Poland homeless people were paid cash benefits and got free access to services in "social integration centres".

She added: "Many of the homeless come from a generation that went through communism, they are scarred and don't trust authority. They drink and find a group that behaves like them. It becomes a lifestyle, and not an easy one to get out off." 
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Sunday, July 4, 2010

Internet affairs a home wrecker

By RACHAEL KAM and SEREAN LAU
newsdesk@thestar.com.my

KUALA LUMPUR: Online social networking sites can be a good place to meet new friends or even seek life partners but they have also become a breeding place for divorces.

Marriage counsellor Yvonne Lee said the Internet had been cited as one of the reasons for divorces of late.

“The Internet can trigger marital problems or worsen a couple’s existing problems. It has opened up more choices for those looking for partners, regardless of whether they are single or married,” explained Lee, a premarital programme trainer at the National Population and Family Development Board in Kuala Lumpur.

Lee, a director of Enrich Counsel-ling and Therapy Centre, said that while the Internet could be one of the causes for divorce, it was still the quality of the relationship that determined the outcome of a marriage.

One in 30 new clients the centre counsels every two months has cited the Internet as one of the reasons for their marital break-up.

A victim of an “online” affair, Ann discovered that her husband, Jason, had registered himself with some foreign match-making and social networking websites to meet other women.

“I thought Jason was having an affair with a woman from China but apparently there were several of them,” she said, adding that they would exchange lurid sex talk and even nude pictures online.

Jason, an engineer, has since left his wife and two children for a married woman he befriended online.
Hillary, 33, from Kuala Lumpur, was pregnant with her third child last year when she discovered her husband’s affair with another woman, a Malaysian working in Hong Kong.

She not only found suggestive emails on his smartphone and computer but also photographs of the mistress with her husband.

Albert, a psychologist, admitted having affairs with at least six women he met on Facebook and three others on Skype before his wife found out about his infidelity and divorced him.

He had joined social networking sites to locate his former university mates and soon added anonymous women as his friends.

Sometimes, it is not the husbands who cheat.

Susan, 42, a mother of a 12-year-old girl dropped a bombshell on her husband recently — she wanted a divorce to marry a Frenchman of African origin whom she befriended on Facebook. The couple run a small retail outlet in Malacca.

Consultant psychologist Valerie Jaques said most couples who cited Internet love affairs as the reason for divorce were already facing some problems.

She added that these problems, whether physical, emotional, psychological or social in nature or a combination, could result in loneliness.

“A lonely person who receives attention via the Internet or face-to-face will be extremely vulnerable, and this can develop into a more serious relationship,” said Jaques from Integrated Psychological Network Sdn Bhd.

“People fall for nice words. Lonely people will be more vulnerable to nice but empty promises.”