^What is wrong with that? We blow up 15-20 year old stadiums all the time, just look at the Charlotte Coliseum. China is growing very rapidly, it shouldn't be surprising that they tear down older buildings to build fancy new ones, most of them were even private companies doing it. When you are growing as fast as China is, buildings become outdated very quickly.
9/27/2010 10:33:49 AM
From what the page said, at least some of the demolitions were due to regulatory uncertainty: someone built what they thought they had a right to build, only some years later to have the government come in and demolish it because some bureaucrat decided the construction had been illegal in some way. This too happens in America.
9/27/2010 11:11:52 AM
I'd say it happens about anywhere, nothing too amazing.[Edited on September 27, 2010 at 12:40 PM. Reason : ]
9/27/2010 12:39:51 PM
Nothing particularly shocking. Only thing that gains notice is that since it's done in China, the scale is much larger even compared to the United States.
9/27/2010 1:43:43 PM
Well, what it is proof of, is that China is now just like the rest of us, with a private capitalist economy, and a regulatory state eager to smash the product it produces.
9/27/2010 1:59:00 PM
No, it's not proof of that. Read the article. China destroys good buildings so they can build a new building and maintain their absurdly high GDP. It's the broken window fallacy in practice, which this country is more than familiar with.
9/27/2010 2:03:30 PM
9/27/2010 3:19:57 PM
No, Kris, while you are probably right that this is not a broken window situation, you are wrong that it such a fallacy cannot increase GDP. If the government conscripted the entire workforce to make rope and set an absurdly high price for rope, then GDP could be huge, while we all starve to death. Governments do lots of stuff that counts towards GDP, such as war, that just consumes resources while leaving everyone worse off.
9/27/2010 5:13:57 PM
9/27/2010 11:00:21 PM
10/20/2010 10:07:43 PM
10/20/2010 11:37:12 PM
10/21/2010 12:28:04 AM
they just jacked some of our stealth tech... their damn hackers plague the world... time to put a tech beat down on them...
1/25/2011 10:58:16 PM
I don't particularly have a problem with them stealing the stealth stuff. That is to say, I'm not thrilled that they have it (or that we let it slip), but I can't exactly blame them for grabbing it. It's what I'd do.I am a bit suspicious about the timing in all of this. They unveil it right before their big diplomatic mission over here, and we convict the guy who sold them the information just a few days later?There was some interesting commentary that the unveiling of the plane (and its timing) may be indicative of a split between the PLA and the civilian and diplomatic actors in the country. Supposedly when Gates mentioned the plane to the premier, he acted like he didn't know what Gates was talking about -- even though by then it was public knowledge over here. That particular development could be worrisome.
1/25/2011 11:42:34 PM
Imitation is the truest form of flattery.
1/26/2011 10:33:18 AM
^^ The growing consensus seems to be that the Chinese government is becoming more factionalized, particularly the PLA. President Hu still commands great respect, but he's more a board chair trying to wrangle a whole bunch of stovepiped departments than a unified leader like his predecessors Deng and Jiang. I don't think the heir apparent will do any better.
1/26/2011 10:44:51 AM
That probably a good thing. Let them fight amongst themselves. Although it does get bad for us if the PLA decides that the best way to assert itself is to play with its new toys.
1/26/2011 11:26:30 AM
Actually, it's a problem for the very reason you state. The Politburo and civilian leadership always helped keep the PLA in check. With their grip weakening on the military, the generals are becoming much more assertive and aggressive, and unfortunately for us, that's usually means an anti-American sentiment. I don't think this means they're going to start waging war without the CCP's approval, but when tensions are high, accidents can happen. We don't need something like a repeat of the EP-3 incident back in 2001.If there is a silver lining though, it's that their aggression has completely undermined Chinese efforts to play the whole "peaceful rise" game with their neighbors and have driven them closer to the United States (South Korea, Japan, and Vietnam are a few examples).
1/26/2011 12:14:18 PM