11/16/2007 4:20:03 PM
Wait, forty percent? That's nuts. A huge difference.
11/16/2007 4:24:25 PM
Nobody is afraid of China now, but rather china 10, 15 and 25 years from now.
11/16/2007 4:29:13 PM
How does this affect growth rate calculations, if at all?
11/16/2007 4:32:29 PM
that 40% was because they had counted gold farming in their GDP
11/16/2007 4:39:40 PM
11/16/2007 4:40:05 PM
How low will adjusted growth rates? The current numbers make China something of an economic miracle. Will this reverse that completely?
11/16/2007 4:45:21 PM
That is not how it will likely work out. More likely, they dramatically over-estimated China starting position back in the late 1980s. China is 40% poorer today than we thought it was, but we have no idea how poor china really was in the late 1980s, it could have been substantially (50+%) poorer than estimated back then, which would make the growth rate since then even higher than we thought. But we will never know which way it slides, more or less miraculous growth rates. Most likely it was a cross between the two: we under-estimated the poverty in the late 1980s and underestimated the annual inflation rate. Either way, it will still be miraculous. [Edited on November 16, 2007 at 4:57 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/16/2007 4:53:06 PM
No surprises here. In fact I expected a report like this to come along sooner or later.When a country is 100% geared towards growth and there is enormous pressure from government to produce 10%+ growth results year after year, there is bound to be some exaggeration and shady accounting going on in order to make Beijing happy.
11/16/2007 6:31:24 PM
This report is interesting in the sense that it makes China's coming crisis look a bit more foreboding. China is up against both a geriatric time bomb, growing unrest in the countryside, and increasing demand for public goods by the urban sectors. Their government has only a limited time in building up a large enough economy to handle their own equivalent of the baby boomers while pacifying both a massive and poverty stricken countryside which feels left out in the economic growth and urbanites who want more quality of life investments in the cities. The fact that China is smaller than claims indicates that their economy has that much more ground to cover before any one of these crises come to a boil.
11/17/2007 2:47:04 AM
OH shit!!!Does this mean I should pull money out from my mutual funds that partially invest in China??? If there is a correction, would that affect returns on investment???Please help!!!
11/17/2007 4:41:02 AM
I had not considered that... I have no idea. Was the PPP GDP of China a strong factor in the pricing of your mutual funds? Either way, if I have heard about this then so has everyone in New York and elsewhere paid to dig up this kind of information. If your mutual fund was going to be hurt by this information then I suspect it shouls have already corrected. Anybody of a different opinion?
11/17/2007 11:37:49 AM
nope.
11/17/2007 4:14:14 PM
yeah that's what you get for investing in COMMIES
11/17/2007 9:20:44 PM
They flexed their muscle recently in Hong Kong:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,313244,00.html
11/27/2007 2:44:50 PM
^ It is a sovereign nation... I don't see what the problem is.
11/27/2007 2:52:57 PM
we are america we can do what we want durrr
11/27/2007 3:18:03 PM
I believe what made the Hong Kong incident such a pain was that it had already been preplanned but the Chinese backtracked last minute. Their last minute change of heart probably comes from one of two reasons: 1) the decision to deny the Americans port was executed by a regional official and then belatedly reversed when the central government figured out what was going on or 2) the Chinese didn't realize that this was one of the biggest holidays in the United States and tried to reverse it to prevent further weakening their image among the general American public.
11/27/2007 3:25:28 PM
It is a common courtesy to allow ships to port, regardless of who their owner is. Chinese freighters and Iranian warships are free to request docking at any port in the world, be it Europe or America. I don't understand why OEP believes American ships should not be granted the same courtesy. That said, this could be simpler than it looks. Maybe at the last minute the port authority realized that there was too much traffic already in port to permit an entire U.S. carrier group on top of it.
11/27/2007 3:39:54 PM
not for another 100 years.... china has way too many internal issues to get too huge, they forcibly control their currency too much as wellthis little thing called resentment, kinda grows in those kinda conditions
11/27/2007 3:57:22 PM
11/27/2007 5:08:17 PM
LoneSnark gives a reasonable answer and still you feel the need to be a little bitch...
11/27/2007 5:14:20 PM
You are too stupid to see the contradictions.And I am the little bitch, right? Who is the one coming in here JUST to call others a bitch, without contributing at all in the 2-week old thread? You are sick.
11/27/2007 5:16:50 PM
what is your problem?are you literally siting in a sandbox without any panties on?
11/27/2007 5:17:42 PM
joe schmoe/duke, apply your moderating powers and warn him/delete his trolling/whatever. just stop him from chit chatting up the thread. if he has any problem with me (is he jealous or what?), he can PM me.
11/27/2007 5:23:14 PM
i will and do troll the shit out of youbecause you're just a clueless whiny cunt, and it's funbut I wasn't trolling you here, at first I was just pointing out how much of an unreasonable idiot you arebut, go ahead and cry to vacuumit's not like anyone gives a shit
11/27/2007 5:25:45 PM
I don't see a contradiction either.
11/27/2007 6:06:48 PM
11/28/2007 3:16:34 PM
11/29/2007 2:17:01 AM
Hey, if there's another major war, it could well be fought over Taiwan. Assuming the US is the current dominant power and China a rising power, some theories predict a confrontation is inevitable.
11/29/2007 10:34:15 AM
the us would be foolish to go to war over taiwan without the complete support of the rest of the world
11/29/2007 10:42:29 AM
Battlefield 2 has predicted the outcome of this thread.
11/29/2007 10:43:57 AM
11/29/2007 10:47:28 AM
China snub over US ships deliberate
11/30/2007 11:10:26 AM
So it has to do with Taiwan, huh?Figures.
11/30/2007 11:18:06 AM