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China: The Great Red Hope

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03/12/09 London, England The Great Red Hope. We’ll get to the commies in a just a moment. First, a question: what happened to Tuesday’s big rally?

Yesterday, stocks held steady. The dollar lost ground. And gold rose back over $900.

So, are we at the beginning of a major rally…or did it end in a single day? We wait to find out.

In the meantime, let’s look at China.

Yes, dear reader, the whole world turned its lonely eyes to the reds: “Touch us!” “Heal us!”

China, with its bumptious population…its boisterous growth…and its boney-handed politicians…is the world’s hope for a fast recovery.

“China will the first out of the slump,” says our old friend Jim Rogers. Jim has staked his fortune, his fame and his future on two things: commodities and China.

Of course, the two go together. If China can continue to grow, she will demand more and more commodities. Prices for wheat, iron, tin, coal – just about everything – will rise as China raises living standards. Or not.

China doesn’t even need to grow wealthier in order to use more commodities. Like her saffron neighbor to the South, India, her population is so large, and growing by such huge numbers, she struggles just to keep up. One percent population growth is not a lot. But one percent of 1.3 billion is 13 million people – equal to America’s entire jobless population. And that, of course, is an increase that happens every year.

The Middle Kingdom, as it is known, is thought to have an advantage in the fight against depression. It doesn’t have to argue with Republican lawmakers, civil libertarians, or sensible people of any sort. If the reds want to do something – no matter how inspired or moronic it is – they can usually do it.

But here is a fork in the road. So we will take it. We don’t follow events in China the way Jim does. Maybe he’s right; maybe China will be the first one out. But we have a feeling that William Pesek might be right too. The idea that China will tug the whole world out of depression is “pure fantasy,” says he.

“Chinese exports slump 25% as demand wilts,” says a headline in the Financial Times this morning. Not hard to figure out why. Remember, this is a depression, not a recession. In a recession, consumers take a breather…orders slide…and exports decline. But it is only temporary…and not catastrophic.

But let us follow the export trail to see if we can figure out what is going wrong.

Let’s see… there’s the factory in Quangzhou. Hmmm…it has cut its production schedule. And there’s the truck leaving the factory…only 3/4 full. Orders have fallen off… It arrives at the harbor in Hong Kong. And there it finds the shipping schedule has been cut (along with prices) drastically. After the container is placed onboard, the ship hoists anchor and is off. Two weeks later – for it is sailing more slowly than it used to, in order to cut expenses by preserving fuel – it arrives in Long Beach…where it is quickly unloaded and put on a truck that will take it to a warehouse, where the container will be opened and its contents off-loaded onto other trucks for distribution to retailers all over the United States. The whole process takes less time than it did a few months ago – simply because there’s less traffic and less back-up at every step. When finally the merchandise gets onto the shelves, it finds fewer shoppers looking it over and fewer buying.

And here we find the source of China’s troubles…and the reason it cannot quickly recover. It has set up its economy to provide end products for foreigners. Those foreigners can’t and won’t buy like they used to; they don’t have the money. The credit bubble has popped. It’s over.

Well, maybe the Chinese could lend U.S. consumers money? Ah…there lies a trap. U.S. consumers have more than twice the debt they usually carry. The last thing they want is more. They’ve seen how hard it can be to pay back debt – especially when you lose your job. Unemployment in the United States is already over 8%. It will probably be over 10% by the end of the year. In four states, it is over 10% already. Each percentage point represents about 1.5 million people who aren’t buying many Chinese goods.

Well, maybe the Chinese could make stuff for their own people? Yes, they could…and they will. But that’s what makes this a depression and not a recession. The whole structure of the economy must change. In the photo accompanying the FT article, for example, it shows a factory in Beijing that makes a third of the world’s violins – almost all of them exported. Sure, the Chinese could decide to take up the violin en masse. But that’s the sort of cultural change that takes time. Or, the factory could switch to making laundry cabinets. Again, it is possible…but it takes time. And the adjustment is painful. The violin makers need to be retrained. Many will be fired as the factory searches for a new product line. Without revenues, perhaps it will go broke…and then be repurchased at auction by a laundry cabinet manufacturer.

This is the process of creative destruction that Schumpeter described. One industry is destroyed so that another might be created. It is what depressions are good for. It is what we all face now – including China. Maybe especially China.

Won’t the Chinese able to do it faster – since the commies are still in control?

Oh dear reader…you are treading on our soul when you ask a question like that! If we learned anything in the last 100 years it was that command economies don’t work very well. Compared to the free market – with its elegant intelligence and infinite information – central planning is clumsy, ham-fisted and ultimately unproductive. The commanders are invariably morons. And the commanded spend their time and energy not doing their bidding, but finding ways to avoid doing it.

Keith Fitz-Gerald at Money Map Report believes China is the main engine of world growth, and that role seems likely to continue – in spite of the current difficulties the emerging Asian giant appears to be facing.

To find out how you can turn China’s growth into a boon for your portfolio, join Keith there from April 21-May 6, 2009 when he’ll introduce you to the best opportunities on the ground.

http://www.opportunity-travel.com/china/

*** Meanwhile in the West…the parasites and wealth destroyers are angling for other peoples’ money. Jamie Dimon, head of JP Morgan, urged lawmakers not to behave like a “dysfunctional family.” Instead, they should get behind the president, he said. ‘And start shoveling out the money,’ he didn’t say.

Yes, the president is asking for ‘shovel ready,’ projects…and everyone seems to have a shovel now. Browsing the Internet, we found an ad:

“Trillions in Government Grants Available…here’s how to get yours.”

There, you discover that the government is giving away “grants,” and all you have to do is apply for one. Following the headlines is a series of testimonials from people who’ve actually gotten money “you don’t have to pay back” from Uncle Sam.

“Maybe it’s just a scam,” Elizabeth suggested when we described it to her.

“That’s the sad thing…it’s probably real. The feds are so eager to give away money that people probably can get a ‘grant’ if they put their minds to it.

Rarely have the leeches had so much public support. “This is an emergency,” says a typical headline in the financial press, “government has to get its act together.”

And so the fix is in. Too bad it only makes things worse.

*** Earlier this week, Obama overturned the Bush-era policy that limited the federal tax dollars for embryonic stem cell research.

This is big news for scientists and investors alike. Breakthrough Technology Alert’s Patrick Cox explains:

“Egyptian scientists have announced that adult stem cells can prevent diabetes-associated heart dysfunction. I’ve already written about the successful treatment of multiple sclerosis by rebooting the immune system with stem cells. Within a week of that news, a similar procedure was shown to successfully treat AIDS.

“The stem cells used in the AIDS therapy came from a donor with a rare genetic resistance to the disease. It worked so well, in fact, that the patient no longer takes AIDS drugs. The donor stem cell transplant also cured his leukemia. This is reality, not science fiction.

“The success of the AIDS SC therapy has huge implications. The most important is that it demonstrates the potential of genetically engineered stem cells to give individuals new immunities and biological capabilities.

“This is critical because humans are born with a broad range of genetic strengths and vulnerabilities. Now, we’re seeing that those strengths can be transferred via stem cells. These donor cells will give your body the ability to knock out diseases you would not otherwise have the ability to fight. Eventually, designer stem cells will be used not only to cure, but to enhance our physical states. Immunities to cancers, Alzheimer’s and other diseases will be routinely delivered via GE stem cells as a new form of inoculation.

“The company I’m recommending to my Breakthrough Technology Alert readers this month, in fact, is on the cutting edge of the convergence between genetic engineering and stem cell technologies. Fortunately for early investors, it has been largely ignored by the financial media. However, there are indicators that this is about to change.”

*** Alan Greenspan rose to his own defense this week. It’s not his fault the world economy is a mess, he said. The report from Bloomberg:

“Given the decoupling of monetary policy from long-term mortgage rates, accelerating the path of monetary tightening that the Fed pursued in 2004-2005 could not have prevented the housing bubble,” Greenspan said.

It matters “a great deal” to understand what caused the bubble in the real-estate market, he said.

“If it is monetary policy that is at fault, then that can be corrected in the future, at least in principle,” Greenspan wrote. “If however, we are dealing with global forces beyond the control of domestic monetary policy makers, as I strongly suspect is the case, then we are facing a broader issue.”

Keep reading for today’s guest essay by Ron Paul, who has famously stood up time and time again to the Sir Alan about his monetary policy and the move away from sound money when he was at the helm of the Fed.

That does it for us today. Until tomorrow,

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

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Bill Bonner

Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America's most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily ReckoningDice Have No Memory: Big Bets & Bad Economics from Paris to the Pampas, the newest book from Bill Bonner, is the definitive compendium of Bill’s daily reckonings from more than a decade: 1999-2010. 

 

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8 Responses

  1. MyLessThanPrimeBeef said

    One option China should think about is perhaps she should become America’s 52nd state.

    Think about it. Their 1 billion proletariat had to toil for years to earn a trillon in foreign reserves when America, the most powerful country in the world, can simply snatch it out of thin air. In addition, being Americans means you will be stimulated with trillions of money you haven’t earned.

    And while China can only have 2 senators as the newest addition to the great empire, she can control up to 70 to 80% of the House of Representatives with her sizeable population. And most importantly, getting a son or daughter of Dragon elected to the White House would be easier than a stroll through a garden in Suzhou.

    on March 12, 2009.
  2. Fx. Point of Impact said

    Is it possible Mr. Greenspan, with his statement of:

    “If it is monetary policy that is at fault, then that can be corrected in the future, at least in principle,” Greenspan wrote. “If however, we are dealing with global forces beyond the control of domestic monetary policy makers, as I strongly suspect is the case, then we are facing a broader issue.”

    might be implying that he is referring to the politically incorrect to refer to ‘elephent in the room’ (global forces beyond the control of domestic monetary policy makers) population policy issue, such as:

    “But the agenda-setting process seems useful only if we consider what the media do place on the agenda. This study shows that agenda-setting may have a dark side, when we consider what the media do not cover. To generalize from this study, it seems likely the media have a blind spot regarding the basic layers of multilayered causality. The deep causes that drive daily events remain off the agenda. Certainly this is the case with population growth, but such causal dissociation may keep many other deep-seated causes of social problems off the agenda.”
    ~ ‘WHAT BLEADS, LEADS’?: Media’s Population Agenda & ‘War on Terror’ Outcome: “HOW and WHY Journalists Avoid the Population-Environment Connection”, by Univ. of SW Louisiania ~

    or phrased as:

    Sometimes you may wonder: Why are nations so committed to economic growth at nearly any cost? Why do central banks continue to pump in so much money long after they recognize the inevitability of its inflationary consequences? Why has GDP growth become the supreme icon of most governments, businesses and investors? When debts and deficits run amuck, why dont our leaders just slow down, take a breather, and focus on finding a more stable path? “Your answers may be varied. But if you trace back through the chain of cause and effect, you will always return to one single, overriding factor: The population explosion colliding with finite resources. More mouths to feed. More demand. More pressure to perpetuate growth. More inflation.”
    ~ US Naval Services Long-Term Study: Global Tipping Points on Food, Water, Energy, Pollution, Population & Natural Resources & The Population Explosion ~

    Just wondering?

    JMCSwan

    on March 12, 2009.
  3. JCD said

    Yes, Obama did overturn the Bush policy of not contributing public funds to stem cell research, but you neglected to say that the money was only withheld for *embryonic* stem cell research to begin with….which so far has yielded no results. Not a single scientific breakthrough has been made with embryonic stem cells. Methinks those who shovel money into that are going to be sorry too. And in the meantime we just created a huge market for aborted fetuses – not good.

    on March 12, 2009.
  4. black 3006 said

    Weird. The authors at The Daily Reckoning preach “freedom”. So what do they do with their free speech forum? Shut it down! Laughing

    This is likely a blind spot in Libertarianism. People have liberty as long as they behave a certain way and do what their told.

    on March 12, 2009.
  5. David said

    Thumbs down on embryonic stem cell research …and on the DR for appearing to cheer it and attempt to profit from it. (Though Cox is actually discussing adult stemcell research from what is shown.)

    Thanks to Obama for forcing me to participate in what is to me at least the first-cousin to infanticide through my tax dollars. This is truly where they will reap a Day of Reckoning.

    I’m beginning to look forward to it now, even though I’ll share in it.

    on March 13, 2009.
  6. Joe Martinez said

    And then there are the new factories that Americans built in China during 2007 and 2008 that now sit idle. Looks like more write downs are coming are way.

    on March 13, 2009.
  7. axbucxdu said

    According to CNBC, the turnaround is already occurring. It’s on TV, so it’s got to be true. Stock market rallies, China rising, I agree with Rogers.

    If there is one, it’s Chinese and Indian aggregate demand that’s the blindspot in the Austrian view of our current macroeconomic circumstances. I’m not saying the Austrians are wrong by any means, but that any analysis that tiptoes past the untapped demand in these two countries is bound to be woefully incomplete, and therefore inaccurate for this reason…

    Unfortunately, people don’t generally distinguish between theories that are flat out wrong and those that are misunderstood…through no fault of the ideas, but only of their purveyors’ inability to fully understand the new economies of scale, (e.g. imagine the size of global economic output if ChIndia possessed just 25% of U.S. per cap GDP-that alone adds two US economies to world output) Austrian economic thought is about to get blasted to Mars…life ain’t fair…

    on March 14, 2009.
  8. axbucxdu said

    And another thing. Herr Bonner is lately wont to say that we’re in a depression: “The whole structure of the economy must change.” Fair enough, but that works several ways, not only can the Chinese opt to produce for their own population, but Americans’ new found thrift can also inadvertently self-finance the government’s new “bamboozles”.

    Domestic non-financial debt owed by households and non-financial businesses, i.e. the economy that’s real , that works for a living, now totals (in 2008 according to http://www.federalreserve.gov/Releases/Z1/Current/z1r-2.pdf) 24.917 trillion.

    As this balance is amortised and the debt service & debt retirement flows return from those real economic entites to the note holders, I’m left wondering where the issuers (read banks) will invest this now surplus cash. Make no mistake, to remain going concerns, they will have to turn these flows over into new assets (debt). They can’t tread water indefinitely.

    As is well known, both households and non-financial businesses are now tapped out. That leaves only the imaginary economy: guvmint. As is also well known, governments have an endless supply of big, notoriously bad, and thus exorbitantly expensive ways to waste these flows.

    All it takes are subtle changes in these massive financial flows to fundamentally and permanently alter the economic landscape. Financial reset is going to occur, just not in the ways Austrians like Bonner expect…things are NEVER what they seem…

    Think of it: large-scale debt retirement during a period of rather elevated inflation…lots ‘o cash with nowhere to go…but to governments…almost like they planned it this way…

    on March 15, 2009.

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