国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion

Getting economic recipe right

By Fan Gang (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-07-02 13:59
Large Medium Small

China's active counter cyclical policy interventions in boom times has tamed overheating over the past three decades

China's GDP growth this year may approach 10 percent. 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 stabilized, 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.

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

Related readings:
Getting economic recipe right Economy likely to maintain steady, rapid growth: PBOC
Getting economic recipe right Wen: economy heading in right direction, 'relatively fast' growth seen
Getting economic recipe right Economy progressing on right path
Getting economic recipe right
 Bank stance to ease inflation risk

Inflation soared to 21 percent 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 percent of total credit 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.

   Previous Page 1 2 Next Page  

南汇区| 琼中| 泰兴市| 咸阳市| 雷波县| 涟源市| 星子县| 乌拉特中旗| 永吉县| 青海省| 宜昌市| 杭锦旗| 江北区| 建昌县| 普格县| 泰顺县| 曲水县| 南安市| 宜君县| 太和县| 定西市| 泗洪县| 丁青县| 平潭县| 江孜县| 台安县| 陆河县| 台中市| 灌云县| 揭西县| 伊通| 连城县| 旬邑县| 敖汉旗| 东阿县| 若尔盖县| 满洲里市| 榕江县| 唐山市| 兰西县| 舞阳县|