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I would be more interested to hear what he proposes we do about the impending doom.
He spoke about how we cannot compete with China and India, I am not aware we ever did really compete with them, they generally make mass produced low value products,
The only problem we have is that with a growing family we'd like to trade up but refuse to get into higher debt. So teh option is to get a bigger house in a cheaper area. That's what we're currently looking for. Of course stamp duty means that the area has to be considerably cheaper so we can pay the duty without having to add it to the mortgage.
We might start to see houses with gardens and bedrooms to fit a decent size bed in....and a professional touch.
That's not the case any more, a lot of our higher value manufactured goods (from passenger lifts to electronic consumables) are being produced in China and consequently Europe has lost much of its manufacturing jobs. His point was that they (China) will soon be competing with Ireland for our "knowledge based" or "highly skilled" manufacturing and IT jobs.
They will be doing the exact same work as the irish workers, therefore irish middle income workers are directly benchmarked against chinese workers.
A consumer driven middle class is an autocracies worst nightmare. If the Chinese middle class continues to grow, the Communists will not survive. And "smooth transitions to democracy" just dont happen, even with the best will in the world - ask Gorbachev.
From my experience middle classes in China are not looking for policitical freedeom. In that case so longs as the Party continue to pump the ecomony and allow the middle class to acquire more wealth, whether it is through owning property or investing overseas.
China's stated aim is to move up to 400 million people form the countryside to the cities over the next few years. So long as the goverment can supply them with electricity and jobs there will be no pressure for change.
The middle classes in Shanghai and Bejing don't want power. They know that running a country of that size would be impossible and are also aware the the paralasis that arrives with democracy would never allow the enviromentally destructive projects like the dam on the yangtze and foreign policy in Darfur to persist. They just care about the hydro electric power the dam will bring them and the oil the arabs in darfus will continue to supply their factories and 4x4's.
I think the biggest threat to China is America defaulting on their debts. What would happen if an American Government turned around as said that they wanted ot renegotiate the trillions of dollars in government bonds that China has bought with all the cash that the consumer spending boom in the US has given them?
Refusing to negotiate could cause a recession in America which will affect Europe and the rest of the Americas which in turn will cause a slow down in demand for those consumer products that have fuelled the success of the Middle Kingdom.
Would an american president have the balls??
The middle classes in Shanghai and Bejing don't want power.
I dont entirely agree with his views on China. I think China is in for troubled times in the future. Reason?
A consumer driven middle class is an autocracies worst nightmare. If the Chinese middle class continues to grow, the Communists will not survive. And "smooth transitions to democracy" just dont happen, even with the best will in the world - ask Gorbachev.
As the % of middle class people grows, it will eventually reach a tipping point. And like a titration experiment, things will change very quickly. The autocrats will not be able to keep up with the demands of the people for a greater say and more freedom. There will be a revolution and in a country the size of China with many different ethnic provinces, it will split into many different countries ala USSR. Some of the countries will probably do well long term, others wont.
What does this mean for the economy? It means a short period of unstability and uncertainty, causing a short sharp shock to the markets. What happens afterwards depends on how things pan out.
But the idea that China, as it is today, will get more powerful and the communists becoming a major world force is a fantasy.
The nightmare scenario (for the Chinese) is the communists refusing to go quietly and using military might against there own people - thus turning a quick transition into a long drawn out devastating process.
I have some UK friends who experienced negative equity in the early 1990s and they reported the same feelings of entrapment and helplessness.
India is the big threat not China that will affect things.
Were you living in a cave when the school bus tragedy happened in Kentstown a few years ago?
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