There's as many working in Chindia building infrastructure to meet the demands of industrialists for new factory space.
Factory space to manufacture goods to sell to the west.
It's a simply fact that over the next few decades, hundreds of millions of manufacturing processes will shift to Chindia. Chindia needs to spend like crazy in order to prepare the industrial base for this move.
Logistics problems have been slowing the pace of outsourcing but the trend for global wage arbitrage remains intact. However, I do not see why they need to "spend like crazy" to prepare for a decade long trend. Surely new factories and infrastructure will be deployed as needed. Outsourced factories still need a market to sell to but the US consumer has stopped buying. Look at yesterday's same-store sales figures. This during a period when revolving credit (unsecured credit - credit cards, personal loans) grew at its fastest rate in over four months. Smacks of desperation.
A 5% reduction in US demand will therefore not necessarily cause any contraction in Chindia. Their economies will simply grow at 4-7% rather than 10-12%
Economic growth at 4-7% would cause major problems for a Chinese economy that is overheating. They need to grow by at least 8% to generate enough jobs to satisfy population growth. That the economy has been growing well in excess of that is leading to some major inflationary problems.
A recession in the USA will speed up, not stop the process. Strapped for cash, companies will accelerate their plans to offshore production from the West to Chindia, thus boosting their individual company's bottom line at the expense of the nation's.
Actually it will stop it. No company is going to engage in a major capital expansion during a recession. Finance is harder to raise as nervous investors demand a greater return for perceived risk, market capitalisation will be lower etc. There will be massive lay-offs in US factories but they won't immediately re-open factories in the China until after the recession.
Bottom line: Chindia will immediately hoover up any oil that the West doesn't buy first. There will be no meaningful, sustained drop in oil prices
What do you mean by first - crude spot prices are set on an internationally traded market. There's no preference given to the US. Prices being paid for materials by manufacturers are at record highs across the board yet not a single commodity is listed as being in short supply. This includes oil and refined oil products. Think about it for a second. There is already more oil available than either the West or any BRIC country is buying. During a period when both China and the US are extending their strategic oil reserves.
On Wednesday, the value of shares traded on the Shanghai Composite exceeded the rest of Asia combined (including Japan). Be interesting to see how willing China is to "hoover up any oil the West doesn't buy first" when that bubble collapses.