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EU: China’s overcapacity worsening

GoFlyKiteNow

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Friday November 27, 2009
EU Chamber: China’s overcapacity worsening
Stimulus package has negative effect.

BEIJING: China needs far-reaching structural reforms to root out industrial overcapacity, which is doing untold damage to domestic growth and the global economy, according to a report released yesterday.

Excess capacity was a long-standing scourge in China, but its impact had become ever more destructive as a result of the global financial trauma, said the study by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

“The crisis has throttled demand for exports from China at a time when even more investment, in the form of the Chinese government’s massive stimulus package, is being pumped into building new plants and adding unnecessary capacity.

“As a result, the problem is actually getting worse in many industries,” the report said.

The State Council acknowledged in August that overcapacity was blighting many industries and that local governments were expanding capacity “blindly”.

The cabinet subsequently singled out iron and steel, cement, electrolytic aluminium, glass, coal chemical, polysilicon and wind power equipment as the worst offenders and announced steps to rein in their expansion.

“The European Chamber welcomes these very positive measures, but we also caution that much remains to be done to bring overcapacity under control and to create the economic and political conditions to ensure that it does not re-emerge in the future,” the report said.

By wasting resources and eroding profits, overcapacity deters research and development and encourages firms to cut corners on health and safety standards as well as environmental protection.

Furthermore, the creation of unneeded capacity raises the risk of non-performing loans for banks that finance the investment. It also generates trade tensions as producers offload their surplus production overseas at cut-rate prices, according to the study. “Since trade frictions hamper supply chains, this is a major threat to globalisation’s positive effects,” it said.

To curb overcapacity, China must shift from investment and export-led growth and focus more on domestic consumption and services, the Chamber argued. — Reuters


To that end, it made a series of recommendations that amount to a root-and-branch overhaul of China’s economic model. They include:

·To redistribute national income from firms to households; state-owned enterprises should disgorge dividends for the government to spend on social security, health and education instead of ploughing profits back into fresh investment;

·Companies must slash capital expenditure in coming years;

·Remove subsidies for energy and other inputs, provided indirectly by households, to which manufacturing has become addicted; increase resource and environmental charges;

·Currently low interest rates subsidise bank borrowing by manufacturers and must rise to reflect the real cost of capital; let the yuan’s exchange rate gradually appreciate; and

·Reform the fiscal system to give more funding opportunities to local governments, which now compete to attract industrial investment for the tax revenues and jobs it generates.

This was the main macroeconomic reason for overcapacity, according to 56% of respondents to an European Chamber survey conducted for the report, followed by loose lending policies. The top microeconomic reasons were firms’ high growth expectations, followed by lax enforcement of environmental rules. — Reuters
 
Foreign Capital Worries and Debt Dodging in China
Central News Agency


TAIPEI—Vice president of China's Supreme People's Court Xi Xiaoming said that more and more foreign capital is being withdrawn and many business owners who filed bankruptcy have fled from China to avoid debts.

Xi is quoted in Hong Kong’s "Wen Wei Po" stating that the conflicts and disputes caused by international and domestic macro-economic environmental changes have increased, and are clearly reflected in the judicial system.

Xi said the survey reveals the number of cases related to loans have increased dramatically. The portion of the cases involving intentional breach of contract increased as well. More fraudulent loan cases were reported.

Survey also shows cases related to foreign investment withdrawing capital and abandoning assets in China has spread across the country; the number of cases related to the problems of state owned enterprises reform increased; and the number of cases related to filing of bankruptcy by private enterprises significantly increased.

More than half of the private enterprise owners that filed bankruptcy chose to flee the country.

For example, in the case of a Korean-owned supermarket, the business suddenly closed on December 25, 2008 without any prior notification. The three Korean owners happened to disappear.

According to a staff of Chaoyang Court, where the Ximaide case trial was held on February 17, the court accepted 32 cases involving claim payments from the Korean supermarket. The plaintiffs are dozens of enterprises, workers and suppliers affected by the sudden closure. This incident is estimated to affect more than 200 people and possible losses exceeding one million yuan (US$146,374).

In terms of foreign investment, the major areas, such as the Pearl River Delta, Yangtze River Delta, Shandong Peninsula, experienced massive amounts of foreign capital withdrawal last year.

Public information shows that among the foreign investments lost, many of them were South Korean enterprises, especially in the Shandong Peninsula. According to official statistics, the number of businesses withdrawing from the country have exceeded 200 in these past few years.

In the Guangdong region, statistics show that in the first 10 months of last year, there were more than 251 cases of group incidents involving more than 30 people over loss of wages due to the business owner fleeing. This is a 92 percent increase compared to the previous year. Such cases mainly happened in the export-oriented and labor-intensive processing and manufacturing plants in the Pearl River Delta region.

In Zhejiang Province, over 1,200 enterprises have declared bankruptcy. Approximately 30 percent of the business owners chose to flee the country, including most of the foreign invested enterprises.

For example, the president of one foreign express delivery company in Jiangsu Province disappeared along with the company’s money, which caused 38 people to become unemployed. Another instance occurred in southern Jiangsu Province when senior directors of four foreign enterprises suddenly disappeared at the same time. All production by these companies came to a halt.
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china is going down.

USA is going down.

japan is going down.

we are all doom.

let go and see avatar 3d to forget the trouble.
 
fuck lah. Europe is still subsidising their farmers and causing the african nations' agriculture industry to be stagnant cos cannot export to Europe. angmoh damn good at talking cock.
 
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