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http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/1228/economy-ponzi-debt-peking-china-bubble.html
On The Cover/Top Stories
The China Bubble
<CITE sizset="22" sizcache="6">Gady Epstein</CITE>, 12.10.09, 06:00 PM EST
Forbes Magazine dated December 28, 2009
China's economy is humming along in high gear, thanks to a fast-growing pile of dicey debt. Such booms tend to end badly.
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China's economy is the envy of the world. As developed nations struggle to eke out a bit of growth and to get unemployment rates out of double digits, Chinese output gallops ahead at an 8% annual rate. This $4.7 trillion economy, it seems, is the world's dynamo and the prototype for the future.
Take a close look, however, and you may come away thinking China resembles nothing so much as Japan shortly before its stock and property markets melted down two decades ago. A speculative frenzy of borrowing and bidding up is at work. If and when prices crash, there will be hell to pay.
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Signs of the times: government bureaucracies funding themselves by foisting debt on state-owned business enterprises; local governments raising capital by selling land at sky-high prices to corporations they own; and a People's Bank of China lavishing liquidity on the entire system in a way that makes Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke look downright stingy.
"It's a Ponzi scheme whose head is the central bank, and it can print money," says Victor Shih, a China expert at Northwestern University.
The U.S. government's $7.2 trillion in debt at the end of June represented 50% of gross domestic product. The Chinese government's officially disclosed $840 billion in public debt represents less than 20% of GDP. But the People's Bank of China and the treasury are also on the hook for potentially $1.5 trillion in off-balance-sheet debt owed by cities and provinces and entities they control. They're also implicitly obliged to backstop $1 trillion, both in loans that "policy banks" were directed to issue, even when they made no economic sense, and nonperforming loans that the government removed from the books of state-owned commercial banks over the past decade.
Add it up and the national government is responsible for debt equal to over 70% of 2009 GDP. That doesn't count any loans generated this year that might go sour amid a 30% increase in debt balances nationwide. (The U.S. government, in addition to its direct debt equal to 50% of GDP, is responsible for cosigning of mortgage borrowers' obligations equal to another 18% of GDP.)
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On The Cover/Top Stories
The China Bubble
<CITE sizset="22" sizcache="6">Gady Epstein</CITE>, 12.10.09, 06:00 PM EST
Forbes Magazine dated December 28, 2009
China's economy is humming along in high gear, thanks to a fast-growing pile of dicey debt. Such booms tend to end badly.
<SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/jquery/jquery.js"></SCRIPT><SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/jquery/jquery.dimensions.js"></SCRIPT><SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/jquery/ui.core.js"></SCRIPT><SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/jquery/ui/ui.tabs.js"></SCRIPT><SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/story/behavior.js"></SCRIPT><SCRIPT type=text/javascript src="http://images.forbes.com/scripts/acs/thickbox.js"></SCRIPT> <LINK rel=stylesheet type=text/css href="http://images.forbes.com/css/story/thickbox.css" media=screen><LINK rel=stylesheet type=text/css href="http://images.forbes.com/css/signup_module.css" media=screen>
China's economy is the envy of the world. As developed nations struggle to eke out a bit of growth and to get unemployment rates out of double digits, Chinese output gallops ahead at an 8% annual rate. This $4.7 trillion economy, it seems, is the world's dynamo and the prototype for the future.
Take a close look, however, and you may come away thinking China resembles nothing so much as Japan shortly before its stock and property markets melted down two decades ago. A speculative frenzy of borrowing and bidding up is at work. If and when prices crash, there will be hell to pay.
Article Controls
reprint
newsletter
comments (23)
share
del.icio.us
Digg It!
yahoo
rss
<SCRIPT src="http://d.yimg.com/ds/badge.js" ____yb="1" badgetype="text" showbranding="0">forbes:http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/1228/economy-ponzi-debt-peking-china-bubble.html?partner=yahoobuzz</SCRIPT>Yahoo! Buzz
Signs of the times: government bureaucracies funding themselves by foisting debt on state-owned business enterprises; local governments raising capital by selling land at sky-high prices to corporations they own; and a People's Bank of China lavishing liquidity on the entire system in a way that makes Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke look downright stingy.
"It's a Ponzi scheme whose head is the central bank, and it can print money," says Victor Shih, a China expert at Northwestern University.
The U.S. government's $7.2 trillion in debt at the end of June represented 50% of gross domestic product. The Chinese government's officially disclosed $840 billion in public debt represents less than 20% of GDP. But the People's Bank of China and the treasury are also on the hook for potentially $1.5 trillion in off-balance-sheet debt owed by cities and provinces and entities they control. They're also implicitly obliged to backstop $1 trillion, both in loans that "policy banks" were directed to issue, even when they made no economic sense, and nonperforming loans that the government removed from the books of state-owned commercial banks over the past decade.
Add it up and the national government is responsible for debt equal to over 70% of 2009 GDP. That doesn't count any loans generated this year that might go sour amid a 30% increase in debt balances nationwide. (The U.S. government, in addition to its direct debt equal to 50% of GDP, is responsible for cosigning of mortgage borrowers' obligations equal to another 18% of GDP.)
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