Krugman posted an excerpt from the WSJ (no actual link because I’m too lazy to register) talking about Chinese energy consumption statistics and implications for its stated GDP growth. Electricity demand is declining, but industrial value added growth is increasing. This seems to go against all past trends, and leads some observers to speculate that the government is cooking the books. The fact that China’s association of electricity generators has simply stopped publishing data is not overly reassuring.
This leads me back to one of my biggest problems with, and concerns about China. While cheery news from Beijing helps our stock markets in the short term, it also blinds us to potential future problems. As I’ve said many times before, I worry about the implications for the West of political turbulence in China since we are so dependent on it for financing and production. If GDP is actually growing at a much slower pace than the Chinese government suggests, problems which need to be addressed will grow, and the longer they are left to fester, the harder they will be to solve.
Chinese transparency would help everyone. Since it does seem to be forthcoming, Western countries need to at least prepare some form of contingency plans. Being unprepared for the loss of our bank and factory at the same time for me spells problems ahead. I suppose that speaking of this publically is perhaps untenable, but I sincerely hope that there are a few paranoid people working in a dark basement somewhere in the State Department writing plans for when things go bad.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
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