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Mostrando postagens com marcador China. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador China. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 30 de agosto de 2023

O tamanho da crise econômica da China - Paul Krugman (NYT, OESP)

O Brasil seria mais impactado por uma crise chinesa do que os EUA (pouco) ou o Japão e a Alemanha, que vendem muito para a China. Ou seja, o Brasil é um perdedor se a China entrar em recessão. 

O tamanho da crise econômica da China
Paul Krugman

O Estado de S. Paulo | Internacional
30 de agosto de 2023
Paul Krugman 
É colunista e ganhador do prêmio Nobel de Economia de 2008
The New York Times

Graças à baixa exposição da economia dos EUA, é difícil que problemas chineses se tornem globais

O efeito da crise seria maior em países que vendem mais para a China, como Alemanha e Japão

A s agruras econômicas dos anos pós-pandêmicos têm ocasionado intensos debates intelectuais e sobre políticas. Algo com que quase todos concordam, porém, é que a crise póscovid se assemelha pouco à crise financeira de 2008. Mas a China – segunda maior economia do planeta – parece balançar à beira de uma crise muito parecida.

Eu não confio no meu próprio entendimento sobre a China para julgar se o país vive seu momento Minsky, o ponto em que todos de repente se dão conta de que uma dívida insustentável é, de fato, insustentável. E, de fato, duvido que alguém ? incluindo as autoridades chinesas ? saiba responder a essa questão.

Mas acho que somos capazes de responder a uma pergunta mais condicional: se a China realmente passa por uma crise em estilo 2008, ela transbordará para o restante do mundo? E a resposta é clara: não. Por maior que seja a economia chinesa, os EUA estão pouco expostos aos problemas chineses. Antes de chegar aí, contudo, falemos sobre por que a China de 2023 se assemelha às economias americana e europeia de 2008.

BOLHA. A crise de 2008 foi ocasionada pelo estouro de uma bolha imobiliária transatlântica. Os efeitos foram amplificados por perturbações financeiras, especialmente o colapso dos ditos "shadow banks" – instituições que agiam clandestinamente como bancos, criando riscos de uma corrida bancária, mas prescindindo de regulamentações e de redes de segurança.

E agora chega a China, com um setor imobiliário ainda mais inchado que o dos países ocidentais em 2008. A China também tem um atribulado setor de "shadow banking", além de problemas peculiares, como dívidas enormes de governos locais.

A boa notícia é que a China não é a Argentina ou a Grécia, que deviam quantias imensas a credores estrangeiros. A dívida em questão aqui é de dinheiro que a China deve para si mesma. E deveria ser possível, em princípio, para o governo nacional resolver a crise por meio de alguma combinação entre resgates de devedores e abatimentos para credores.

Mas o governo da China tem competência para gerir o tipo de reestruturação financeira? As autoridades chinesas têm determinação ou clareza intelectual para fazer o que é necessário? Eu me preocupo especialmente com a segunda questão.

A China precisa substituir o investimento imobiliário insustentável por maior demanda de consumo. Mas alguns relatos sugerem que autoridades chinesas mais graduadas continuam suspeitas em relação a gastos de consumo "supérfluos" e resistem à ideia de "dar poder para os indivíduos tomarem mais decisões a respeito de como gastar seu dinheiro".

E não é nada tranquilizador o fato de as autoridades chinesas estarem respondendo à possível crise pressionando os bancos para emprestar mais, basicamente continuando a política que levou a China à situação em que ela se encontra.

EXPOSIÇÃO. Portanto, a China poderá entrar em crise. Se entrar, como isso afetará os EUA? A resposta, até onde eu consigo perceber, é que a exposição dos americanos a uma possível crise chinesa é surpreendentemente pequena.

Quanto os EUA têm investido na China? O investimento direto é de US$ 215 bilhões. Investimentos em carteira – ações e obrigações –, pouco mais de US$ 300 bilhões. Então, estamos falando de um total de US$ 515 bilhões.

Este número pode parecer grande, mas, para uma economia enorme, não é. Considerem uma comparação. Neste momento, há muitas preocupações a respeito do setor imobiliário comercial dos EUA, especialmente em relação aos prédios de escritórios ? que provavelmente encaram uma redução permanente na demanda em virtude do aumento do trabalho remoto. Os prédios de escritórios dos EUA valem hoje US$ 2,6 trilhões, aproximadamente cinco vezes mais que o nosso investimento total na China.

Por que uma economia tão grande atraiu tão pouco investimento dos EUA? Basicamente, porque, dadas as arbitrariedades das políticas chinesas, muitos possíveis investidores temem a possibilidade de a China se tornar uma armadilha: você consegue entrar, mas não consegue sair.

Mas o que dizer da China enquanto mercado? A China é uma importante jogadora no comércio mundial, mas não compra muito dos EUA – apenas US$ 150 bilhões, em 2022, menos de 1% do nosso PIB. Portanto, uma crise não surtiria muito efeito direto na demanda por produtos americanos.

O efeito seria maior em países que vendem mais para a China, como Alemanha e Japão, e algo poderia ricochetear nos EUA por meio das vendas a esses países. Mas o efeito geral ainda seria pequeno.

DIFERENÇAS
Uma crise poderia até surtir um pequeno efeito positivo nos EUA, porque reduziria a demanda por matérias-primas, especialmente petróleo, o que reduziria a inflação. Nada disso significa que devamos aplaudir a possibilidade de uma recessão chinesa ou tripudiar sobre os problemas de outro país.

Mesmo que por razões puramente egoístas, devemos nos preocupar com o que o regime chinês poderá fazer para distrair a atenção de seus cidadãos dos problemas domésticos. Mas, em termos econômicos, parece que estamos diante de uma possível crise interna na China, não de um evento global em estilo 2008. 

TRADUÇÃO DE GUILHERME RUSS


sábado, 19 de agosto de 2023

China financia publicações de esquerda do Brasil (Gazeta do Povo, NYT)

 Os americanos costumavam fazer isso antigamente. Agora, os chineses são os novos americanos, a sort of…

New York Times: China financia publicações de esquerda do Brasil

Uma reportagem do The New York Times desvendou uma rede de influência internacional bancada pela ditadura chinesa. Alguns desses braços estão no Brasil. 

A investigação do jornal americano joga luz sobre a atuação de Neville Roy Singham, empresário de origem indiana ligado ao Partido Comunista da China. Singham mora em Xangai e produz, dentre outras coisas, um programa para o YouTube financiado pela cidade — leia-se o partido. 

Mas a sua atuação vai muito além disso. Segundo o jornal, ele está na linha de frente de uma guerra silenciosa iniciada pelo Partido Comunista da China para influenciar a opinião pública fora do país. Em outras palavras: propaganda política apresentada como se não fosse. 

Em 2017, Singham vendeu sua empresa do ramo da tecnologia, a Thoughtworks, por US$ 785 milhões (o equivalente a R$2,5 bilhões à época). Agora, o ativismo pró-ditadura chinesa é a sua principal ocupação. A rede movimentada por ele distribuiu pelo menos US$ 275 milhões nos últimos anos, de acordo com o jornal americano. O repasse do dinheiro é feito por manobras que dificultam o seu rastreio e utiliza quatro organizações não-governamentais de fachada com sede nos Estados Unidos. A única presença real dessas entidades são caixas postais. A legislação americana não exige que organizações sem fins lucrativos divulguem quem são os seus doadores. 

Think tank marxista Singham financia uma teia de organizações que têm como objetivo divulgar propaganda (ou desinformação) sobre a ditadura chinesa. Um dos pontos centrais dessa teia é um think tank chamado Instituto Tricontinental de Pesquisa Social. O instituto se apresenta como "uma instituição internacional orientada por movimentos e organizações populares do mundo, focada em ser um ponto de apoio e elo entre a produção acadêmica e os movimentos políticos e sociais". 

Brasil, Índia, Argentina e África são o foco da organização, que cita Karl Marx e Antonio Gramsci como suas referências. Uma das sedes da organização fica no Brasil. Na página de apresentação do instituto, a palavra “China” simplesmente não aparece. O conselho consultivo não tem chineses — mas inclui Neuri Rossetto, do Movimento dos Sem-Terra

Porta-voz da China no Brasil 

A reportagem do jornal americano menciona especificamente um veículo brasileiro financiado pela rede de Singham: o Brasil de Fato, publicação de extrema-esquerda que faz apologia ao regime chinês. Entre ataques ácidos aos Estados Unidos, ao "neoliberalismo" e a políticos conservadores, a página publica notícias chapa-branca sobre o regime chinês. "China combate desertificação para garantir segurança alimentar e qualidade do ar", diz uma reportagem publicada em 15 de agosto. Pouco sutil, um artigo publicado em 30 de junho ganhou o seguinte título: "China cresceu e erradicou a pobreza porque fez tudo ao contrário do que pregam os neoliberais." 

O Brasil de Fato é um veículo influente na esquerda brasileira. Em 2019, por exemplo, a publicação entrevistou Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva dentro da cadeia. O vídeo reúne quase 800 mil visualizações no YouTube. O grupo também já publicou entrevistas exclusivas com o ator Wagner Moura e o ex-presidente do MST, João Pedro Stédile. Mais recentemente, o canal passou a produzir conteúdo em inglês. 

Em seu canal no YouTube, o Brasil de Fato publica semanalmente um programa chamado "Notícias da China", que traz uma versão pró-chinesa dos acontecimentos. O conteúdo é apresentado por Marco Fernandes. Ele, por sua vez, trabalha para um site chamado Donsheng News. A página apresenta-se apenas como “coletivo internacional de pesquisadores interessados pela política e sociedade chinesas”. Marco também se apresenta como pesquisador do Instituto Tricontinental e organizador do "No Cold War" — outra publicação pró-ditadura chinesa de perfil nebuloso e ligada a Singham. "Uma nova Guerra Fria contra a China vai contra o interesse da humanidade", proclama a página. 

O fundador do site Spotniks, Rodrigo da Silva, também mostrou que outros sites brasileiros, como o Brasil 247 e o Opera Mundi, publicam artigos de Vijay Prashad, diretor do Instituto Tricontinental

Além disso, o Brasil de Fato, o No Cold War e o Instituto Tricontinental realizaram um seminário online que teve a participação da ex-presidente Dilma Rousseff e de João Pedro Stédile, além do ex-chanceler Celso Amorim e do professor Elias Jabbour, da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. O evento aconteceu em 2021. 

A influência chinesa mundo afora também se dá nos círculos acadêmicos. Como a Gazeta do Povo mostrou, o regime de Pequim utiliza os Institutos Confúcio para espalhar seus tentáculos. 

No Brasil, onze universidades mantêm filiais do centro chinês. 



domingo, 13 de agosto de 2023

China: será o centro da próxima crise na economia mundial? - Adam Tooze

Whither China? Part I - Regime impasse?

Whither China? 

With the inflation (or should we say price shock) drama in the West largely played out, there is no story more important in the world economy right now than the question of China’s future. 

The mood on China has shifted spectacularly in the last 18 months. Whereas once the prevailing impression was one of awe, now what prevails is a negative story. This is assembled out of data, official news from Beijing, quotations from off the record interviews with interlocutors in China and more or less commonplace assumptions about economic and political development. This may be bricolage. But it is the best we can do. There is not other way of forming a view. But in such moments it is a good idea to check our prejudices. 

On the podcast, Cam and I took on the challenge of making sense of China’s current situation. 

China's Economic Crisis

Ones and Tooze

In this mini-series of newsletters I want to review the main lines of interpretation in Western public debate about China. Six lines of interpretation immediately come to mind which will form the first installments in the series. 

(1) Part I - Regime impasse 

(2) Part II - Balance sheet recession 

(3) Part III - Keynesian structuralist 

(4) Part IV - Dual-circulation, Siege economy 

(5) Part V - Zero COVID in hindsight

(6) Part VI - One China or many Chinas? Regional economies and debt crises 

To make sure you get all the parts of the mini-series, sign up here and consider supporting the Chartbook Newsletter project. 

***

The news out of China is not good. Growth has slowed dramatically in recent years. Under the impact of zero-COVID it was sometimes brought to a halt. The recovery since the abrupt end of zero-COVID has seemingly run out of steam. The housing market is in crisis. China has been spared the inflation that afflicted the rest of the world. Instead seems to teeter on the edge of deflation. 

Reading the business-cycle is a difficult business at the best of time. Though one measure of inflation - CPI - moved into deflation this month, China’s core inflation actually appears to have bottomed out and ticked up slightly.

In recent months the export numbers have turned downwards. But this is against the backdrop of world historic export records in 2022. It was always a mistake to read those exports and the resulting giant trade surplus as signs of economic health. They were rather the opposite a symptom of sluggish domestic demand. 

For all the negative talk we should bear in mind that most economists both inside and outside China expect its economy to grow at 5 percent per annum. Whatever the fundamentals, it is a long way from Japan-style stagnation.

Source: FT

But, beyond the mood swings of the media cycle, what is going on is clearly very dramatic. We are witnessing a gearshift in what has been the most dramatic trajectory in economic history. The question is how to interpret it. 

***

The most obvious line for many Western interpreters to take is that China’s problems are basically political. Specifically they are to do with the unpredictable and ideologically motivated turns taken by Xi’s government, which themselves reflect the irredeemably authoritarian quality of the Chinese regime. Xi’s regime may undertake efforts to revive the economy with stimulus measures, but they lack conviction. 

This interpretation is common place in the West but it has been presented in quintessential form in recent weeks in essays in the twin flagship publications of American liberalism, one by Li Yuan in the New York Times and the other by Adam Posen in Foreign Affairs. The two pieces differ in style, in their sources and in the point they are trying to make. But they deliver a common message. The problems of China’s economy are political and though they center on Xi they go beyond him and concern the entire system. 

On the basis of her no-doubt excellent contacts in the Chinese business class Li Yuan paints a picture of a resentful stand off between “business owners” and the regime, an impasse which is resistant to any recent efforts by the party to raise spirits. 

Stocks on the mainland and in Hong Kong, where many of China’s biggest private enterprises are listed, fell on Thursday but regained their footing on Friday. Some entrepreneurs rushed to praise the guidelines in official media. But in private, others I interviewed dismissed the party’s pep talk in words that can be best translated as, “Save it for the suckers.” By now it’s obvious that the country’s economic problems are rooted in politics. Restoring confidence would require systemic changes that offer real protection of the entrepreneur class and private ownership. If the party adheres to the political agenda of the country’s paramount leader, Xi Jinping, who has dismantled many of the policies that unleashed China’s economy, its promises on paper will remain just words. 

Speaking to her off the record “business-owners” vented their frustrations with the regime. 

The stock markets’ reaction was very honest, one tech entrepreneur said. Investors sensed how desperate the party is, he said, and how meaningless the guidelines are. At its core, he said, the issue of confidence is a matter of government credibility. Beijing has lost nearly all its credibility in the past few years, he said. If it really wants to remedy the situation, it can at least apologize for its wrongdoings. He cited a document that the party issued after the Cultural Revolution admitting some of its mistakes under Mao Zedong’s leadership from 1949 to 1976. Other people pointed to similar steps the party took then, such as rehabilitating persecuted cadres and intellectuals. At the very least, they said, the government should release Ren Zhiqiang and Sun Dawu, outspoken entrepreneurs who are serving 18-year prison sentences after their arrests in the recent crackdown. Or, another entrepreneur told me, the government could return the fines it imposed on his company, which he believed served as punishment for not toeing the party line and as revenue for an overextended local government. He said he felt that he had been robbed. None of the business owners I talked to expects the government to take any of these steps. They all spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of punishment by the authorities. 

It is hard to know how seriously to take such spleen from aggrieved business people. Are they representative of opinion at large or is there selection bias at work, in that those who are most upset are also most likely to talk to a Western journalist. And how far are the grumpy views of frustrated managers, anywhere indicative of what actually gets done in business? In any case, Li Yuan uses these quotes to suggest that any bond of trust between the regime and vocal segments of business opinion has snapped. Though the regime in the summer of 2023 is trying to curry favor with business, everyone remembers the rollercoaster of recent years. 

In 2021, a commentary headlined, “Everyone can feel it, a profound transformation is underway!” was reposted on many of the most important official media websites. Praising the suppression of the private sector and the policy proposal known as “common prosperity,” the commentary said, “This is a return from capital groups to the masses, and a transformation from a capital-centered approach to a people-centered approach.” 

In the spring of 2023 the regime reversed course and turned back to private business:

“We have always regarded private enterprises and entrepreneurs as part of our own,” Mr. Xi said in March, repeating himself from 2018. The head of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s economic planning agency, held a series of meetings with business leaders, pledging support. Then came the 31-point guidelines. Most Chinese businesspeople support the government and willingly follow what it says. Still, the comments from some entrepreneurs on state media read more like pledges of loyalty to the party than authentic expressions of confidence. Ben Qiu, a lawyer who practices law in Hong Kong and the United States, summed up the executives’ comments in a social media comment: “The emperor’s clothes look fabulous.” … No matter how many supportive words the party offers now, it will be hard for the private sector to feel confident. 

Effectively, Li Yuan suggest that China is experiencing something akin to a “capital strike” spreading through the business community. And this matters, because of the overall weight of the private sector in China’s modern economy. 

The private sector … contribute(s) more than 50 percent of the country’s tax revenues, 60 percent of economic output and 80 percent of urban employment, according to none other than Mr. Xi in 2018. 

If Li Yuan had wanted data to back up her argument she could have turned to the output of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington DC, whose team tracks the balance of public and private sectors in the Chinese economy. 

The data show a lurch towards the priority of state investment during the initial shock of COVID and no substantial recovery by the private sector since. So far at least the pessimism of Li Yuan’s informants is born out. 

The head of the Peterson Institute is Adam Posen who has emerged in recent months as perhaps the leading public critic of the Biden administration’s industrial policy. His latest piece on China in Foreign Affairs has to be read in this context. Posen is worried that America’s aggressive trade and industrial policies are based on a fundamental misdiagnosis of China’s situation and the Biden team are thus missing a historic opportunity to wrong-foot and undermine the authoritarian regime of the CCP. 

For Posen, Xi’s China has reached a tipping point, which unlike Li Yuan he traces less to China’s national history, than the general logic of authoritarian regimes. According to Posen, all authoritarian regimes suffer from a severe case of what is called “original sin”. The lack of credible legal constraints on action by the sovereign makes it hard to sustain a high-functioning economic regime. Since the reform period of the 1980s, the CCP has, in fact, been unusual in holding out for a relatively long time against the temptations of arbitrary rule. But in Xi’s third term the regime is finally succumbing to this universal temptation and - this is the crucial point - broader Chinese society is now waking up to this reality. 

Riffing on the famous Martin Niemöller poem - “first they came for the socialists” - Posen describes the unraveling of the bargain between the majority of Chinese and the regime. Most Chinese, Posen claims, live with an understanding that is summarized by the motto “no politics, no problems”. If you pursue your private interest at a distance from politics you could count on remaining unmolested. When Xi wielded his power versus corrupt officials at the top of a party to which 7 percent of the population belong, the rest of China was not displeased. When Xi came down on the tech oligarchs after 2020, the rest of society shrugged. But the extreme policy of zero-COVID in 2022 extended this domineering, capricious logic to the entire society.

Certainly the fiasco of COVID policy in 2022 delivered a severe shock to the authority of the CCP regime. But it is remarkable that Posen attributes so much significance to this one moment, as opposed to longer term factors stressed by critical analysts like Michael Pettis. After all, but for the total mishandling of the pandemic by the West, which massively amplified the second and third waves, China’s regime might well have emerged triumphant from the crisis. Beijing’s policy was not capricious as such, but lackadaisical when it came to vaccination and ineffective against highly-infections variants. 

In any case not only stresses the historical importance of the COVID shock, he claims that we can see an immediate impact of the new insecurity in the macroeconomic numbers. “In China’s case, the virus is not the main cause of the country’s economic long COVID: the chief culprit is the general public’s immune response to extreme intervention, which has produced a less dynamic economy.” The immediate reflection of this new anxiety appears for Posen in the dramatic surge in household bank deposits. 

On top of Li Yuan’s investment strike, Posen thus sees a comprehensive defensive retreat by Chinese society that is driven not by economic circumstances but ultimately by fear of the regime. 

Since Deng Xiaoping began the “reform and opening” of China’s economy in the late 1970s, the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party deliberately resisted the impulse to interfere in the private sector for far longer than most authoritarian regimes have. But under Xi, and especially since the pandemic began, the CCP has reverted toward the authoritarian mean. …. What remains today is widespread fear not seen since the days of Mao—fear of losing one’s property or livelihood, whether temporarily or forever, without warning and without appeal. … The COVID response … made clear that the CCP was the ultimate decision-maker about people’s ability to earn a living or access their assets—and that it would make decisions in a seemingly arbitrary way as the party leadership’s priorities shifted. 

SAME OLD STORY 

After defying temptation for decades, China’s political economy under Xi has finally succumbed to a familiar pattern among autocratic regimes. They tend to start out on a “no politics, no problem” compact that promises business as usual for those who keep their heads down. But by their second or, more commonly, third term in office, rulers increasingly disregard commercial concerns and pursue interventionist policies whenever it suits their short-term goals. … Over varying periods, Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey, Viktor Orban in Hungary, and Vladimir Putin in Russia have all turned down this well-worn road. 

Li Yuan avoids this kind of comparative historical rumination. But she makes a similar point by citing as a witness sociologist Sun Liping, who in recent essays has highlighted the sense of uncertainty afflicting Chinese society. Sun Liping is a well-known public intellectual who recently retired from Tsinghuawhere he taught sociology. 

“Why are many people saving money and cutting back on spending? Why are ambitious entrepreneurs reluctant to make long-term planning and investment?” Sun Liping, a sociology professor at Tsinghua University wrote in an article last month. “It’s because they feel uneasy.” He said that for China to get out of its slump, the government needs to create a business environment that can provide reassurance. … “Private enterprises don’t need support. They need a normal social environment” regulated by the rule of law.

Whereas Sun Liping calls for a reaffirmation of law, Posen points out the regime seems to be headed in the opposite direction, responding to emergency by demanding more discretion.

In March, China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress, amended its legislative procedures to make it easier, not harder, to pass emergency legislation. Such legislation now requires the approval of only the Congress’s Standing Committee, which is made up of a minority of senior party loyalists. 

Posen thus sees a spiraling breakdown of trust. The lack of trust undermines the credibility of policy. Businesses and householders no longer believe that stimulus means stimulus and that it will not be countermanded by some dramatic intervention of a punitive kind. This lack of credibility makes markets less responsive to policy. Less responsiveness to policy increases volatility as policy becomes less effective. Greater volatility increases the need to intervene. As Posen puts it: 

Once an autocratic regime has lost the confidence of the average household and business, it is difficult to win back. A return to good economic performance alone is not enough, as it does not obviate the risk of future interruptions or expropriations. The autocrat’s Achilles’ heel is an inherent lack of credible self-restraint. To seriously commit to such restraint would be to admit to the potential for abuses of power. Such commitment problems are precisely why more democratic countries enact constitutions and why their legislatures exert oversight on budgets. 

With Xi having undone the fragile equilibrium that allowed China for decades to avoid the usual fate of authoritarian regimes, China is now embarked on a road back to stagnation and serfdom. It is a vision worthy of Hayek.

You might think that this is all a little overdone and that to compare contemporary China with Venezuela is far-fetched. Indeed one imagines that Posen himself does not mean the point to be taken literally. What he is trying to do with this jarring comparison is to correct the blindspots of Western observers. He wants them to radically revise their outlook for China in a negative direction. 

Many outside observers have overlooked the significance of this change (the breakdown of trust and “Long-covid”). But its practical effects on economic policy will not go unnoticed among households and businesses, who will be left still more exposed to the party’s edicts. The upshot is that economic long COVID is more than a momentary drag on growth. It will likely plague the Chinese economy for years. More optimistic forecasts have not yet factored in this lasting change. To the extent that Western forecasters and international organizations have cast doubt on China’s growth prospects for this year or the next, they have fixated on easily observable problems such as chief executives’ fears about the private high-tech sector and financial fragility in the real estate market. These sector-specific stories are important, but they matter far less to medium-term growth than the economic long COVID afflicting consumers and small businesses 

The analysts of China that Posen most wants to reach are decision-makers in Washington. Posen is alarmed by the move to protectionism and confrontation towards China. He thinks this is dangerous, because increasing the risk of war, self-harming, because inefficient, and counter-productive, because it strengthens Xi’s regime. 

Western officials should adjust their expectations downward, but they should not celebrate too much. Neither should they expect economic long COVID to weaken Xi’s hold on power in the near future. … The perverse reality is that local party bosses and officials can often extract yet more loyalty from a suffering populace, at least for a while. In an unstable economic environment, the rewards of being on their good side … go up, and safe alternatives to seeking state patronage or employment are fewer. 

Faced with this situation, what Posen takes encouragement from is that some Chinese rather than turning to the regime for reassurance are opting for self-insurance i.e. are trying to opt out of the future as defined for them by Xi and the regime in Beijing. 

If CCP policies continue to diminish people’s long-term economic opportunities and stability, discontent with the party will grow. Among those of means, some are already self-insuring. In the face of insecurity, they are moving savings abroad, offshoring business production and investment, and even emigrating to less uncertain markets. Over time, such exits will look more and more appealing to wider slices of Chinese society. 

This is the opportunity that America’s present policy of confrontation is missing. 

Washington should think in terms of suction, not sanctions. … The United States should welcome those (Chinese) savings, along with Chinese businesses, investors, students, and workers who leave in search of greener pastures. … Removing most barriers to Chinese talent and capital would not undermine U.S. prosperity or national security. It would, however, make it harder for Beijing to maintain a growing economy that is simultaneously stable, self-reliant, and under tight party control. Compared with the United States’ current economic strategy toward China, which is more confrontational, restrictive, and punitive, the new approach would lower the risk of a dangerous escalation between Washington and Beijing, and it would prove less divisive among U.S. allies and developing economies. This approach would require communicating that Chinese people, savings, technology, and brands are welcome in the United States; the opposite of containment efforts that overtly exclude them. … If Washington goes its own way instead—perhaps because the next U.S. administration opts for continued confrontation or for greater economic isolationism—it should at the very least allow other countries to provide off-ramps for Chinese people and commerce, rather than pressuring them to adopt the containment barriers that the United States is installing. 

What Posen wants to offer is the opportunity for individual Chinese and their families to vote with their feet. His suggestion that the West should open “off ramps” for Chinese seeking to opt out of the Cold War is telling - off ramps being a phrase more commonly invoked nowadays in Washington to discuss possible peace terms with Putin. 

***

Thus, two pieces that are supposedly about the limit topic of disillusionment in business circles in China and China’s current economic difficulties, spiral into readings of world history. 

The most radical assumption of all is encapsulated in the subtitle of Posen’s Foreign Affairs article, which boldly declares that what we are witnessing in China is the “Same old story”. One should linger over this apparently casual remark. Though passing for social scientific common sense, it is a staggering claim to make. One is tempted to say - paraphrasing Samuel Johnson - that when an analyst says about China, with a bored shrug, that is the same old story, they are probably done with intellectual life. 

If it were true that anything about Venezuela or Turkey’s complex histories clearly anticipated that of China it should surely count, not as a confirmation of the some obvious piece of wisdom, but as a staggering and profoundly counter-intuitive discovery. These kind of comparisons again and again reveal the failure to grasp the sheer scale of the Chinese projects. This China that we are casually generalizing about, is a state whose population is the same as that of North America, South. America and all of Europe put together, under almost 80 years of uniquely transformative rule by a historically unique and still dynamic political party that directly inherits the DNA of the revolutionary era and self-consciously orientates itself towards avoiding the fate of the only regime to which it can, at a pinch, be meaningfully compared, namely the Soviet Union. 

As Robert Harding put it very nicely in the FT a few days ago:

China’s economy defies analogies. Just as its growth over the past four decades was unprecedented, its current difficulties — and it certainly has a problem, if not quite a crisis — are unique. It is not Japan in 1990, Korea in 1997 or the US in 2008. (AT: let alone Venezuela, Turkey or Russia)

It may be true that parts of Chinese society are for a variety of reasons suffering a crisis of confidence, but precision is called for. Adam Posen and Li Yuan talk in general terms about “confidence” and credibility, but their narratives and evidence actually pertain to three different groups. Households are the center of the Posen story. Presumably the households that count are actually the affluent upper 25 percent or so, concentrated in Tier 1 cities, who are responsible for most spending and saving. Secondly, there are the corporate chieftains who not only toe the line, but whose businesses also have really big investment budgets that are easy for the regime to inspect. And then, the third group, the nameless group of “business owners” who are Li Yuan’s interlocutors. Presumably they are not so large that they must be seen to conform, but they are significant enough to attract the attention of a New York Times correspondent and be worth quoting. 

Across these basic sociological divisions run questions of party membership, connection to provincial cliques and institutional connections to banks and other sources of funding. Those matter because what we in the end want to know is which of these groups is spending how much on consumption and investment and why. What kinds of things they are buying? What kinds of projects they are undertaking and how far this shows up in the macro data? If business confidence is shaken, what is the balance between large privates who are toeing the line and the mass of smaller private firms, where proprietorial dissatisfaction - expressed so graphically to Li Yuan - rules the roost? 

Above all what we need to know to arbitrate the basic causes of the current malaise is how far depressed private business investment is in fact due to the kind of sectoral issues that Posen so quickly dismisses. Since property is the main store of household wealth in China, is this not likely to be the main driver of uncertainty, rather than views about Xi, the party and the capriciousness of their rule. Li Yuan’s piece is about the latest stimulus package and the stock markets so you would not necessarily expect a long discussion of the real estate crisis. But it is truly remarkable how little space Posen in his Foreign Affairs article devotes to the drama of China’s housing market. 

At first glance this is doubly surprising because you might see the real estate slump as the single most important demonstration of the regime’s capriciousness. That is by all accounts how many property developers in China view the so-called “three red lines” policy that was announced in August 2020 at the peak of regime hubris. But before taking that interpretation at face value, ask yourself for a second how subprime mortgage lenders and dealers in MBS, or shareholders in AIG are wont to talk about the 2007-8 financial crisis. When tracking an unfolding economic crisis, who are the reliable informants? Whose opinions do we take at face value and whose do we take with a pinch of salt? Whose opinions matter because whether right or wrong they wield substantial power in the economy? Whose opinions can we discount on account of their powerlessness? 

My bet is that Posen steers clear of discussing the housing crisis - overwhelmingly the most important source of uncertainty in the Chinese economy right now - because it causes problems of his argument. He knows that it does not fit his overarching thesis that the regime’s authoritarianism is the main source of risk for the modern Chinese middle class and that this by itself makes Xi’s regime incapable of ensuring sustained economic growth. At a technical level, as Michael Pettis explains, the figures for bank deposits that Posen cites to underpin his case, reflect both an increased rate of savings by worried households and a reallocation away from riskier assets, more closely associated with risks in housing. They are, in other words, an indicator of specific as much as general uncertainty. This is not to deny that the repressive tendencies and the ideological intent of the regime are a source of risk for private business and private individuals. Of course, they are. But the regime also offers advantages and protections. And those are not merely cold comforts. One cannot sensibly generalize about a downward spiral into an increasingly abusive relationship, as Posen’s narrative suggests. Sectoral performance is not a detail. It is all important. What is decisive is whether Beijing gets policy right and this reflects specific issues of policy and political economy that go beyond the simple boundary between public and private. These more complex balances of interests were decisive in the handling of COVID, of the real estate crisis, of the debt crisis, in the economic war with the US. They will be the topic of further installments to come.

quarta-feira, 2 de agosto de 2023

As coisas no BRICS andam um pouco confusas, para dizer o mínimo...

 Heads of state from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will make a pronouncement on the enlargement of the group when they meet 


A planned announcement on the expansion of BRICS at a forthcoming summit in South Africa will mark a significant change in the global order, the nation’s ambassador to the five-nation bloc said, even as some of its members push back against new admissions.

Heads of state from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will make a pronouncement on the enlargement of the group when they meet Aug. 22-24, Anil Sooklal said in a lecture at the University of KwaZulu-Natal on Wednesday. Twenty-two nations have asked formally to become full-time members of the group, and more than 20 others have submitted informal requests.

China favors a rapid expansion of the bloc, which will require consensus among its members. But it has encountered opposition from India, which wants strict rules on how and when other nations could move closer to the group without formally enlarging it, and from Brazil, which is wary of alienating the US and European Union, according to officials with knowledge of the matter. 

“BRICS has been a catalyst for a tectonic change you will see in the global geopolitical architecture starting with the summit,” Sooklal said. While he emphasized that the bloc doesn’t see itself as a counterweight to any other organization, he said its expansion was stoking anxiety and opposition among nations in “privileged positions.” 

Russian leader Vladimir Putin will participate at the gathering virtually, avoiding the risk of possible arrest on a warrant from the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes if he travels to South Africa, which is a member of the tribunal.

A decision on whether Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will attend has yet to be taken, although necessary security arrangements have been made and other pre-visit formalities have been completed, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. While Modi’s absence may be viewed as a snub to the host and he would miss out on bilateral meetings with other leaders, India isn’t comfortable with him holding talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping while a border dispute remains unresolved, they said. 

So far, representatives from 71 nations have been invited to attend the summit, according to Sooklal. 

“This will be the largest gathering in recent time of countries from the Global South coming together to discuss the current global challenges,” he said. 

Formed officially in 2009-2010, BRICS has struggled to have the kind of geopolitical influence that matches its collective economic reach. The bloc’s members represent more than 42% of the world’s population and account for 23% of global gross domestic product and 18% of trade.

An expanded BRICS will account for “almost 50% of the global population and over 35% of global GDP and that figure will grow,” Sooklal said. He also highlighted the role that the bloc’s leaders were playing in trying to end Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“There is no tangible evidence that any one of the BRICS countries, South Africa included, is feeding weapons into that conflict,” he said. “But there is clear evidence to the global community that the West is pumping billions of dollars into that conflict and the conflict is raging, so who is talking peace and who is talking war?”

domingo, 23 de julho de 2023

Estados vilões buscam a inteligência das universidades ocidentais - Fiona Hamilton (Times)

É um fato: Estados vilões - aqui identificados explicitamente com a Rússia de Putin, a China de Xi Jinping e o Irã dos aiatolás - usam o conhecimento avançado obtido nos centros de produção mais sofisticados como alavancas contra os seus próprios povos e contra outras nações civilizadas. Goste-se ou não da afirmação, ela parece evidente.

You are targets for hostile states, students told

Fiona Hamilton 

Crime and Security Editor 

Times, July 27, 2023

Universities are "magnetic targets for espionage and manipulation", the head of M15 has warned, as he compared the global scientific race to the Cold War.

 Ken McCallum said hostile actors were stealing British research with "dispiriting regularity" and urged students to be extremely cautious to avoid passing secrets to China, Russia and Iran.

 McCallum said: "Today's contest for scientific and technological advantage is not a rerun of what we had in the Cold War but it is every bit as far reaching. Systemic competition means just that.

If your field of research is relevant to advanced materials or quantum computing or AI or biotech, to name but a few, your work will be of interest to people employed by states who do not share our values." 

McCallum issued the warning last month as he delivered the annual Bowman Lecture at the University of Glasgow, where he graduated with a degree in mathematics in 1996. He was speaking to students, staff and alumni. 

He has previously said that spies for hostile states are targeting politicians, military officials, think tanks, academics and other officials to gather valuable information but had not previously been so explicit in his language about the threat at universities. 

Last week a report by the parliamentary intelligence and security committee said universities had become a "rich feeding ground" for China to seek intellectual property and military technology, saying some had turned a "blind eye" to the risks while taking its money. 

The Times revealed last year that British universities had accepted £240 million for research collaborations with Chinese institutions, many with links to the military, leading to concerns the work could help Beijing to build superweapons. 

McCallum told Glasgow students:

"Hostile actors working for other states make it their business to take your hard work and use it for their gain... We see this happening with dispiriting regularity. Precisely because our great universities are so great and rightly prize openness, they are magnetic targets for espionage and manipulation." 

He added: "If you look at what [Vladimir] Putin's military and mercenaries are doing in Ukraine; at the Iranian regime's ongoing suppression of its own people; at the restrictions of freedoms in Hong Kong and human rights violations in Xinjiang, or China's escalatory activity around Taiwan - I don't think you want the fruits of your inspiration and perspiration to be turned to the advantage of the Russian, Iranian or Chinese governments."

 McCallum said students should not be fooled by attractive conference invitations, collaboration proposals, "donations with strings" or "jointly funded research that builds dependency". 

"These aren't hypotheticals," he said. "They're things MI5 sees in investigations week by week, and they happen in universities just like Glasgow." 

The National Protective Security Authority, which is part of MI5, will offer expert advice and training to universities, businesses and institutions to help them protect themselves.


sexta-feira, 21 de julho de 2023

China makes a big bet on electric vehicles with Brazil investment - Sam Cowie (Al Jazeera)

China makes a big bet on electric vehicles with Brazil investment
BYD is set to spend $600m on new complex to build electric and hybrid cars, buses and trucks, as China and Brazil grow closer.
By Sam Cowie
Al Jazeera, 20 Jul 2023
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/7/20/china-makes-a-big-bet-on-electric-vehicles-with-brazil-investment

Sao Paulo, Brazil – Stella Li stood in front of a packed stage, banging a brightly decorated drum to a samba-reggae rhythm.

Moments earlier, Li, global vice president of the world’s largest electronic vehicle manufacturer, BYD, had announced that the Shenzhen-headquartered Chinese company would open an industrial complex in Brazil’s northeastern state Bahia.
“Our dream is to build Bahia state as a centre of innovation and high technology,” she said at an event in early July.

BYD plans to invest 3 billion Brazilian reals ($600m) to generate more than 5,000 jobs and produce electric and hybrid cars, as well as electric buses and trucks, in Camacari near Bahia’s capital, Salvador.

The plan marks a political victory for the government of Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio Lula da Silva, himself a former metalworker, who hopes to “reindustrialise Brazil” with support from China.
Last year, another Chinese manufacturer, Great Wall Motor, had announced it would invest $1.9bn in Brazil over the next decade to produce hybrid and electric cars in Sao Paulo state. It expects production to begin next year.

Western car companies like Ford and Mercedes-Benz have left Brazil in recent years after setting up there decades ago, adding to the country’s deindustrialisation woes. But Chinese carmakers are beginning to fill the gap as part of Beijing’s ambitious automaking expansion abroad.

The Chinese manufacturers’ plans carry especially strong symbolism: BYD plans to set up shop in an abandoned Ford factory, while Great Wall Motors will take over an old Mercedes-Benz factory.

Experts point to a series of benefits for Chinese car companies in Brazil, a middle-income country of 203 million people with a non-aligned foreign policy.

“There is no geopolitical tension here with China, unlike Europe, the USA or Canada,” Mauricio Santoro, a political scientist and author of Brazil-China Relations in the 21st Century, told Al Jazeera. “There is no vetoing of Chinese companies, the great example being Huawei, which operates in Brazil with total freedom.”
He said BYD’s new facilities will act as a jumping-off point to expand in the region.
“They are going to use Brazil as an export platform to other countries in South America, to countries like Argentina and Chile, which is something that other multinationals also do here,” he added.

Almost half of China’s current investments in South America are in Brazil, which offers opportunities for Chinese manufacturers, said Tulio Cariello, content and research director at the Brazil-China Business Council.

“Brazil is a country that has an emerging middle class,” he told Al Jazeera, “and it is a country where people want to have a car.”

According to Brazil’s Institute of Geography and Statistics, just under 50 percent of the country’s households had a car in 2022, compared with 92 percent in the United States.
The Chinese vehicle makers’ plans also reflect, in part, the consolidation of China’s rise in South America and perhaps the start of a new chapter of the continent’s most defining geopolitical shift this century.
China is Brazil’s top trading partner, having overtaken the United States in 2009, with nearly $151bn in trade between the two countries in 2022, according to official government data.

Now serving his first year of a historic third term, Lula re-established openly warm relations with Beijing with an April visit to China, where he met with President Xi Jinping. The visit seemed aimed at repairing a relationship previously strained by the anti-China stance of far-right former President Jair Bolsonaro.

As part of that renewed rapport, Brazil offered China concessions to attract the car manufacturer.

In return for its commitment to invest, BYD will receive a 95-percent break on Brazil’s value-added tax until 2032, no car ownership tax on electric vehicles up to 300,00 reals ($62,375), and access to the nearby Aratu Port for the import of raw materials and exports of the products it makes locally.

Brazilian authorities also promised to improve the roads to reach the port as well as considering withdrawing property taxes, dependent on talks with Camacari city hall, according to Brazil’s UOL news portal’s specialist car column.

While Brazil’s electric vehicle (EV) market is still in its nascent stages, selling just 564 units in the first quarter of 2023, Cariello said that — in the long term — Brazil would catch up with more advanced electric car markets and that the Chinese are “pioneers” to establish themselves first in the local market.

Rodrigo Zeidan, a professor of finance and economics at New York University Shanghai and at Brazil’s Dom Cabral Foundation, said China’s electric models were more suited to the budgets of middle-income countries like Brazil.

“The Western companies are building more valuable models like Tesla. The Chinese manufacturers, they produce cheaper stuff,” he told Al Jazeera. “It is a middle-income market in which consumers are not that rich, and they know this market.”

Li — the BYD global vice president — told the O Globo newspaper in early July that the company planned to bring to Brazil the Seagull compact car, its cheapest EV model. It launched in China for the equivalent of 55,000 reals ($11,450), an ideal price range given that 90 percent of Brazilians earn less than 3,500 reals ($728) a month.

There is one indication that EV-related jobs will be welcome in Brazil. In just seven days in July, BYD received 44,000 job applications for its announced 5,000 vacancies.

Zeidan warned that current infrastructure to support electric vehicles in Brazil is woefully inadequate and building charging stations for cars across the vast country “requires long-term planning”.

Chinese companies, often helped by generous state subsidies and loans, are able to work in longer time frames than competitors, which may help them in Brazil, Santoro said.

Still, he and other experts interviewed by Al Jazeera warned of significant challenges ahead, including China’s slowing economy and geopolitical tensions with other world powers, as limits to the Lula government’s hopes to “reindustrialise” Brazil.

“The rhetoric that the Chinese will somehow reindustrialise Brazil, that is an exaggeration,” he said. “No country has managed to reindustrialise.”

Zeidan also criticised the tax breaks that are being given to BYD but said Ford and other Western carmakers had been offered the same kinds of deals to entice them to do business in the country.
“Brazil has thrown a lot of money at car companies,” he said. “It’s a lot of public money given to privately owned companies.”

He said that although Brazil was a “tough” market, it is possible for car companies to make good profits.

“The question is can BYD make enough money to justify being in Brazil 30 years from now?” he said.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA