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 Strategies & Market Trends | True face of China -- A Modern Kaleidoscope


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To: hui zhou who wrote (10881)2/3/2012 11:54:11 AM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
What’s in store for China in 2012?
Despite food price inflation and a stagnant housing market, China should maintain a rapid rate of growth.

mckinseyquarterly.com 



"Gordon Orr, a director in McKinsey’s Shanghai office, offers a forecast for growth in China this year. Read his ten predictions, then let us know what you think.

1. Government policies will spur consumption and investment. These moves will compensate for declining exports and a slumping housing market. To boost consumption, policy makers could pull a number of short-term levers, including tax breaks and rebates, and are likely to raise the minimum wage further. The 12th five-year plan calls for raising household disposable income by 7 percent a year; thus the government may urge large state-owned enterprises to increase wages across the board, which would pressure other companies to follow suit. Policy makers are also likely to extend a popular program offering rebates on purchases of electronics and appliances. (It fueled the sale of 200 million units, generating 450 billion renminbi—about $71 billion—in revenues from 2009 to 2011.) In addition, the government will invest heavily in manufacturing, particularly in the central and western regions, offering incentives to attract industrial companies inland. The manufacturing sector will continue to fuel China’s growth, thanks in part to the lower cost of labor and the improving infrastructure in the country’s interior.

2. Dominant models will emerge for reforming rural land ownership. China must consolidate its farms to increase agricultural output and reduce the income gap between rural and urban populations. Land reform could help it achieve these and other objectives, and regions across the country are testing different pilots to identify the best approaches. One in the city of Chongqing, for example, helps farmers move to cities and thus gain access to education, health care, and pensions, which may be unavailable in rural areas. Participants have the option of keeping or giving up their land use rights in the process. A pilot in Chengdu, aiming to bring jobs and development to the countryside, gives rural populations rights typical of those urban residents enjoy. Thanks in part to this initiative, more than 90 percent of Chengdu’s rural residents now have medical insurance.

3. Real estate will stagnate. In an effort to further cool prices, the authorities will maintain purchase and credit restrictions that contributed to the deterioration of property markets in the second half of 2011. According to the China Index Academy, local-government revenues fell as a result of declining land sales—by 13 percent in Shanghai, 14 percent in Beijing, and 29 percent in Nanjing from January to November 2011, compared with the same period in 2010. Fear of local-government defaults and a general property rout may induce the central authorities to ease restrictions. Nonetheless, Beijing will continue to prioritize the construction of affordable housing for the poor in an attempt to prevent a hard landing in the construction sector.

4. The fundamentals will cause further inflation in food prices. Broader inflation in consumer prices appears to have peaked, but those of food rose at twice the rate of the consumer price index in the closing months of 2011. Inflation is highest for meats—the price of pork and beef rose by 27 and 14 percent, respectively, over the 12 months ending in November 2011, compared with the same period in 2010. The trend reflects changing consumption patterns among urban consumers and the growing middle class, who eat more meat, thereby increasing demand for cereals to feed animals. The availability of food imports is limited, and the rate of productivity improvement in domestic agriculture remains low. Moreover, price volatility is high, since even minor disruptions can affect supply dramatically.

5. Chinese investment in green tech will spike upward. Thanks to manufacturing at scale, China is already well established as a leader in the solar and wind industries. In 2012, the country will expand its efforts to deliver products and services directly to end users in international markets, raising barriers to entry for others. It will also boost investment in manufacturing and other upstream segments of the value chain, perhaps by acquiring (or striking partnerships with) struggling Japanese firms to gain access to intellectual property. As green-tech matures, the government may let subsidy programs lapse to prevent unmanageable growth and oversupply. Investors are interested. In 2011, 28 of the world’s 51 clean-tech IPOs came out of China.

6. Accounting scandals will continue. China’s reputation among regulators and investors was tarnished in 2011. According to the Financial Times, the total value of Chinese companies delisted from US exchanges exceeded what Chinese companies raised through IPOs in the United States last year. The trend will probably continue in 2012, since more than 400 “reverse merger” companies are still listed in the United States; the fact that they were not subjected to the rigors of the typical IPO process suggests that markets are in for more surprises. International investors will become increasingly selective about purchasing shares of Chinese companies.

7. Private-equity and venture capital funds may go ‘walkabout.’ Some venture capital and many private-equity funds in China used an aggressive short-term strategy that essentially involved buying companies shortly before they went public and then listing them at high multiples. But as asset prices decline and the stock market drifts, the potential for quick, IPO-driven returns falls greatly. If the assets these funds hold were marked to market, a significant portion would be out of the money. Some funds will probably get into trouble with impatient investors, raising the possibility that certain fund managers may walk away from investments.

8. Chinese acquirers will be bolder. As prices drop, Chinese companies will seek international buying opportunities. A recent example is Shandong Heavy Industry Group’s recently announced acquisition of Ferretti Group, the Italian luxury yacht builder. Companies in some countries seem wary of the trend. Indeed, a South Korean consortium may be assembling to preempt Chinese companies from acquiring a French firm that has critical technology for liquefied-natural-gas tankers. The Chinese will continue to purchase property in the United States, but opportunities to acquire businesses there will be scant in 2012, an election year.

9. The automobile segment will be slow. The auto market will probably grow by around 8 percent, much slower than the 32 percent jump in 2010 but higher than last year’s 2.5 percent. In particular, the market for small cars and microvans will grow significantly in 2012, although the budget segment (cars that cost less than $10,000) will become a key battleground between multinational joint ventures and local companies. The National Development and Reform Commission has required joint ventures to develop and sell vehicles under “indigenous” (that is, local) brands, and most offer budget models under them. This development puts joint ventures in head-to-head competition with domestic automobile producers, such as BYD, Chery, and Geely. Meanwhile, several local Chinese producers suffer from declining share. Stagnant real-estate prices will dampen demand for luxury cars, and the debate about how aggressively to encourage electric models has led to some adjustments in policy—such as a push behind range-extended electric vehicles—that might at last help to ignite the market. One certainty is that local companies are not ready to commercialize electric-battery vehicles at scale in 2012.

10. Hospital reform will accelerate. Two developments will drive the reform of hospitals. First, the emergence of clearer policies governing the payment mechanism between payers and providers will dramatically reduce excessive levels of prescriptions for expensive drugs. Second, local and overseas funds will lead a wave of hospital privatization, including both existing and new assets. In the pharmaceutical and medical-device segments, new provincial tendering policies will further erode prices. Nimble locals will fare best in this climate; multinationals will wait and see.?



About the AuthorGordon Orr is a director in McKinsey’s Shanghai office."



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To: hui zhou who wrote (10881)2/3/2012 12:42:29 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
"H-1B workers are better paid, more educated, study finds
Workers on H-1B visas are 10 years younger, earn 10% more than U.S. workers'

computerworld.com 

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From: brian h2/8/2012 10:02:38 PM
   of 11580
 

Dog ate dog..........A scapegoat emerges.

ibtimes.com 

Wednesday, February 8, 2012 2:43 PM EST

Top Chinese Cop, Wang Lijun, Possibly Seeking U.S. AsylumBy Michael Billera




A former police chief of a major Chinese city was reportedly seeking asylum in the U.S. after fighting with one of China's most powerful politicians.

Wang Lijun was known as a vigilant police officer in Chongqing city, fighting to keep crime off the streets by tackling gangs. His work even inspired a drama on Chinese state television called "Iron-Blooded Police Spirits." Reports originally circulated that China's top cop had taken a leave of absence because of the intense amount of stress he was under, after he had disappeared from a stand-off, Feb. 7, involving security officers surrounding a U.S. consulate in Chengdu, reported ABC News.

Wang was a close ally of the city's top Communist leader, Bo Xilai. Bo is one of China's top contenders for party leadership this fall as the country's central government is expected to shuffle its leaders.

However, Wang was removed from his position and reassigned to an education and environmental unit, according to ABC News. The move made some Chinese citizens speculate that Wang was under investigation by some authorities or he had fallen out of favor with his ally, Bo. It was also speculated that Wang had attempted to seek help from the American consulate during the tense standoff.

"We can't comment on what happened in Chengdu (Tuesday) night," Richard Buangan, spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Beijing told ABC News. Buangan told Reuters "there was no threat to the (Chengdu) consulate yesterday and the U.S. government did not request increased security around the compound."

However, they did not definitively say if Wang was involved. The Chinese government also tried to quell rumors that Wang was involved in the standoff.

"It is understood that Deputy Mayor Wang Lijun, who has suffered overwork and immense mental stress for a long time, is seriously indisposed physically. He is currently undergoing a vacation-style therapy," the Chongqing information office said, according to Reuters.

Analysts claim these series of events will have a major impact on Bo's political future in the Chinese government, especially since he had supported Wang's anti-crime policies so heavily.

"This will be a big blow to Bo Xilai, because Wang was instrumental in his anti-organized crime campaign, and that was instrumental in building Bo's appeal in public opinion and even among officials," said Chen Ziming, an independent scholar who studies party politics, reported Reuters.

Wang has still not been located by any media outlet.

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From: brian h2/10/2012 12:52:13 PM
   of 11580
 
This lady wrote this article. I read and forward it to you China patriots.

mag.chinatimes.com 

What if Foxconn did not have the contract to manufacture? What if Hwawei did not win more labor intensive contracts in China and abroad? What if Lenova did not rank the number 2 in PC sales? What if other semi-government owned / private owned enterprises did not maintain their labor intensive manufacturing contracts from the world?

Do you think your beloved CCP governments can do any thing for your socialized societies? The answer is pretty obvious. We saw these corrupted top CCP dogs ate dogs soap operas and saw those CCP officials sold the CCP owned farmlands to private enterprises and foreign companies in order to obtain bribes or benefit their own family/relative owned middleman companies. The list goes on and on........

Are you as China patriots really proud to be called People of Republic of China citizens? Do you truly believe your CCP party really follow your own county's Constitution to give China citizens a people republic? Do you forefathers dream's PRC are supposed to be running as is?

Sigh....................................

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (10884)2/10/2012 2:26:48 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 

The Renminbi’s Role in the Global Monetary System
China now has the world’s second largest economy and is a key driver of global growth. But of the six largest economies in the world, China’s renminbi is the only currency not used as a global reserve asset. Although it has recently taken steps to promote the renminbi’s international use, the Chinese government has still not been willing to open its economy to the free flow of capital nor allow a flexible exchange rate. Nevertheless, the sheer size of China’s economy and its rising shares of global output and trade foreshadow a rising role for the renminbi in international finance and trade. The deeper question, however, is whether the renminbi’s global stature will match that of the Chinese economy— and perhaps surpass the U.S. dollar.

brookings.edu 

Uncorrected Transcript (PDF)
brookings.edu 

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (10887)2/10/2012 2:42:42 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Singapore on China policy: Don’t call it ‘containment’
By Fred Hiatt

washingtonpost.com 
To contain China or not to contain China?

That is the question on the mind of Singapore’s foreign minister, K Shanmugam, as he winds up a week-long visit to Washington, his first in his current job.

His answer is a clear no. Or, at least — and this is my interpretation of the minister’s remarks — a no, please don’t call what you do containment.

“Containment does not work, will not work,” Shanmugam said during a visit to The Post on Tuesday. “Once you get into Cold War rhetoric, then you get everyone else into a Cold War framework, and it takes on a logic of its own.”

What Southeast Asian neighbors want, the foreign minister said, is for China and the United States to develop a symbiotic relationship, with each seeing the benefit of peaceful development, and smaller countries not having to choose between them.

But what if China, as its power grows, does not continue on that peaceful path? After all, its expansive territorial claims in the South China Sea already have alarmed Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines.

A “fair question,” the minister agreed. But he said he sees “no reason to disbelieve them when they say that, as long as their red lines are not crossed, there can be peaceful development.” While they talk about Tibet and Taiwan as “red lines,” he said, regarding the South China Sea, “they have not indicated that every aspect of their claim is part of their core interest.”

Shanmugam said he welcomes deeper U.S. engagement in the region, not only military but economic and diplomatic as well. He did not object to recent U.S. actions that have been widely interpreted as a response to rising Chinese power and neighbors’ anxiety about that: the Obama administration’s ballyhooed “pivot” to Asia, its agreement to station Marines in Australia, its even more recent agreement to reestablish a naval presence in the Philippines.

Those are all subject to more than one interpretation, the minister said. They can be explained to China and the world as fully consistent with the United States’s role as a global power and its “legitimate interest in keeping sea lanes open,” a strategic goal of long standing.

Just don’t call it containment.

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (10888)2/10/2012 2:45:24 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Singapore Straddles the Fence With U.S. and China
blogs.wsj.com 

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (10889)2/10/2012 3:02:43 PM
From: hui zhou2 Recommendations   of 11580
 
OT, Apple concentrating camp style secretive campus tech.fortune.cnn.com 

And Steve Jobs estrange personality cbsnews.com 

No, I will not use any of the Apple product.

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From: hui zhou2/13/2012 8:50:30 AM
   of 11580
 
Old documentary Kim Jong IL visited China in 1983.
youtube.com 
youtube.com 
youtube.com 
youtube.com 
....

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To: hui zhou who wrote (10890)2/14/2012 1:49:11 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
yep, I have been boycotting ALL Apple product for a long time. The only Apple product I bought was about 20 years ago, a small crappy made-in-us ugly Macintash<g> but it cost something like $1200. Computer was expensive at that time


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