Thursday, 26 December 2013

China To Abolish Hukou System

The Chinese Government has announced plans to abolish the hukou system – the form of “internal passport” that restricts the movement of Chinese nationals within the country. The move will trigger a mass push towards urbanization and provide migrant workers with a full range of social services in cities away from their hometown. The decision does away with decades of discrimination amongst China’s massive army of travelling workers.
The announcement was made at the China Urbanization Conference last week, at which both President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang spoke of the need to urbanize China’s smaller cities as a huge engines for growth. The announcement echoed plans proposed during the Third Plenary Sessions held last month.
The hukou system will be fully removed in towns and small cities, allowing integration of their migrant worker populations. The system will also be gradually phased out in medium-sized cities. Some restrictions will remain in place for the larger metropolises such as Beijing and Shanghai in order to prevent large numbers of workers swamping these cities’ social infrastructure.
These reforms are necessary to enable China’s workers to move to smaller and medium sized cities with the comfort of being able to access welfare, education and medical services. Prior to this they were classified as “rural residents” and only able to claim these services in their home town or village.
The aim is to create “urban clusters” across China, which will help cities such as Wuhan and Changsha attract migrants and boost productivity. The conference also cited three main metropolitan areas that will be developed:
The Pearl River Delta – with Guangzhou at its center
The Yangtze River Delta – with Shanghai at its center
The Bohai Rim – with Beijing and Tianjin at its center
This will allow previously migrant workers to settle throughout these areas, and specifically into the smaller cities in these massive regions.
Chris Devonshire-Ellis of Dezan Shira & Associates comments that “this will be a major economic driver for China as small-medium cities will now be able to grow properly and offer incentives to attract migrant labor and talent. This has worked well in the past in cities such as Shenzhen – now one of China’s wealthiest and with a huge ex-migrant population. Shanghai has also benefited from a long term flow of Anhui workers into the city. The abolition of the hukou system will create a new dynamic of better integrated people with more confident skill sets as they will need to adapt to new surroundings and this tends to have a positive effect on social attitudes. The available labor pool in urban areas will also increase and become more stable and this is good news for developing sustainable manufacturing businesses in the lower tier cities.”
Source: China Briefing

China’s Total Debt at 215 Percent of GDP in 2012: CASS

China's total debt topped more than 100trillion yuan in 2012, which was 215 percent of that year's GDP, according to the China Balance Sheet 2013 released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).
China's social debt amounted to 111.6trillion yuan at the end of 2012, including 58.76 trillion yuan in non-financing sectors which accounted for 113 percent of the country's 2012 GDP and 27.7 trillion yuan of government debts, or 53 percent of GDP.
Last year, the corporate leverage ratio in China reached 113 percent of its GDP, compared with OECD's important marker of 90 percent.
Household sector debt was at 16.1 trillion yuan at the end of 2012 while bonds issued by financial sectors stood at 9.13 trillion yuan, the report said.
De-leveraging is inevitable for China as the whole nation’s leverage ration is pretty high as shown by the statistics, said Li Yang, deputy chairman of the CASS. 
China's total debt level, mostly lower than that in developed nations, is mild and under control, said Li, adding, however, that China should be aware of the fast-rising debt.
The CASS report also showed that China’s net assets had exceeded 300 trillion yuan in 2011, underling small chances of a sovereign debt crisis in the future.  
Source: The Sinocism Newsletter

Bolex goes digital with the D16 Cinema Camera

The Digital Bolex D16 Cinema Camera, sporting its snazzy retro pistol grip

There was a time, not all that long ago, when most independent film-makers shot their projects on relatively-inexpensive 16mm film – it wasn't as pricey as 35mm, but was definitely a step up from Super 8. The cameras shooting that film were quite often made by the venerable Swiss manufacturer, Bolex. Today, in the age of digital video, film-makers wanting to take a step up from consumer-grade camcorders are looking at some pretty expensive gear. LA-based entrepreneurs Joe Rubinstein and Elle Schneider are trying to change that, with the introduction of their Digital Bolex D16 Cinema Camera.
The result of a successful Kickstarter campaign, the D16 is being developed in partnership with Bolex International. It has the appealing retro looks of a classic 16mm movie camera, but records HD video at a resolution of either 2048 x 1152 (2K) or 1080p, via a Super 16mm-sized sensor with 12 stops of dynamic range. Its frame rate is adjustable up to 32fps, and it records in 12-bit CinemaDNG raw format – this means that the video isn't compressed, as it with other formats.
The camera has two 24-bit 96-kHz audio channels, each of which is served by its own XLR mic input. Footage is recorded on a built-in Enterprise Class solid state drive, although the D16 also has two CF card slots. Power is provided by an integrated rechargeable battery that offers about four hours of run time per charge.
Just like a "real" movie camera, it also allows users to swap in different C-mount lenses as needed – they can even use existing Bolex lenses.
Footage shot with D16 is described as having an "organic" (read, "film-like") quality, and can be seen in the demo video at the end of the article. Additionally, the 2K resolution allows that footage to be projected onto a big screen without getting too grainy, while the uncompressed raw format allows for more in the way of post-production image manipulation.
Rubinstein and Schneider state that the D16 is intended not just for serious film-makers, but also for amateurs who are interested in exploring cinema-quality video. At a cost of US$3,299, however, the former of those two groups are more likely to be buyers. That's actually a very low price, as digital cinema cameras from the likes of RED, Canon and Sony range from $10,000 to over $30,000. Blackmagic' Pocket Cinema Camera , on the other hand, goes for just $995 – definitely a competitor.
The Digital Bolex D16 Cinema Camera is available via the first of the links below.
Source:Digital Bolex via Digital Trends

Police Find Tunnel Under China-Hong Kong Border

  According to a report from the Wall Street Journal ''Chinese authorities this week discovered a narrow concrete tunnel built by smugglers intending to shuttle consumer goods from Hong Kong across the border to the mainland Chinese city of Shenzhen''.
The tunnel, equipped with lights, vents and a rail track with pulleys to ferry contraband, was found by Shenzhen police before it was put to use. The passage was about 40 meters (131 feet) long and led from a garage in Shenzhen to a secluded thicket of reeds near the Hong Kong border, according to state media reports.
Authorities suspect that the tunnel, which was about 0.8-meter wide and a meter in height, was to be used to smuggle smartphones, tablets and other electronics from Hong Kong into mainland China.
Hong Kong's police force said that it was notified by its Shenzhen counterparts of the tunnel's existence Tuesday. "We will step up patrol of the border area," a Hong Kong police spokeswoman said Thursday. Shenzhen's police department couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
Smuggling between the two cities has increased significantly in recent years. Although Hong Kong is under Chinese rule, the city is a special administrative region that is a free port with its own separate trade laws and tariffs that differ from the rest of mainland China. Travelers entering Hong Kong from China must go through immigration and customs clearance,
Hong Kong returned to Chinese administration in 1997, but the city remains separated from the rest of mainland China with miles of heavily guarded fences to prevent smuggling of illegal immigrants and goods.
Shenzhen, a city with a population of about nine million people directly across the border from Hong Kong, is a frequent gateway for trade, including smuggled goods.

US Markets higher in early morning

The U.S. equity markets are moving higher in early action after being closed yesterday for the Christmas holiday, aided by a larger-than-expected drop in domestic initial jobless claims. Treasuries are moving modestly lower following the data. However, volume will likely remain light, with markets in Europe, Canada, Australia, and Hong Kong remaining closed for holidays. In light equity news, United Parcel Service Inc announced late Tuesday that the volume of air packages in its system exceeded capacity as demand was much greater that it had forecasted, resulting in a small percentage of shipments that were delayed and were not delivered on time for Christmas. Gold is higher, while the U.S. dollar is lower and crude oil prices are mixed. Overseas, Japanese stocks closed at a six-year high as the yen weakened to help export-related issues, while Chinese stocks shrugged off a GDP growth forecast that was above the nation's target, as liquidity concerns continued to fester.

Source:  Schwab

U.S. Department of Labor data, Initial Claims

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE WEEKLY CLAIMS REPORT
          SEASONALLY ADJUSTED DATA

In the week ending December 21, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 338,000, a decrease of 42,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 380,000. The 4-week moving average was 348,000, an increase of 4,250 from the previous week's revised average of 343,750.
The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 2.2 percent for the week ending December 14, unchanged from the prior week's unrevised rate. The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending December 14 was 2,923,000, an increase of 46,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 2,877,000. The 4-week moving average was 2,836,750, an increase of 39,500 from the preceding week's revised average of 2,797,250.

Japan's Abe Visits Controversial Shrine

   The Wall Street Journal reports:  "Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Thursday visited a controversial Tokyo shrine seen by Asian neighbors as a symbol of the country's past militarism, in a move that quickly drew angry responses from Beijing and Seoul, and disapproval from Washington".
The visit to the Yasukuni Shrine in central Tokyo came as a surprise as Mr. Abe had so far refrained from going, stressing that he wanted to avoid turning the matter into a diplomatic issue.
"I offered my respects to those who lost their precious lives for our country, and prayed that their souls may rest in peace," he told reporters after the visit. "I have no intention at all of hurting the feelings of the Chinese or the South Korean people."
Mr. Abe had repeatedly said he regretted not visiting the shrine during his first tenure as prime minister from 2006 to 2007, and Thursday's visit, which comes exactly a year after he returned to power, is seen as a reflection of his convictions as well as a move to appeal to his conservative support base.
Wearing a formal morning coat and a silver white tie, the prime minister walked slowly up the steps leading to the shrine's main altar, led by a Shinto priest.
Many Asian nations that suffered under Japan's wartime actions see the Yasukuni, which honors convicted Class A war criminals along with Japan's war dead, as representing Tokyo's past militarism.
China's foreign ministry criticized Thursday's visit as the latest attempt by Mr. Abe to gloss over Japan's militaristic past and said it would further harm relations already tense from a dispute over contested East China Sea islands.
"Under these conditions, not only does the Japanese leader not show restraint, but instead makes things worse by manufacturing another incident over history and creating a new political obstacle to the improvement and development of relations between the two countries," spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement. "Japan must bear all the consequences arising from this."
Seoul also decried the move. "Our government cannot but deplore and express anger about Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to the Yasukuni Shrine despite concerns from neighboring countries and the international community," said Yoo Jin-ryong, a South Korean spokesman, reading from a statement.

From WSJ: US stocks in rally mode,Twitter gone wild

    According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, "there are two constants this holiday season: The U.S. stock market keeps hitting new highs and social-media stocks can do little wrong".
The Dow Jones Industrial Average has risen every day since the Federal Reserve’s decision last week to rein in, or taper, some of its extraordinary easy-money policies. The blue-chip average is up 482 points, or 3%, during its five-day winning streak.
Markets were closed Wednesday for Christmas.
Microblogging site Twitter,” has surged 17% this week and is up 70% for the month. Shares, which traded above $70 this week for the first time, are up more than 170% from last month’s $26 IPO price.
The rally has confounded many Twitter analysts, who generally remain lukewarm on the shares. “It appears valuation metrics are irrelevant,” Blake Harper, an analyst at Wunderlich Securities, wrote to clients on Tuesday. “Investors are betting aggressively on Twitter being the next great media-technology platform.”
He says positive investor sentiment and a limited float of available shares could push the stock price even higher in the near term. But broadly speaking, “the stock trades at objective measures that are hard to justify,” Mr. Harper said.
Facebook is another stock that continues to befuddle Wall Street. Shares hit a new highon Tuesday, finishing at $57.96. The stock has rallied 5.2% since joining the S&P 500 late Friday after the closing bell. Facebook is up 23% this month and 117% for the year.
Social-media stocks aside, the stock market’s latest leg higher has occurred on relatively low volume. With Wall Street trading desks half empty for the holidays, most market observers aren’t putting too much emphasis into what transpires through the end of the year.

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Nikkei scales more than 6-year high, driven by retail investors

Tokyo's Nikkei share average climbed 0.9 percent to a more than six-year high on Thursday, with buying mostly by retail investors as tax-free investment accounts aimed at driving Japanese savings into stocks kicked off.
The Nikkei was up 145.99 points at 16,155.98 in mid-morning trade, after closing above 16,000 for the first time since December 2007 on Wednesday.

"Today's the first day of the NISA trading start, so retail investors are quite active, or at least investment trusts will be quite active because they will be handling the money from 
The government-sponsored investment plan, known as Nippon Individual Savings Account, will provide a five-year tax holiday on dividends and capital gains provided the money is invested in stocks, mutual funds or exchange traded funds.
Also underscoring the positive short-term outlook, Japanese companies' one-month earning momentum improved to 4.3 percent from -0.65 last month, data from Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S showed. That compared with -4.19 percent for the Standard & Poor's 500.

Slowdown in growth a concern for some BOJ policymakers - minutes

 Bank of Japan policymakers broadly agreed the economic recovery will remain on track as an improving job market fuels consumer spending, but some expressed worry about the pace of growth, the minutes of the central bank's November meeting showed.

According to the minutes released on Thursday, two policy board members voiced concern about a large contribution from inventories and a fall in wages in Japan's latest gross domestic product data.
"This may be indicative of a downward shift in growth, instead of merely a temporary slowdown," one member said, referring to the third-quarter GDP data.
Differing views over the pace of growth could make it difficult for the BOJ to present a united front next year, when GDP could dip sharply in the second quarter after a planned increase in the national sales tax.
In the July-September quarter Japan's economy grew 0.3 percent, slower than 0.9 percent growth in the previous quarter as consumer spending and exports weakened.
Many economists say GDP growth has already picked up as exports have improved.
But an increase in the sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent in April is expected to cause a temporary contraction, which will be a test of whether the BOJ can ride out pressure to ease policy further.
Source: reuters

Japan's Abe to Visit Yasukuni Shrine

   According to a report from the Wall Street Journal,Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will visit the controversial Yasukuni ShrineThursday, government officials said, in a move that is likely to anger Japan's neighbors who view the shrine as a symbol of Japan's past militarism.
The shrine, which honors convicted war criminals along with Japan's war dead, is regarded by Japan's Asian neighbors as a symbol of the country's past militarism.
Mr. Abe had repeatedly said he regretted not visiting the shrine during his first tenure as prime minister from 2006 to 2007.
He last visited the Tokyo shrine in October of last year, after he was chosen as the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, but before the party won the December general election that put him back in power.

Japan ranks high in child poverty rate among 31 nations surveyed

Japan ranked sixth in children's overall happiness, but 21st in the category of material well-being, reflecting a high poverty rate, according to a survey of 31 economically advanced countries.

The United Nations Children's Fund and Japan's National Institute of Population and Social Security Research released their child well-being study on Dec. 25.
Using 20 indicators to create five categories, their assessment examined material well-being, health and safety, education, behaviors and risks and housing and environment.
The key reason behind Japan's low rating in the material well-being category was the high percentage of children up to age 17, some 14.9 percent, who live below the poverty line.
The poverty line is calculated as 50 percent of the national median of disposable income. An income is calculated by taking the household income and adjusting for family size and composition.
The Netherlands topped the overall ranking for happiness, followed by the Nordic countries of Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden and then Japan.

Source: Asahi

Japan's daycare shortage hits women in work

Japan's social welfare crisis is not simply about the aging population. The nation also has more than 20,000 children on the waiting-list for day-care centers, which means their mothers can't get back to work.

As Bloomberg's Aika Nanao reports, the shortage of places is a challenge for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who wants more women in the workforce to revive the economy.
Source: NewsOnJapan

Nakaima 'set' to approve Henoko plan

Okinawa Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima is expected to approve land reclamation work in the Henoko district in Nago, Okinawa Prefecture, as early as Thursday, paving the way for relocating the U.S. Marines Corps' Futenma Air Station in Ginowan 18 years after the Japanese and U.S. governments agreed to relocate the facility from a densely populated area in the prefecture, according to several sources.
Nakaima met Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Wednesday afternoon at the Prime Minister's Office, where he was briefed on measures the government will take to reduce the prefecture's U.S. base-hosting burden, as well as steps to boost its economy.One of the biggest proposals is that Tokyo will enter negotiations with Washington toward signing a new accord to enable authorities from the Japanese side to enter U.S. bases in Japan for such purposes as environmental surveys. Such an accord would complement the Status of Forces Agreement.
"I'm grateful for the surprisingly good proposals made by the prime minister," Nakaima said after emerging from the 25-minute talk.
The measures that the government is expected to take include moving forward the deadline for returning land currently used by the Futenma Air Station from the current 2022 or later and carrying out U.S. military exercises using MV-22 Osprey transport aircraft in various locations.

Source:Yomiuri

UN bullet supply deal highlights Tokyo-Seoul rifts

The awkward exchange between Tokyo and Seoul over ammunition Japan provided to South Korean troops taking part in a United Nations peacekeeping operation highlights the deep diplomatic difficulties between the two neighbors.
Japan provided 10,000 bullets to South Korean peacekeepers in strife-torn South Sudan on Monday through the U.N. But claims by the two governments over details of the transaction have been inconsistent. The arrangement has also led to speculation Tokyo is trying to curb the nation's self-imposed ban on arms-exports as part of an attempt to expand its military profile. It was the first time Japan has provided arms to a foreign military since World War II.Japan's main government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, reiterated Wednesday that the decision was based on "urgent and humanitarian" needs in the African nation, and said the request was made both by the U.N. and South Korean troops taking part in the mission.
But South Korean officials maintain Seoul asked the United Nations to provide ammunition, not Japan, and received the bullets through the world body.
South Korean troops "asked the U.N. for support in increasing it defense capability and received ammunition through the U.N. No more. No less," said South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young on Tuesday.
Ties between Tokyo and Seoul have been chilled by arguments over Japan's past occupation of Korea and by a dispute over islands claimed by both countries.

Source:  WSJ

Amari to return to work on Thursday

Japanese Economic Revitalization Minister Akira Amari will return to work on Thursday morning, when he attends a cabinet meeting, the government said Wednesday.
Amari announced on Dec. 5 that he had early-stage tongue cancer. He underwent surgery on Dec. 12.

Source: Jiji Press

Govt forecasts 7-year-high GDP of Y500 tril. in FY14

The government on Saturday afternoon approved at a Cabinet meeting its economic outlook for fiscal 2014, which forecasts nominal gross domestic product at ¥500.4 trillion.
Personal consumption and corporate capital investment will increase thanks to the fiscal 2014 budget, according to the government.Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is expected to improve to 3.7 percent next fiscal year from 3.9 percent in the outlook for this fiscal year.
The economic growth rate is forecast at 1.4 percent in inflation-adjusted real terms, while the nominal growth rate, considered a close indicator of actual consumer sentiment, is set at 3.3 percent.

Source: Yomiuri

SoftBank on course to buy T-Mobile

Japan's SoftBank plans to acquire T-Mobile US through its subsidiary Sprint in a move that would create the world's second largest mobile carrier by revenue after China Mobile, a report said Wednesday.

SoftBank intends to buy a majority stake in fourth-ranked US wireless carrier T-Mobile in early 2014 in a transaction with an estimated price tag of more than 2 trillion yen ($19 billion), the Nikkei business daily said.
It is in the final stages of talks with T-Mobile's parent, Deutsche Telekom of Germany, the economic daily quoted anonymous sources close to the matter as saying.
SoftBank declined to comment on the report. Shares in the firm fell 0.56 percent to 8,760 yen in Tokyo morning trade.
The purchase would boost the SoftBank group's annual revenue from mobile operations to $69.4 billion, making it the world's No. 2 carrier behind China Mobile with $90.4 billion, the Nikkei said citing, industry figures.

Source:  NewsOnJapan

A minicar named Hustler? Japan's brand names raise eyebrows

Suzuki Motor Corp had little idea that the name "Hustler" for its new, boxy minicar aimed at outdoorsy Japanese customers might cause mirth among English speakers for its association with an adult magazine - but it's not alone.

Plucking words from foreign dictionaries without checking how they might be received by native speakers appears to be a habit at Japanese companies, which have produced countless products with unintentionally unsavoury names.
The name Hustler was chosen to conjure the image of agility, as well as invite nostalgia from customers who remembered an off-road motorbike released in 1969 called the Hustler 250, said a Suzuki public relations officer.
Foreign visitors might instead recall the sexually explicit magazine started by porn magnate Larry Flynt as competition to Playboy, or associate the word with obtaining money through illegal activities or vice industries.
The Hustler follows a string of other Japan-made cars to bemuse speakers of foreign languages, such as Daihatsu Motor Co Ltd's Naked in 2000 and Isuzu Motors Ltd's 1983 Bighorn.
Spanish speakers were taken aback by Mazda Motor Corp's (7261.T) Laputa, a derogatory word for sex worker, while Mitsubishi Motors Corp sold its Pajero model as the Montero in Spanish-speaking countries as the former is slang for sexual self-pleasure.

Source: Reuters

China's foreign trade weathers storm of fluctuation

After a roller-coaster year, China's foreign trade may yet reach its 8-percent growth target by the end of 2013. Exporters remain optimistic.
A survey of over 500 Chinese exporters in October by Global Sources, a Hong Kong media company, shows two thirds of them looking to increase revenue in the first half of 2014.
Hardware and automotive parts suppliers are the most optimistic, with nearly 75 percent anticipating higher export revenues in the first half of next year.
The feelings are in line with customs statistics showing a 9.3 percent increase in trade volume in November and an all-time export high of 202 billion U.S. dollars, up 12.7 percent from the previous year.
The increase brought growth in the first 11 months of 2013 to 7.7 percent, close to the 8 percent target set at the beginning of the year.
During a monthly press conference, Ministry of Commerce (MOC) spokesman Shen Danyang attributed the fast growth to three factors: government policies to stabilize expansion; a low base number in November 2012; and recovery in traditional markets.
China will continue opening up in 2014 and traditional export strengths will be retained while avenues are explored. Shen added that exporters should not be too optimistic, even though exports will continue to growth rapidly.
MOST VOLATILE YEAR
Shen's caution does not come out of nowhere. Overseas trade has just gone through a most Mercurial year in two decades.
The increase during January to March was a stunning 13 percent, but dropped to under 5 percent in the second quarter. Foreign trade rose only 0.4 percent in May, and June saw the first decrease in 17 months.
Moderate growth in July and August was followed by another negative number in September, then a 5.6 percent rebound in October.
"The fluctuation comes from several sources, which include the uncertain recovery in global markets, and carry trades which greatly distort the customs figures," explained Xiao Yaofei, a professor with Guangdong University of Foreign Studies.
Shen Danyang believes that this new wave of increase is better grounded, as recoveries are seen across a range of industries, including labor intensive sectors such as bags, shoes and toys.
Analysts are still concerned that carry trades, a kind of cross-border interest rate arbitrage, are also behind the growth in November. The government and the trade companies are warned to look at the underlying reasons for the fluctuations.
Lu Zhengwei, chief economist of Industrial Bank, believes choppy, distorted trade figures are related to both the overvaluation of the yuan and high domestic interest rates
"They are the conditions which breed carry trades. When exchange rate volatility is small enough, hot money will flood into China via trade channels," Lu explained, "and these conditions still exist."
According to the Global Sources survey, 66 percent of respondents list "yuan appreciation" as their primary obstacle, replacing production and labor costs in the previous survey 6 months ago.
The yuan gained more than 2 percent against the greenback in 2013 alone, undermining export competitiveness, especially for small and middle sized suppliers.
The situation worsened in recent months, when the currencies in some emerging markets depreciated against the U.S. dollar, making Chinese products even more expensive. These developments add weight to the need for reform, including the internationalization of the yuan.
A central economic work conference in mid-December emphasized a push for market interest rate reform and reform of yuan exchange rate mechanism to increase efficiency.
Rising costs and price pressure from the buyers are concerns of over 60 percent of the companies, mainly from the coastal provinces of Guangdong, Zhejiang, Fujian and Jiangsu. About 64 percent of them did not think their revenue growth in the next half year would be over 20 percent.
Craig Pepples, president of Global Sources' corporate affairs, said rising prices are not just a result of high costs, but come from a shift from cheap to upscale production.
"Moving from being a source of inexpensive goods to a hub for top-quality products that offer good value for money is part of the evolution of China's export industry," said Pepples. "Upscale, and OBM and ODM production will secure China's place as an export powerhouse even as new low-cost manufacturing hubs emerge."
Haier, the country's largest exporter of home appliances, invested heavily in global marketing and new media promotions this year to contend with yuan appreciation and sluggish demand.
"It's a bad time for all home appliances makers worldwide, but I think we can maintain double digit growth," said Zhang Qingfu, sales director for the Middle East and African markets.
BRIGHT SIDE
While a challenge to trade, yuan appreciation opens a time window for global expansion. China's overseas investment may soon surpass the foreign direct investment (FDI) it attracts.
According to the MOC, Chinese investors splashed out money on 4,522 companies in 156 countries and regions in the first 11 months of 2013. Non-financial direct investment hit 80.24 billion U.S. dollars, up 28 percent year-on-year, exceeding the total of 77.2 billion dollars in 2012.
Actual use of foreign capital from January to November was 105.5 billion U.S. dollars, increasing 5.48 percent from the previous year, with 20,434 new foreign funded enterprises established, 9.19 percent fewer than last year.
The MOC issued a new foreign investment guide in late December, covering political, economic and social backgrounds in 165 countries and regions. The fifth edition since 2009 should help Chinese investors to reduce risk. The recent economic conference also decided to simplify approval for investment overseas.
During another conference in south China's Guangzhou in late December, Justin Yifu Lin, former senior vice president and chief economist of the World Bank, suggested that Africa will be a prefect receiver of China's unwanted labor-intensive capacity, with its advantage of cheap labor.
"China's transformation from labor intensive industries to capital and technology intensive industries will bring opportunities for countries with lower wave levels to start their modernization," Lin added.
"Direct investment from Chinese companies will help underdeveloped regions cope with environmental problems and poor infrastructure, while including them in the global industrial chain."
While labor intensive industries focus on emerging markets in Asia and Africa, high-end manufacturers are more interested in developed markets.
China's investment in the United States leapt 232.2 percent in the first 11 months of this year.
Francisco J. Sanchez, a former U.S. undersecretary of commerce, said at the same occasion that the United States could also become the bridgehead for Chinese companies' global expansion.
Sanchez added that if costs of labor, gas and electricity keep decreasing in the United States, manufacturing labor cost will be almost the lowest among developed countries.
Chinese enterprises that invest in the United States will have bright futures, he said.

Putting brakes on China's auto industry

Another big name joined PSA Peugeot Citroen, Honda, Nissan, Kia and Volvo as a Dongfeng Motor Corporation partner last week, when French automaker Renault signed on the dotted line.
Renault sealed a 1.3 billion U.S. dollar 50-50 joint venture agreement with China's second largest automaker on Dec. 16. This allows Renault to assemble vehicles in China and provides easy access to the world's biggest auto market.
Foreign automakers must have a local partner to make cars in China. The policy was conceived in the hope that Chinese carmakers would absorb foreign technology and management expertise. After three decades, foreign brands dominate the market and Chinese brands are steadily losing ground and the rationale behind the joint-venture policy has come into question.
Foreign passenger cars took 73 percent of the market share from January to October, a small rise of only 0.4 percent from the same period of the previous year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).
As a late starter, China benefited from joint ventures and enormous profits were made from the sale of foreign branded cars but, according to Jia Xinguang of China Automotive Industry Consulting and Development, that's just half the story.
Zhong Shi, an independent auto analyst, holds the view that joint ventures hinder the development of local brands. If the government does not adjust or abandon the joint venture policy, the prospect for stronger local brands is gloomy, he said.
EASY MONEY, LAZY RESEARCH
Easy money and overdependence on foreign technology mean Chinese automakers have very little interest in research and development, said Jia.
Many Chinese brands use chassis technology and engines of foreign partners, sometimes even outdated technology.
First Automobile Works Group (FAW), the company that made the China's first truck in 1958, relies on foreign products, including the Audi 100, Lincoln Town Car and Toyota Crown Majesta, for the range of FAW vehicles sporting the Red Flag badge, a communist symbol.
FAW has joint ventures with Volkswagen, Toyota and Mazda. It sold 2.6 million automobiles and raked in 370 billion yuan (60 billion U.S. dollars) in 2011. It was ranked 197 on the 2011 Fortune Global 500.
FAW has no shortage of funds, but the National Audit Office revealed in June 2012 that the company had not invested enough in research and development of proprietary models and that its 2008-2010 profits stemmed largely from joint ventures.
Angry voices have been raised as Chinese automakers, in cahoots with their joint venture associates, launch so-called "self-developed" and "local brand" cars. These are nothing more than cut price, rebadged and relaunched versions of superannuated foreign models that have gone out of production.
Government assessment of state-owned automakers mainly focuses on profitability, which is detrimental to product development, said industry analyst Xu Binjin.
Private automakers do not get the same support from the government and it is an unequal struggle, competing with foreign and state-owned automakers, said Xu.
What is required is an adjustment to auto industry policy, cooling the cozy relations between state-owned and foreign automakers and obliging state carmakers to stand on their own feet, said Wang Xiaoguang of the National Development and Reform Commission.
PUT THE BRAKES ON JOINT VENTURES
The government encouraged auto joint ventures for 30 years and thereby stifled development of domestic brands, said Zhong Shi.
Rao Da, secretary-general of the China Passenger Car Association and son of the man who headed FAW in Mao's time, wants the government to suspend new auto joint ventures.
Whether China is an auto manufacturing giant lies not in the number of joint ventures or how many cars it sells. It depends on whether the domestic automakers have strong independent research and development capabilities, said Rao.
"How come we were able to design and manufacture the luxury Red Flag limousine in the 1950s but needed to import steering technology for mid-sized trucks in the 1980s?" he said.
He believes that using foreign technology discourages local technicians and that is why state-owned automakers have failed to stop the slide of their own brands.
The Ministry of Commerce told the media on Nov. 19 that the government may relax foreign investment restrictions in areas including auto manufacturing. This easing will weaken the position of indigenous carmakers further.
Dong Yang, CAAM secretary-general, said that if foreign ownership rules were relaxed, Chinese carmakers would lose control of joint ventures.
"Foreign ownership being capped at 50 percent is the red line we must not cross because we need to protect our Chinese brands," Dong said in his blog on the CAAM website in early December.
Although the foreign cars manufactured in China contribute to local taxes and employment, the profit distribution leans toward the foreign companies as they have advantages in technology and management, said Dong.
There is no doubt that joint ventures are an integral part of the Chinese auto industry, but local brands are the core interests, he said.
Foreign automakers' role in technological progress in China is different from their Chinese counterparts. Auto manufacturing is also concerned with China's economic safety and national defense security, he said.
Dong called for the government to solicit opinions from the auto industry and have a scientific appraisal before making a policy that will have a significant effect on the industry, he said.
Source: Xinhua

Mao fans, minority worship?

 Chairman Mao is another God in the largely Buddhist hamlet of Man'en, where most ethnic Dai villagers enshrine the founding father of New China at home, though the "great helmsman" was de-deified after the end of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976).
A large portrait of Mao Zedong hangs high in the living room of Ai Pa, with a smaller image of a senior Myanmar monk by its side. This arrangement was a suggestion from the Buddhist clergyman, who presided over a prayer service for Ai's new house in 2000.
When Ai requested a portrait from the monk to be used as a "home guardian" after the ceremony, the monk insisted his image be placed in a subordinate position to that of Mao, saying that Mao was a real savior and guardian of the ethnic Dai people.
Loving almost all Mao things, from his quotations to the passionate red songs, Ai Pa remains a loyal Mao fan even though his family suffered during the Mao era.
Ai's family was classified as a landlord during the land reform in the 1950s, and his father fled to neighboring Myanmar only a few days after Ai's birth in 1957 in fear of penalties as denouncement campaigns against landlords swept Menghai County in Xishuangbanna, southwest China's Yunnan Province.
As the descendant of a landlord, Ai Pa had to face discrimination when he grew up. He was rejected when he registered to join the People's Liberation Army.
Indeed, Ai does think his family was wronged. "My ancestors were all poor peasants. It was not until my grandpa reclaimed some wasteland that our family began to own some paddy fields and hire a few laborers," he says.
However, all the adversities have not resulted in a resentful Ai Pa. "A Buddhist should not return grudge for grievance," says the 56-year-old man.
In addition, he says, he admires Chairman Mao because the late leader was a man who truly wanted to do good for the people, and he appreciates the value of equality that emerged in the Mao era.
Most villagers owned no land before the land reform in Xishuangbanna, where the feudal lord claimed ownership of all land and peasants had to shoulder the heavy and inescapable burden of taxation, according to He Ming, an ethnic studies professor at Yunnan University in Kunming.
Ai Pa recalls that when he was a child, old people in the village told him that Chairman Mao was like the Monkey King in the traditional Chinese fairy tale of the Pilgrimage to the West, who was invincible and was commissioned by the Heaven to bring fairness and equality to the world.
WHY NOT MAO?
Three decades into China's reform and opening-up drive, Man'en, as well as many other remote villages, has witnessed drastic economic and social transformation.
Satellite television broadcasts, mobile phones, motorcycles, cars, highways and the Internet have shortened the distance between them and the outside world. And yet Mao has remained an icon in the hamlet that has more than 6,000 villagers.
A Mao portrait bought in Beijing is always regarded as a very precious souvenir for local villagers, while Mao's mausoleum is usually a must-go for their maiden trips to the national capital, says Ai, who is also chief of Man'en village.
Like Ai Pa and his fellow villagers, the ethnic Blang people in Jiliang, another village with a population of over 2,000 in Menghai, are also Mao worshipers. They have his images printed on glazed bricks on the outside walls of their new homes.
However, these ethnic minority hamlets are not isolated cases. A survey by the Horizon Research Consultancy Group in 2008 in 40 Chinese cities and towns, including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, showed that 11.2 percent of respondents enshrine Mao Zedong at home, way ahead of those that worship the Buddha, God of Wealth, and other gods.
In the words of Huang Jisu, a sociologist, playwright and cultural critic, Mao worship is a quite complicated phenomenon and has a strong social background, and is also related to personal experiences.
However, Huang doesn't believe there is a geographical, age or social class division in regard to people's attitude toward Mao.
For example, Huang says, there are also Mao fans in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai, while some young people in universities also admire him. Huang also notes that it is not rare for entrepreneurs and millionaires to admire Mao.
However, Huang stresses that admiration for Mao does not necessarily mean the admirers want to go back to the Mao era.
"It's quite natural for Mao, such a great man, to have admirers. Just as pop stars can have so many fans, why not Mao?" says 58-year-old Huang, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing.
As for Mao fans, Huang says, ordinary people psychologically need a great person to hold in high esteem, and Mao has filled - and fills - that need.
In Huang's view, the greatest good that Mao did for the nation was the Chinese revolution he led, which ended the nation's survival crisis that had lasted a century.
PASSION IN LENS
Both Sun Yat-Sen and Chiang Kai-shek failed to lead the nation out of that crisis, and Mao was an unrivaled great man of his century, Huang says.
Sun Dahong, a photographer who has published an album featuring ethnic Mao fans, argues that the modern passion for Mao has nothing to do with a personality cult.
"It's never a political fervor that creates blind followers like those during the Cultural Revolution, but a kind of spontaneous affection or emotion that has sprouted at the grassroots and passed from generation to generation," says Sun, a former provincial deputy police chief of Yunnan.
Sun cites for example an ethnic Hani herb store owner in Kunming he met when working on the album. The middle-aged man has kept a Mao portrait for 30 years, a heritage from his grandfather, previously a headman who was invited to Beijing and met Mao after liberation.
The man moved to Kunming from Pu'er for business18 years ago, and now the Mao portrait hangs in his herb store. "I always take it with me wherever I go," the man told Sun.
Sun says he has witnessed much Mao worship among ethnic minorities. As a police officer, he has been to many areas of Yunnan, home to 25 ethnic minority groups, where he could often see Mao's images at local people's home, sometimes alongside their ancestors' shrines.
An idea of shooting an album of Mao fans occurred to Sun when, during the Lantern Festival in February 2011, his lens captured three old women in Chengjiang County of Yunnan talking merrily under a portrait of Mao.
His collection of more than 90 photos were exhibited in Beijing from Dec. 22 to 28 to celebrate the 120th anniversary of Mao's birth. He says that through his photos he would like to share with people of all ethnic groups a feeling of affection, respect and admiration for Chairman Mao.
Sun spent nearly three years traveling across Yunnan and other parts of the country to make up his collection of images, which cover Mao's admirers from all the 56 ethnic groups, including the originally fishing and hunting tribe of Hezhens in the northernmost Heilongjiang Province and the Muslim Tatars in far-flung Xinjiang in the west.
Sun reveals that it was more than a journey for art but also a process of soul searching.
"There have always been concerns that today's society is one without belief, but I have rediscovered it among the ordinary people. Mao worship is an instinctive expression of their emotion and perhaps even reflects a higher level of spiritual need," Sun says.
"To his worshipers, Chairman Mao stands for auspice and victory, represents social justice and is a man that leads them to common wealth. So they believe in, respect and love Chairman Mao," Sun says.
Also a Mao fan, Sun actually shares some similarities with Ai Pa. Sun's mother, a provincial cadre in Yunnan, was persecuted to death during the Cultural Revolution when Sun and his younger brother were both in Shanxi Province receiving reeducation from local peasants.
His mother's death has been a lingering anguish but Sun has never blamed or hated Chairman Mao. After all, he says, blames for personal grievances should not all go to a policy maker.
As for Mao's errors, a controversial topic, Sun would like to quote a man he met in Dehong, an autonomous prefecture of ethnic Dai and Jingpo, when shooting his album:
"Chairman Mao's contributions and merits are like a majestic mountain, but his faults can be measured in just a handful of earth."
Huang Jisu agrees that Mao's mistakes should be put under critical analysis, but he argues that criticism should be based on facts instead of rumors or even slanders.
"For such an epoch-making man, he is always a giant, no matter what the comments are, be it praise or censure," Huang says.

China: Emergency response questioned as vaccine-related deaths climb

   Seven children have now died in China since November following hepatitis B vaccination, raising questions of the effectiveness of the emergency response.
To date, four infants have died in south China's Guangdong Province after hepatitis B vaccinations with products made by Biokangtai,a Shenzhen drug manufacturer, the Provincial Disease Control and Prevention Center said on Monday.
The four deaths in Guangdong occurred in Zhongshan, Jiangmen, Shenzhen and Meizhou, but the Zhongshan case was not related to the vaccine. The baby in that case died of pneumonia, according to the center.
Autopsy results have not yet been released for the other three cases. Cause of the death can only be confirmed after autopsies which normally take 30 working days.
Two babies in neighboring Hunan Province and another in the southwestern province of Sichuan died in similar circumstances, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
A circular on Friday ordered suspension of Biokangtai vaccinations,two weeks after the first Biokangtai link was established on Dec. 6. Babies died in Hunan on Dec. 9 and in Shenzhen on Dec. 17.
A newborn in Hanshou County of Hunan showed a severe adverse reaction after being vaccinated on Nov. 25, according to local disease control authorities.
In response to the criticism, Biokangtai released a statement on Dec. 16 saying that "coincidental events are commonplace and easy to misinterpret," which did very little to deflate public anger and panic.
It is still not clear how many problematic vaccines were dispatched and used in other parts of China. Biokangtai is a major supplier of free hepatitis B vaccine, accounting for about 60 percent of the market share.
Many questions are being asked. Should the government have suspended use of Biokangtai vaccines earlier? Could the latest death in Shenzhen have been prevented?
The China Food and Drug Administration sent out a circular on Dec. 13, asking local authorities to stop using two batches of Biokangtai hepatitis B vaccine: C201207088 and C201207090. By that time, the problematic vaccines were already in use in Guangdong, Hunan and Guizhou provinces.
Four days later, a baby died in Shenzhen 70 minutes after an injection from a different batch of Biokangtai vaccine -- C201207086.
The father of the baby told Xinhua that doctors had said the infant was in good condition before the vaccination, shortly after his birth last Tuesday morning in hospital.
According to the 2011 Chinese emergency response regulations on medical safety emergencies, relevant information should be disseminated to the public as swiftly as possible when emergencies occur.
Shenzhen reported the case to higher authorities on Dec. 19, two days after the tragedy because the health authority did not immediately associate the death the vaccine, said Zhang Shiyin of the municipal disease control and prevention center.
"We only associated the death with the vaccine on Dec. 18 when the family asked for compensation," said Zhang. Shenzhen suspended use of the C201207086 vaccine on Dec. 19.
As of Monday, Guangdong had dispensed 113,964 doses of C201207086. More than 6.2 million Biokangtai hepatitis B vaccines have been used this year, according to the disease control center.
Vaccines which had not been used were sealed and the center is following up all the vaccines that have been used.
Vaccine regulations mean free hepatitis B vaccines are procured and delivered by provincial health authorities and there is now a huge shortfall in free hepatitis B vaccine since the suspension of Biokangtai products.
The Guangdong disease control center has procured 1.45 million doses of hepatitis B vaccine from another supplier, Beijing Tiantan Biological Products, which can meet demand for two or three months. The new vaccines were sent to hospitals on Monday night, according to Zhang.
Some hospitals are using non-free vaccines to fill the temporary deficiency.
"The hepatitis B vaccines we are using now are from a company from the northeastern city of Dalian and they are not free," said Yang Jinmin with Nanwan Hospital in Shenzhen.
"If the baby's father or mother is infected with hepatitis B, the baby must be injected within 24 hours. Those babies will be given priority," said Yang.
Other babies can receive the injections one or two weeks later without being in danger, he added.
Source: Xinhua

China maintains pressure with 5-year anticorruption plan

The Communist Party of China (CPC) has vowed to firmly fight corruption and maintain its "high-handed posture" in the next five years.
"If the problems of work styles and corruption are not handled properly, they will critically harm the Party, and even lead the Party or nation to perish," said a five-year (2013-2017) plan on building a system to punish and prevent corruption, issued by the CPC Central Committee on Wednesday.
All cases must be investigated and miscreants punished more severely to deter others, the plan said.
The CPC reiterated its pursuit of "tigers" and "flies" and the fight against harmful work styles, the hotbeds for corruption. The Party's work style campaign is fundamental to the fight against corruption, according to the document.
"Corruption is still common. The soil that nourishes corruption still exists. The situation remains critical and complicated," the plan said.
"The report showcases the Party's resolution in combating corruption in the next five years, focusing on both solving problems on the surface and eradicating their roots," said Ma Huaide, vice president of China University of Political Science and Law.
Within five years, "public satisfaction should be achieved," according to the plan.
For the CPC, building an anticorruption system is a "major political task, while for society it is a common responsibility.
The plan was hailed by the CPC Central Committee as an important guide in the fight against harmful work styles and corruption until 2017.

Source: Xinhua

China: Food security more than just quantity

  It is always the top priority for the government to ensure people have access to enough food, especially in a populous country like China, Tuesday's central rural work conference emphasized. The tone echoes the annual central economic work conference in mid-December, which listed guaranteeing national food security as the primary major task for 2014.
Both conferences elaborated a national food security strategy based on domestic supply and moderate imports, aimed at ensuring production capacity and speeding up the development of agricultural science and technology.
Ensuring that China is self-sufficient in grain supply is extremely important for national security. China's focus on food security shows the central leadership has strong crisis awareness and attaches importance to people's lives and security.With a huge population, the importance of food security cannot be overemphasized. Catastrophic famines in the past tell how devastating they can be.
What is food security? Having enough accessible food in hand.
There have been studies showing that China's self-sufficiency in grain has plunged below 90 percent, but more detailed studies show that beans accounted for over 70 percent of China's grain imports. As a result, the country's self-sufficiency rate for major grains other than beans remains higher than 97 percent.
In fact, the core of ensuring food security is to realize the country's sufficient and stable grain supply. To reach that goal, a country can rely on both its own production and trade; but considering China's huge population base, decision-makers cannot take risks in this regard and it is much better to seize the initiative in grain supply. Therefore, highlighting domestic production for sufficient grain supply is a choice based on reality.
However, fast urbanization and industrialization have resulted in increasingly prominent contradictions between urban construction and preservation of arable land. Some local governments are using the urbanization drive for land acquisition, threatening to reduce the country's arable land to below the government's red line of 1.8 billion mu (1.2 million square kilometers).
Since the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the country's grain output has increased by four times, but its population has grown about 1.4 times since 1953, while the area of arable land has continued to decline. Advances in agricultural science and technology have made the grain yield per unit area increase fourfold, but because of the increasing technical difficulties, the dividend that can be tapped through technological progress is limited. Without new technological breakthroughs, the risks to grain self-sufficiency will grow. Therefore, China's emphasis on food security and striving for self-reliance in grain production means protecting the existing arable land.
By emphasizing food security the central economic work conference proposed achieving absolute self-sufficiency in the supply of rice and wheat and basic self-sufficiency in corn.
The meeting also demanded related authorities focus on the quality of agricultural products, food safety, supervision of production sources and the wholesale process. By including quality of agricultural products into the category of food security, the government has emphasized the importance of food safety and food quality to people's livelihoods.
That means to ensure grain self-sufficiency, China should not only guarantee the amount of arable land, but also attach great importance to land pollution issues.
Source: China Daily

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