Friday, 27 December 2013

China: Foshan’s Four Surprises and How China can move from middle income to high income status

"Few people outside of China know Foshan, a city of seven million located at the heart of the Pearl River Delta in southern China. But this vibrant and economically progressive city – which Foreign Policy and the McKinsey Global Institute ranked last year as the  world's 13th most dynamic city , based on its projected GDP increase from 2010 to 2025 – embodies China’s quest for a high-value-added, high-income economy.
  With this in mind, about 18 months ago, a team of researchers (including us) launched a case study on Foshan . The city stood out, because its experience exemplifies China’s progress over the last 35 years – as well as the structural challenges that the country now faces. One of the first Chinese cities to implement experimental economic reforms, Foshan first built itself up as a low-cost manufacturing center, and is now working to become a knowledge-based, innovation-driven economic powerhouse.

This micro-institutional study of macro outcomes produced four surprises.
 The first was Foshan’s economic performance. The city’s per capita GDP reached $14,828 in 2012 – higher than Shanghai or Beijing, and well within the World Bank’s “high income” category. Real-estate value per capita reached almost $50,000 in 2010 – more than four times per capita GDP that year – owing largely to soaring property prices. And Foshan’s urbanization rate, supported by high-quality infrastructure and an advanced industrial sector, reached 94%.
Of course, Foshan is not the only such success story in China. Of 287 Chinese cities, 17 have populations of more than three million, with per capita GDP exceeding $12,000. Together, these cities account for 11% of China’s total population and 30% of its GDP. While all of them hold important lessons for China as it attempts to avoid the middle-income trap, Foshan’s experience offers particularly useful insights.
  Thisis because of the second surprise: beyond slightly easier access to international markets – a result of its proximity to Hong Kong and history of municipal-level reform – Foshan’s success does not depend on some unique advantage. Thus, the main components of Foshan’s escape from poverty can be replicated in other Chinese cities. These include:
         Private-sector-led growth. The private sector contributed 62.5% of Foshan’s GDP in 2012, with one private enterprise for every 20 residents.
       Production for domestic markets. Foshan’s net exports declined from 30% of GDP in 2006 to 18% in 2012, reflecting a much earlier shift to domestic markets than occurred in other Chinese manufacturing cities like Wenzhou (25% of GDP), Dongguan (32%), and Shenzhen (37%).
·         Globally connected, specialized markets. Foshan has more than 30 specialized market towns with sophisticated industrial clusters and local supply chains linked to international markets.
       High-quality migrant labor. More than half of Foshan’s population and two-thirds of its workforce are migrants, who have access to the same social services as locals, owing to reforms in vocational training, health care, housing, and social security.
        Greater local autonomy. By delegating significant fiscal and management responsibility to county, township, and village officials, Foshan’s government was able to stop acting as a substitute for the market, and begin facilitating and supporting market growth.
        Decentralization of social services. The delegation of social services to more than 1,000 industry associations and non-government entities improved delivery and reduced the burden on public finances.
The third surprise was why only Foshan took these six steps, even though other cities could have done so easily. The city’s mayor, Liu Yuelun, explained that Foshan “had to rely on the market to get the people, capital, resources, infrastructure, technology, and sales for its growth.” After all, Foshan is not a special economic zone; it is not under the direct control of the central or a provincial government; and it is not rich in natural resources. In other words, the market – not the state – played a key role in resource allocation.
 The final surprise was that the key economic challenges facing Foshan today – such as local-government debt, credit access for small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs), and pollution – are identical to those facing China as a whole.
These four surprises highlight the need for China to move beyond mainstream economics, which emphasizes top-down macro policies, at the expense of the micro, institutional, and municipal-level reforms. But it is precisely such reforms that will determine whether China reaches the next stage of development".


Source: by Andrew Sheng and Geng Xiao, Project-Syndicate

Banks to accept smartphone photos of cheques

British banks are set to accept photos of cheques sent by smartphone, cutting the processing time from six to two days, the Treasury said on Thursday – but it insisted that this was not the next step in phasing out them out entirely.
The chancellor, George Osborne, is to consult next year on legislation to speed up cheque payments and make it easier for businesses and consumers to use smartphone technology. Consumers would also be allowed to send photos of cheques or go to banks with photographs of cheques in a move that mimic the way that plane tickets can now be printouts of emails.
In America, JP Morgan Chase introduced the cheque service in 2010, followed by Citibank and Bank of America. But in the UK, the law states the bank has a legal right to demand to physically see the cheque, especially if it is from a different bank, before it decides to honour it.
Welcoming the move, Steven Roberts, Barclays' managing director, said: "When you can download a book or a film in seconds, we believe you should be able to deposit a cheque in the same way. This is just the beginning of how we want to transform the 'cheque clearing cycle' for our customers, driving down the six days it currently takes a cheque to clear."
The Treasury said it accepts that despite debit cards, cheques remain crucial, with nearly £840bn-worth processed last year. This accounts for 10% of all payments made by individuals. A total of 23m cheques were sent as gifts since surveys show they are still the most trusted method of sending money through the post. But with cheques in overall decline, the Treasury said the new photo cheque would boost their status.
Source:  theguardian

Japan's CPI 1% in November. Analysts skeptical of 2% target of BOJ

Japanese consumer inflation topped 1 percent in November for the first time in five years, making steady headway under the central bank's efforts to achieve a 2 percent inflation target via aggressive monetary stimulus.

Factory output rose for a third straight month, retail sales jumped and job availability hit a six-year high, other data showed on Friday, adding to growing signs the recovery in the world's third-largest economy is gathering momentum.
Still, analysts remain doubtful of whether inflation will accelerate quickly enough to meet the BOJ's ambitious target, set in April, of 2 percent inflation in roughly two years.
"Consumer prices show signs of being pushed up by the weak yen, so we're still looking at cost-push inflation. It remains to be seen how strongly wages will rise," said Yasuo Yamamoto, senior economist at Mizuno Research Institute in Tokyo.
The core consumer price index, which includes oil products but excludes volatile costs of fresh food, rose 1.2 percent in November from a year earlier, government data showed on Friday, roughly in line with a median market forecast for a 1.1 percent increase.
That was the fastest pace of growth since a 1.9 percent increase in October 2008, when a spike in global commodity prices pushed up import costs.

Source: NewsOnJapan

China will further open its markets, accelerate negotiation on free trade zones and promote investment partnerships.

China will further open its markets to the outside world by setting up free trade zones and launching investment agreement negotiations with its trade partners, according to a statement issued after the annual Central Economic Work Conference.
The closed-door meeting, which was held from December 10 to 13 in the capital, brought together the country's top policymakers to review the previous year's economic conditions and set out a roadmap for the following year's development.
In some ways, the meeting can be seen as picking up where the third full meeting of the Communist Party's 18th Central Committee left off, trying to flesh out broad plans with finer details.
At the conference this year, policymakers indicated that opening up the economy would continue. Also, for the first time leaders said they wanted to take measures to help exports.
Exports have experienced a significant slowdown since the onset of the Global Financial Crisis in 2008. In the past, exports grew at 30 percent per year, but recently that has slowed to 10 percent. Although the country's exports continue expanding as a portion of the global total, they are facing challenges due to rising labor and material costs and stronger competition from Southeast Asia and Latin America.
The conference this year pledged to "accelerate negotiations on free trade zones" and for the first time mentioned "steadily pushing forward with negotiations on investment agreements." These statements indicated the country wants better engagement in bilateral and regional trade and business cooperation.
China has signed 12 free trade agreements and another six are in talks, including ones with South Korea, Australia and Norway. Negotiations with Australia are expected to be completed next year.
The talks between China and South Korea have entered the stage of price bargaining, while trade talks between China, Japan and South Korea are in their third round where the focus is on the model of tax reductions and scope.
In May, negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) between China, Association of Southeast Asian Nation members and several other countries were launched. The talks are scheduled to be completed by the end of 2015.
China is also trying to promote stronger investment partnerships with the United States and Europe. With the launch of the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, some experiments in foreign investment management are expected to be adopted in future partnerships.
In both the economic work conference report and a document issued after the party meeting in November, policymakers said they wanted to "promote a new maritime Silk Road." This is an indication the government intends to enhance links between the Pacific Ocean and the Baltic Sea, the body of water between northern and central Europe.

Source: Xinhua

China : Grain Security Top Priority in 2014

Grain security and agricultural modernization are the two expected focal points at this week's Central Rural Work Conference. Officials say China’s high self sufficiency ensures a stable grain supply, while more efforts are needed to make it more secure.
Despite the record high grain output this year, officials are admitting that the grain supply remains a challenge for China, as the country’s urbanization continues to unfold. Therefore, ensuring grain security will be a top priority next year.
China’s grain self-sufficiency is more than 95 percent. It is absolutely secure, and the actual figure is higher than the level, up to 98 percent.
Agricultural modernization is also a major issue at the meeting. Experts say the Chinese government is piloting rural reform areas and looking to set up a new rural operation system, as part of its modernization drive. That will give a huge boost to the sector’s overall efficiency.
Source: Xinhua

London Metal Exchage Prices


London Metal Exchange
Aluminium Alloy Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:301810.00
+15.00
+0.8
Aluminium Alloy 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:301845.00
+35.00
+1.9
Primary Aluminium Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:301753.25
+43.75
+2.6
Primary Aluminium 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:301796.75
+41.50
+2.4
Copper Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:307365.25
+93.75
+1.3
Copper 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 13:307226.75
0.00
0.0
Lead Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:302278.75
+32.75
+1.5
Lead 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 07:452245.50
0.00
0.0
N. American Special Alum Alloy Cash Official Confmd $/m tonneFri 13:301814.50
+42.00
+2.4
N. American Special Alum Alloy 3mo Official Confmd $/m tonneFri 13:301847.50
+35.00
+1.9
Nickel Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:3014222.50
+115.00
+0.8
Nickel 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 13:3014102.50
0.00
0.0
Tin Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:3022975.00
+35.00
+0.2
Tin 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:3022975.00
+57.50
+0.3
Zinc Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 13:302102.25
+30.50
+1.5
Zinc 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneFri 07:452075.00
0.00
0.

Xinhua Insight: Given history lessons, Japan's rearmament drive should be kept at bay

Humanity can learn from mistakes and lessons provided by history.
Japan's rearmament pursuit incarnated in a array of controversial moves its government has taken recently demands high vigilance of the international community and should be timely contained, considering the horrible occurrences in the last century.
On Sept. 1, 1923, a deadly mega-quake jolted Japan's main island of Honshu, killing hundreds of thousands of people, including three royal family members, and leaving about 1.5 million homeless in Tokyo and Yokohama.
The devastating quake had further exacerbated anxieties for security and survival of the island nation, which has been fettered by its narrow land territory and the lack of natural resources.
These anxieties and mentality have been behind Japan's aspiration for military expansion of its Lebensraum or living space overseas.
Also in the 1920s, a hurricane of economic crisis originating from the United States crushed Japan's economy, leaving around 3 million people jobless. That as well prompted Japan to speed up its military expansion overseas to quell domestic turbulence.
A then weak and perplexed China, which was only years away from the crumble of the 2000-year-long feudal imperialist system and overwhelmed by warlords' infighting, topped Tokyo's hunting list.
In later years, a militarized fascist Japan launched one of the most sanguinary aggression in the human history into China and other countries in the Asia-Pacific region and killed tens of thousands of people before it was defeated in 1945.
After nearly a century passed since the 1923 quake, Japan was hard hit again in March 2011 by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake, which was followed by huge tsunami waves that set off a nuclear crisis.
This natural disaster came at a time when Japan was led by a ever-right tilting government and mired in a stagnated economy in the aftermath of the worst global financial meltdown since the Great Depression.
These striking similarities seen in the 1920s and in the recent years have already carried enough weight for the world community to stay highly vigilant again.
In fact, the real situation on the ground is even worrying. The Japanese government led by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe seems to have taken history not as a lesson, but more of a humiliation of a defeated samurai.
Therefore, it has apparently decided to rearm itself despite constraints prescribed in its constitution and opposition voiced by nations having the best knowledge on what kind of brutality and slaughter Japan was able to deliver if its paranoia for growing military muscle went unchecked.
Seeking to conceal its territorial ambitions, Abe and many of his cabinet ministers are tirelessly whipping up Chinaphobia and China-threat in a coherent manner so as to rationalize their motive for military build-up.
While at the same time, the United States, Japan's adversary-turned-ally, is taking advantage of the escalating tensions to maintain orders in the Asia-Pacific according to Washington's wishes.
Yet it seems that the U.S. government has forgotten the Japanese politicians never play the game by the rules, and once their vicious desires are unleashed, American lives could also be in jeopardy.
Therefore, nations concerned should not appease a warmongering Japan again.
For the world not to be pushed into another bloody conflict, all peace-loving nations, especially those in the region, need to stand united, take enough precautions against Japan's malicious agenda, and adopt effective measures to contain Tokyo's dangerous pursuit of rearmament.
These countermeasures could include strong international consensus at the UN and other multilateral forums that demand the Abe administration stop further fan the flames in Northeast Asia, as well as practical economic sanctions that could cost Japan dearly so that it would never again cross over the line.
Because of Japan's self-assertive moves, the Asia-Pacific region is once again standing on the edge of a situation very much similar to that seen 90 years ago.
For the sake of peace and the millions of lives that were lost during the Second World War, it is dead certain that this time the horrors of history should not be repeated, and chances for another dispiteous war should be strangled once and for all.
Source: Xinhua

China Nov. industrial profits rise 9.7%, slower than October

China’s industrial profit growth slowed in November. Industrial firms with annual revenues over 3.3 million U.S. dollars posted a profit rise of 9.7 percent. That’s sharply slower than October’s 15.1 percent increase.
The slowdown is main due to state firms and collectively owned companies. Private firms and foreign invested companies’ logged quicker earnings growth.  The National Bureau of Statistics says January to November industrial profits totalled 5.33 trillion yuan, or 877 billion US dollars. That’s up 13.2 percent year on year.
Source: CCTV

China trade volume hit 4.14 trln USD in 2013, up 7%

China’s Ministry of Commerce held its work conference in Beijing today. Minister Gao Hucheng summarized China’s major economic data for 2013.China’s trade volume is estimated to reach 4.14 trillion dollars in 2013, up more than 7 percent from last year.
Trade volume in the services sector surpassed 520 billion dollars.
Retail sales is predicted to reach 23.8 trillion yuan this year, growing more than 13 percent year on year.
Foreign direct investment will reach 117 billion dollars, up around 5 percent.
Gao says that consumption and investment in the services sector are growing quickly.
Chinese outbound investment will reach 88 billion dollars in 2013, up around 15 percent from last year.
Gao says China’s outbound investment will continue to grow --as Chinese companies become more advanced in their technologies and management. He points out the strong demand for investments in infrastructure construction around the world.
Source: CCTV

China : Agricultural modernization and Grain Security Top Priorities in 2014

Grain security and agricultural modernization are the two expected focal points at this week's Central Rural Work Conference. Officials say China’s high self sufficiency ensures a stable grain supply, while more efforts are needed to make it more secure.
Despite the record high grain output this year, officials are admitting that the grain supply remains a challenge for China, as the country’s urbanization continues to unfold. Therefore, ensuring grain security will be a top priority next year.
China’s grain self-sufficiency is more than 95 percent. It is absolutely secure, and the actual figure is higher than the level, up to 98 percent.
Agricultural modernization is also a major issue at the meeting. Experts say the Chinese government is piloting rural reform areas and looking to set up a new rural operation system, as part of its modernization drive. That will give a huge boost to the sector’s overall efficiency.
S

Ex-steelmaker president Sudo seen as next chairman of ailing TEPCO

The government is making final arrangements to appoint Fumio Sudo, a former president of steelmaker JFE Holdings Inc., as the next chairman of Tokyo Electric Power Co., which is trying to restructure itself in the wake of the crisis at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, sources close to the matter said Friday.

Sudo, 72, currently an outside director of TEPCO, will have the task of helping the utility to continue its cleanup activities at the plant and at the same time reviving its battered business.
On the same day, TEPCO and state-backed Nuclear Damage Liability Facilitation Fund sought government approval of the utility's new 10-year business plan, which features more financial support from the state and the resumption of the idled Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant from July.

Source: NewsOnJapan

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

China 2013 grain collection hits historical high

China has kicked off its nation-wide grain collection process, just as the country's autumn harvest reached new high. Farmers are looking ahead for a great harvest season since the government recently increased the minimum purchase prices for grains. But, storage has become a big challenge.
Grain production in China is expected to reach over 600 million tons this year, the 10th straight year of growth.
One tenth of this amount will go to the national reserves. Good news for farmers: minimum purchase prices have been adjusted up. Rice produced from the North-east part of China rose 2 Jiao per kilogram, from its original 3 yuan per kg. Corn price has also risen on a small scale.
"We will strictly follow government price policies, and adjust how much we purchase according to market price fluctuations," Song Zhiyuan, Deputy Manager of China Grain Reserves Corporation, says.
The price policy certainly protects Chinese farmers, but as more bag of grain flood in, storage space is running out.
"Jilin Province plans to purchase 20 million tons of grain, the highest in history. But storage space in the whole province is just enough for about 7 million tons," Song Hai He, Planning Director of China Grain Reserve Corporation of Jilin Province, says.
And China's largest local grain reserve, located in Dalian is already full. It is estimated that about 20 million tons of grain would have to be placed in open ground, with a big risk of getting spoiled.
Source:  CCTV

Okinawa Gov. announces approval of landfill for base relocation

Okinawa Governor Hirokazu Nakaima announced Friday that he has approved the Japanese government's application for landfill work that is part of the plan to relocate the U.S. Marine Corps' Futenma air base within the southernmost Japan prefecture.

The issue of the Futenma base relocation, agreed between the Japanese and U.S. governments, will enter a new phase following the key decision by the governor.

Source: Jiji Press

U.S. expresses disappointment at Abe's Yasukuni visit

The United States expressed disappointment at Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to Yasukuni Shrine on Thursday.
"The United States is disappointed that Japan's leadership has taken an action that will exacerbate tensions with Japan's neighbors," the U.S. embassy in Tokyo said in a statement."The United States hopes that both Japan and its neighbors will find constructive ways to deal with sensitive issues from the past, to improve their relations, and to promote cooperation in advancing our shared goals of regional peace and stability," it said.

Defiant Abe a real danger

 No matter what pretexts Japanese politicians employ to justify it, the Yasukuni Shrine in the heart of Tokyo is a highly symbolic reminder of Japan's militarist past, because it enshrines 14 convicted Class-A war criminals such as Hideki Tojo and other war criminals among Japan's war dead.
Whether a Japanese prime minister visits the shrine is a tested-and-true political weather vane for judging its political direction, as well as proof that he respects or disregards the sensitivities of other countries and the postwar international order.
On Thursday Shinzo Abe signed the entry book to the shrine as Japan's prime minister, revealing the claims by his subordinates, that he visited it in a "private capacity" and it was a matter of "personal belief", to be poor disguises and outright lies.
Resorting to their same old gangster logic in the dispute over the Diaoyu Islands, they want us to swallow Abe's offensive pilgrimage to Yasukuni as a non-issue.
Responding to the ensuing angry diplomatic ripples, the unapologetic Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida highlighted his government's "hope" to "avoid letting an affair as such develop into a political or diplomatic issue". This "hope" is sheer hypocrisy. Because Abe knows full well "it is a reality that the visit to Yasukuni Shrine has become a political and diplomatic issue".
Contrary to his claim that Abe had "no intention at all of hurting the feelings of Chinese or South Korean people", Abe made the visit anticipating opposition from both countries, as Japanese New Komeito Party chief Natsuo Yamaguchi confirmed.
Abe knew it would be an insult. But he does not care. What he wants to do is use the opposition of neighboring countries to fuel domestic nationalism and garner more support.
Abe's shrine visit is a signal that nothing at home is holding him back from his ultra-rightist political agenda to rewrite Japan's pacifist Constitution and revive his war-cabinet grandfather's dream of making Japan a military power.
If Abe truly loves peace, he would not have sought to break Japan's tradition and let it export weapons again. If he respects international law, he would not have claimed there is no clear definition of "aggression". If he honors humanity, he would not be trying to sweep under the carpet the atrocities committed by the Japanese troops and instead show respect to their victims, both the buried and the breathing.
Abe's calculated move, on the anniversary of his administration's taking office, is an intolerable insult to the feelings of Chinese and Korean peoples among others and a blatant attack on human decency, as well as a shameful challenge to the international consensus on history and justice, to which our response should in no way stop at diplomatic representations.
Abe's nasty track record — his denial of the aggressive nature of Japanese intrusions during WWII, his lack of remorse for Japan's historical sins, and his crooked approach to territorial disputes — disqualifies him from having an opportunity to explain, face to face, to Chinese and South Korean leaders his motive and purpose. His tribute to Yasukuni has slammed the door to dialogue shut.
Given the Abe administration's bankrupt political credibility and dangerous political orientations, the international community and China should not be fooled by his excuses, instead it is time for them to seriously reconsider their relationship with Japan, from perspectives of security, diplomacy and economy.
A Japan obsessed with its militarist past is a real danger to the Asia-Pacific.
Source: China Daily

Abe's shrine visit grave provocation, fuels regional tension

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to the Yasukuni shrine on Thursday is a grave provocation that may lead to heightened tension in the region.
The visit came at the first anniversary of Abe's taking office as prime minister. It is also the first visit by a sitting Japanese prime minister since Abe's predecessor Junichiro Koizumi visited the shrine in 2006.
Choosing a sensitive time to visit a highly controversial and notorious place, Abe knows perfectly what he is doing and the consequences.
Instead of a pledge against war, as Abe has claimed, the visit is a calculated provocation to stoke further tension.
It will deeply hurt the feelings of those victimized by Japan's war crimes, stirring up nightmare memories among Japan's neighboring countries.
By visiting the shrine that honors Japan's war criminals, Abe is publicly challenging the post-World War II order, and embracing the country's dangerous tradition of militarism.
The visit is the culmination of Abe's year-long policy of right-wing nationalism.
During the past twelve months, Japan, for the first time in eleven years, raised its military budget.
Earlier this month, Tokyo approved a new national security strategy and defense policy package spearheaded by Abe to expand its military might.
In the security strategy, Japan vowed to seek more "proactive" roles for its military forces abroad and to set new guidelines on arms exports, signaling a major shift from its previous restrictive policy.
Japan also unveiled a so-called "helicopter-equipped destroyer" Izumo which is much more like an aircraft carrier with a length of 248 meters and a weight of 19,500 tons on the 68th anniversary of a U.S. atomic bombing in August.
Despite Japan's domestic economic woes, a considerable amount of government spending has been or will be invested in building up military strength instead of beating a 15-year deflation.
Apart from those military moves, the Abe administration also seized every opportunity to recast Japan's wartime history with a impenitent tone.
In April, Abe said that the definition of "aggression" has yet to be fixed, trying to defend Japan's invasion into Asian neighbors during the Second World War.
The hawkish and irresponsible actions and remarks, vainly whitewashing the country's war crimes in its history, will only hurt Japan's relations with the war-victim countries.
The right-wing Japanese politicians, who never fully understood how to deal with its history of militarist aggression, is steering Japan towards a dangerous road leading to nowhere, again.

China: Closer Look: For Annual Economic Conference, 'Free Trade' Is the Common Denominator

China will further open its markets to the outside world by setting up free trade zones and launching investment agreement negotiations with its trade partners, according to a statement issued after the annual Central Economic Work Conference.
The closed-door meeting, which was held from December 10 to 13 in the capital, brought together the country's top policymakers to review the previous year's economic conditions and set out a roadmap for the following year's development.
In some ways, the meeting can be seen as picking up where the third full meeting of the Communist Party's 18th Central Committee left off, trying to flesh out broad plans with finer details.
At the conference this year, policymakers indicated that opening up the economy would continue. Also, for the first time leaders said they wanted to take measures to help exports.
Exports have experienced a significant slowdown since the onset of the Global Financial Crisis in 2008. In the past, exports grew at 30 percent per year, but recently that has slowed to 10 percent. Although the country's exports continue expanding as a portion of the global total, they are facing challenges due to rising labor and material costs and stronger competition from Southeast Asia and Latin America.
The conference this year pledged to "accelerate negotiations on free trade zones" and for the first time mentioned "steadily pushing forward with negotiations on investment agreements." These statements indicated the country wants better engagement in bilateral and regional trade and business cooperation.
China has signed 12 free trade agreements and another six are in talks, including ones with South Korea, Australia and Norway. Negotiations with Australia are expected to be completed next year.
The talks between China and South Korea have entered the stage of price bargaining, while trade talks between China, Japan and South Korea are in their third round where the focus is on the model of tax reductions and scope.
In May, negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) between China, Association of Southeast Asian Nation members and several other countries were launched. The talks are scheduled to be completed by the end of 2015.
China is also trying to promote stronger investment partnerships with the United States and Europe. With the launch of the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, some experiments in foreign investment management are expected to be adopted in future partnerships.
In both the economic work conference report and a document issued after the party meeting in November, policymakers said they wanted to "promote a new maritime Silk Road." This is an indication the government intends to enhance links between the Pacific Ocean and the Baltic Sea, the body of water between northern and central Europe.

WTO crafts first liberalized global trade pact

 IT was touch and go, over a period of six intense days at Bali early December. In the end, the World Trade Organization’ Bali Ministerial delivered a trade liberalization package - the first ever deal that the WTO could craft ever since it came into being in 1995.
This came about in the backdrop of a 12-year stalemated Doha Development Agenda (DDA) and a spaghetti bowl of regional trade agreements being pursued widely.
The Doha Development Agency was launched in Doha in 2001. As negotiations on the DDA progressed, the poor realized that the rich want only better market access while paying lip service to development, hence the continuing stalemate.
Western agriculture subsidies was always the spoiler. Europe inter alia wanted new deals on investment, competition, transparency in government procurement, and trade facilitation as a trade off against reforms of their farm subsidy regime. However, many in the developing world were opposed to all the four issues and the Cancun Ministerial of 2003 collapsed without any conclusion.
The Cancun collapse was salvaged in Geneva in July, 2004 and it was agreed that DDA negotiations should continue, but retaining only trade facilitation among the four issues.
Low hanging fruits
Among other issues, trade facilitation featured at the Bali Ministerial as part of the Doha Lite deal, as a way forward to harvest low hanging fruits of the DDA and move forward. As expected the level of ambition between the rich and the poor are always at cross roads and thus the text on trade facilitation was not a consensus one, but it was sorted out in the end.
That was possible after the agreement on public stockholding of food grains breaching the 10 percent subsidy limit was crafted without tying it down to a four-year peace clause but until a permanent solution is found.
As India’s trade minister, Anand Sharma, triumphantly said: “A historic day for the WTO. India’s food security concerns are addressed.”
The US was recalcitrant, as it has little appetite for the DDA and has therefore been pursuing two mega regional deals. India’s hard stand made pundits feel that she is walking into a trap and thus negotiators will go back empty handed. Miraculously a deal was struck at Bali.
The US wanted the accord on trade facilitation badly, which was the trade off that India used for its demand on food security flexibility.
However, trade facilitation. ie, cutting down the red tape in customs procedures is a win-win deal, which was welcomed by all. This deal is expected to generate about US$1 trillion gain to all countries, of which most will accrue to the developing world.
In the end multilateralism stood its ground, which is the best way forward for all. The scene will now shift to Geneva, where negotiators will work out the nuts and bolts of what they have agreed at Bali, and tackle the unfinished agenda of the DDA over 2014 and beyond.

IMF Working papers: Local Government Financing Platforms in China: A Fortune or Misfortune Part I

1.Local government financing platforms (LGFPs) are the backbone of local
governments in promoting infrastructure development in China. As the principal
financing agents for local governments, their crucial role in upgrading China’s infrastructure
and promoting economic growth has been widely acknowledged. By not encouraging higher
local fiscal deficits or imposing more pressure on local government to issue bonds, LGFPs
could, to some extent, be seen as a fortune for Chinese local governments, as they act as a
vehicle to provide off-balance sheet quasi-fiscal support for local governments.

2. The rapid credit expansion in 2009–10 brought LGFPs into the spotlight. To 
shield the domestic economy from the financial crisis, at the end of 2008 the Chinese 
authorities started to implement fiscal stimulus measures and ease monetary policy. The 
stimulus measures provided a strong impetus for local governments to spend on 
infrastructure to generate growth and create employment. Given their limited revenue base 
and prohibition from direct borrowing from financial markets by the Budget Law, local 
governments relied increasingly on LGFPs to channel funding for infrastructure spending. 
The rapid expansion of LGFPs may turn the fortune to a misfortune as the resulting rapid 
credit expansion to LGFPs triggered concerns regarding local governments’ indebtedness, 
banks’ asset quality, and, more broadly, medium-term financial stability and sovereign risk in 
China, if the causes of rapid expansion are not addressed. 

3. This paper explores the function of LGFPs and the reasons behind their recent 
expansion (Sections II and III). We argue that the relationship between LGFPs and local 
governments is intertwined, and LGFPs’ rapid growth results from an economy that relies 
heavily on investment; a large government role in the economy; revenue and expenditure 
mismatches (at the local government level) exacerbated by the fiscal stimulus; and banks’ 
weak risk management and internal controls. 
4. The rapid development of LGFPs has made the economy subject to the volatility 
of the real estate market and further distorted the economic structure (Section IV). At 
end 2010, the debt by LGFPs amounted to RMB 4.97 trillion, equivalent to two thirds of the 
sum of total local government revenue and transfers from the central government. Moreover, 
since the receipts from the sale of land lease rights are the main sources for debt repayment, a 
correction in real estate prices could hurt the debt servicing ability of local governments and 
LGFPs, and impair banks’ asset quality. In the worst case scenario, it may trigger contagion 
between the financial sector and the sovereign. 

5. The proliferation of LGFP debts and their consequences make it essential to 
understand the causes of their rapid development, address the risks, and more 
importantly, implement measures to prevent a similar phenomenon from recurrence 
(Section V). Given that discussion of China’s economic growth model and monetary and 
financial framework is beyond the scope of this paper, the suggestions raised in the paper 4 
 
cover four areas. First, the mismatches between revenue and expenditure at the local 
government level should be fully acknowledged and addressed. Second, there is a need to 
establish a comprehensive framework to regulate and supervise local government budget and 
financing. Third, it is important to ensure that the financial resources obtained from the sale 
of land are sustainable given the constrained land supply in the medium term, which requires 
a comprehensive strategy for land capitalization. Finally, encouraging the issuance of local 
government bonds and developing them into safe assets can also help to make the land 
capitalization process sustainable and thus alleviate sovereign risk by cutting the 
transmission of contingent risk from local governments to the central government.
 
Prepared by Yinqiu Lu and Tao Sun 



The Consumer Electronics Startup Show Posted Dec 24, 2013 by Matt Burns

The size and scope of the Consumer Electronics Show is unfathomable for the uninitiated. CES has been called a cesspool. It’s been called a shitshow. And those descriptions are accurate. It’s a clusterfuck of consumer electronics companies, big and small, vying for attention. That’s why TechCrunch attends.
For the 2014 show, which is just two short weeks away, TechCrunch is, for the first time, breaking out its Startup Battlefield event from Disrupt. Called Hardware Battlefield, this startup competition has been tweaked and reworked to focus on, and celebrate, the brightest and most promising unlaunched hardware startups. And what better place to host it than CES?
CES is the largest startup show in the world, and to say that it takes over Las Vegas is not hyperbolic. The city is consumed by CES: Nearly every hotel room is booked; almost every conference room is used. For every Samsung and Microsoft, there are at least 100 smaller companies — the best and brightest of which often do not have an official spot on the CES show floor.
For years, CES has been held at the Las Vegas Convention Center. This massive facility has four exhibition halls nearly large enough to hold air shows within. But in recent years, with the LVCC bursting at its seams, the show expanded next door to the Hilton, The Venetian and Palazzo. If that’s not enough, companies and startups often save a bunch of cash, forgoing the traditional CES experience and rent suites in other casinos. Then there are hackathons, press events, and more lame parties than one can possibly attend.
CES is not for us, the press or the average consumer. It’s a show for buyers and exhibitors. It’s a show for innovators and salespeople. It’s a show for the consumer electronics industry.
Over the last few years gadget startups have risen in prominence. Once hampered by long development cycles and poor designs, thanks to crowdfunding and understanding venture capitalists, hardware startups can now operate nearly as lean as web-based companies.
  Best yet, countless startups have risen out of the ashes of the consumer electronic wasteland to help consumers turn ideas into companies.
The folks behind CES, the CEA, fully understand that the show is on the cusp of turning into something different. They have made moves to make the show more accessible to smaller companies, creating special venues to better suit the needs of the startup. Of course adding more exhibit space does not address the bloated feeling of CES. As before, it will seem overwhelming and excessive but still exciting and magical in its own special way — especially to the startup attending CES for the first time.
Source:techcrunch

Popular Posts