It is atypical for him to sound a positive note about growth, yet he sees the investment and acceleration of the Chinese financial system as being essential for growth globally. The cautionary note about capital investment in China to the point of overcapacity is also critical for balance of trade globally.
References
Clement, D. "Explaining Growth " the Region 1 Sep. 2010:
Geert Hofstede, and Robert R. McCrae. "Personality and Culture Revisited: Linking Traits and Dimensions of Culture. " Cross - Cultural Research 38.1 (2004): 52.
Lin, H., and E. Lin. "FDI, Trade, and Product Innovation: Theory and Evidence. " Southern Economic Journal 77.2 (2010): 434-464.
Nouriel Roubini. "The Confucian Consumer: Seven reasons why the Chinese save, when they really should be spending.. " Newsweek 24 Jan. 2011:
Article: The Confucian Consumer; Seven reasons why the Chinese save, when they really should be spending.
Nouriel Roubini. Newsweek. New York: Jan 24, 2011. Vol. 157, Iss. 4
Abstract (Summary)
[...] no country can be so productive that it can take, every year, half its GDP and reinvest it into more capital stock without eventually ending up with a huge excess capacity and a mountain of bad loans. [...] China needs to radically change its growth model from net exports and investment to reduced saving and more consumption. [...] there is little of a social safety net in China now that the "iron rice bowl" system of cradle-to-grave public services has broken down.
The traditional Chinese model of economic growth required the U.S. And a few other countries to be consumers of first and last resort, spending more than their income and running ever-larger trade deficits -- so that China could be the producer of first and last resort, spending less than its income and building ever-larger trade surpluses. That model is now challenged, if not altogether broken, because the excessive accumulation of private and public debt and deficit by the U.S. has forced a painful deleveraging: the overindebted U.S. consumer needs to spend and consume less, import less, and save more to reduce debt. Indeed, as the U.S. trade deficit shrinks, the Chinese trade surplus has been sharply shrinking, too.
How has China been able to maintain its high -- 8%-plus -- growth despite the collapse of its net exports? It did not do it by reducing its saving and consuming more; rather, it has boosted further fixed investment in real estate (commercial and residential), in infrastructure (roads, airports, bullet trains), and in manufacturing capacity, which already suffers from a glut. Fixed investment in China is now close to 50% of GDP.
But no country can be so productive that it can take, every year, half its GDP and reinvest it into more capital stock without eventually ending up with a huge excess capacity and a mountain of bad loans. Thus, China needs to radically change its growth model from net exports and investment to reduced saving and more consumption. There are, however, many structural reasons why the Chinese save too much and consume too little. (Consumption...
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