Monday, April 30, 2007

China learning well from U.S. Economists

As one of the fastest growing economies in the world and one of the largest, China could easily be arrogant, unresponsive and even disrepectful to the U.S., a former Cold War nemesis. That does not seem to be the case however, considering the trend of decisions made by the Chinese version of the FED, with counsel from U.S. bankers and economists.

The Wall Street Journal reported today that China lifted bank reserves in an attempt to help control growth. Although growth in double digits seems very appealing to most investors, the Chinese Central Bank and U.S. economists realize it may actually pose a huge recession threat down the road. With a lesson learned from the U.S. housing bubble, created by Alan Greenspan's flawed monetary policy, China is attempting to prepare itself and provide a soft-landing to the world's second largest economy (GDP using PPP).

Though the graph suggests no recession problems, you can be sure that growth will be tough to sustain at such a high rate. If China can curb its growth now at 8-9%, it will be able to sustain it for a much longer period of time with less volatility, such as the graph suggests. However, if they continue growing by double digits, the threat of a bubble burst is likely, one that could ultimately ruin the economy or set Chinese progress back severeal years.

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