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Beijing to Slow Growth

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

Keywords:


China imbalances in runaway growth-corruption, pollution, overbuilding, misallocation

06/27/2005

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The difficult choices in the new environment- transition to a new leadership, how to change the export model without serious disruptions, how to deal with western demands for balanced global growth, dealing with the inequality and corruption generated in the kind of growth China experienced (by the fiat of the State), opening up freedom of expression to curb corruption and to provide representation for hitherto blocked out voices, transition to freedom of expression and democratic processes without serious disruption to thegrowth needed for employment and improvements in the standard of living across all parts of society and regions, reducing or channelling to constructive ends prevailing nationalistic, anti-western or anti-Japanese sentiment. The new leadership of Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang is expected to be more outward looking than than of Hu Jintao and Wen Biao and comes at atime when China needs to make some difficult choices about future direction.

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China's Reform Moment

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China Is Slow and Unbalanced

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U.S. Stocks Shrug at China's Woes

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Chinese debt: The great hole of China

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China’s ghost towns point to nation’s waning fortunes - The Washington Post

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Roubini on China, currency issues, and domestic consumption in China.

05/17/2010

By letting the yuan China can shift the benefits to households, who will have more purchasing power, and reverse the shift that has taken place in the last 10 years, with domestic consumption making up about 36% of GDP- down by about 10 points from ten years earlier. State owned companies gained at the expense of households, as did infrastructure spending, but it is leading to misallocation of investments and hurting households. As a result China will hit a growth wall in the next 2-3 years, says Roubini.

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The Obama-Romney Tariff

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Europe’s Debt Crisis Is Casting a Shadow Over China

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An Accord (and Lessons) to Remember

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Taking On China

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Yuan Revaluation for China's Own Sake

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Three Faces of the New China

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