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China’s Stock-Market Woes Trace Roots to Earlier Stimulus

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James Areddy explains why the Jinping administration in China was so keen on promoting gains in the equity markets. It was seen as a way to ease the debt overhang from the 2008 Stimulus of $586 billion. The Stimulus was put together in November 2008 to pay for infrastructure, construction and social spending, at a level that was 3 times the stimulus proposed in the European Union. Critics say that the initial signs of a crisis that might affect the government are magnified in China's authoritarian political structure, with one example being the size of this stimulus. With this kind of hasty spending a common problem is that not enough good projects can be found. One example of wasted spending is the $930 million spent to build the Shanghai West rail station from a older structure that had fallen into disuse. With three other stations serving Shanghai this station gets little traffic. The Jinping administration promoted the stock market as a way for companies to issue equity and reduce debt, and make less reliance on bank loans. The result was to push the Shanghai Composite Index up by 150% for the one year gain by June 12, 2015. The government also made it possible for individual investors to borrow money to invest in the market. About $354 billion of margin lending to finance stock purchases is estimated by Goldman Sachs, which now poses problems with a one third decline in stocks after June 12, 2015, leading to losses for individual investors. The loss of the boost from the stock market is likely to hurt GNP growth by 1% percentage point, according to Capital Economics. As China's real growth according to experts is closer to 4%, because of statistical errors and overestimates, according to experts, this could pose a serious problem for the economy. Countries dependent on commodity exports to China such as Australia, Chile and Brazil are likely to feel the effects of a decline in demand for iron ore, copper and other metals.

China's $586 billion 2008 Stimulus package and the resulting debt overhang that the Jinping administration hoped to ease through the equity market

07/09/2015

The effort appears to have failed leaving companies as dependent as before on the bank loans. The surge

Grouped Articles

China’s Stock-Market Woes Trace Roots to Earlier Stimulus

Wall Street Journal 07/09/2015

A Warning on China Seems Prescient

New York Times 08/24/2015

China facing full-blown banking crisis, world's top financial watchdog warns

The Telegraph 09/19/2016

Moody’s Cuts Its China Rating for the First Time Since 1989

WSJ 05/24/2017


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