The People’s Bank of China reports that the combined domestic debt of corporations, households and the public sector increased last year to a level equivalent to 280 % of GDP (285 trillion yuan or 36 trillion euros), up from 255 % of GDP in 2019. When China’s foreign debt (which the PBoC estimates to be 14.5 % of GDP at the end of June) is included, total debt rises to about 295 % of GDP.
Due to the covid crisis and related measures, the debt-to-GDP ratios of many countries increased significantly last year. Figures from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) for over 40 countries suggest China’s the increase in debt-to-GDP ratio from the start of 2020 to end of June was quite ordinary compared to the other countries. China’s debt-to-GDP ratio, nevertheless, is distinctly higher than in other emerging economies and on par with US and euro area, which have more developed financial markets.
China’s piling on of debt has long raised concerns among observers of the Chinese economy because rapid descents into indebtedness in other countries have typically led to major economic collapse or severe banking crises. Moreover, China was already engaged in efforts to bail out small and medium-sized banks before covid-19 struck, with so at least 500 billion yuan (BOFIT Weekly 40/2020) in public funds already expended. The lion’s share of Chinese debt exists in the form of bank loans taken by the corporate sector. During the covid pandemic, certain branches experienced significant declines in the ability of firms to service their debts. Stress tests released by PBoC in November showed that 10 of 30 banks were would fail even under the mildest stress scenario, which only assumed that GDP growth would be 1.6 % in 2020 and 7.8 % in 2021. The stress tests comprised all of China’s systemically critical banks.
And the secret for the CPC success is the biggest, the best run human resource HR department in the world...it is responsible for all training and promotion of the 100 million CPC members....each and every CPC delegate very very impressive
Posted by IDQWE001 > 16 minutes ago | Report Abuse
Fuelling debt increase
The United States and China – the world’s two biggest economies – are almost entirely fuelling the predicted debt increase, the IMF said.
The US ratio of debt to gross domestic product (GDP) is set to increase to 136.2% in 2028 from 121.7% in 2022.
China’s debt is forecast to soar to 104.9% of GDP in the next five years from 77.1% in 2022 as spending increases and the economy expands less than projected prior to the pandemic.
The power of white elephant and abandoned housing projects caused the bad debt trap.
Don't lip service support only dare you buy an unit of property there.
China’s Trillion-Dollar Project Has Failed | Thousand-Year Key Project |Suspended Mega Project ===
these people, jump here jump there...tomorrow they will have forgotten they did that and disown their own work. ........................western media is a joke already.
Plenty of videos on in the internet show casing xiong an.....the greenest, most modern city....everyone who is anyone in China wants a part of xiong an
In February 2023, China exported $27.2B to United States. Between February 2022 and February 2023 the exports of China have decreased by $-12.6B (-31.6%) from $39.7B to $27.2B. Global supply chain realignment is real, ASEAN countries are in rise.
In February 2023, China exported $27.2B to United States. Between February 2022 and February 2023 the exports of China have decreased by $-12.6B (-31.6%) from $39.7B to $27.2B. Global supply chain realignment is real, ASEAN countries are in rise
export to US really drop more than 30% yoy. Malaysian red army very anxious, deperate, angry, fear because he knows this is the facts and does not know what to do. very pity.
export to US really drop more than 30% yoy. Malaysian red army very anxious, deperate, angry, fear because he knows this is the facts and does not know what to do. very pity.
Would any boss of the company so silly to challenge the biggest customer of the company ? unless he wants to close shop. silly fool
blow back for Biden.....................................Build the production line! Huawei announces mass production of 14nm chips! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qq0IFl9cbtE
China juggles major economic changes in 2023 12 April 2023
Change is afoot in China. Economic growth is slowing, while rising political tensions between China and the US, coupled with global supply chain restructuring, are disrupting its external markets. China’s exports are set to experience a downturn in 2023, driven by the global economic slowdown. Exports in the first two months of the year fell 6.8% from the same period in 2022. Moreover, the US-China relationship has deteriorated further over a series of recent events, including technology blockages and the Chinese balloon incident. The global supply chain is seeking diversification from China for cost, security and political reasons.The Peterson Institute for International Economics calculated that taxes for the US had increased from 8% to 21.2%.However, beyond the short term, China’s competitiveness will be challenged. Its cost advantage, especially for middle- and low-end products, is already eroding.
taxes for the US had increased from 8% to 21.2%. cost advantage, especially for middle- and low-end products, is already eroding.
Lost of the most favour nation and developing country status caused higher tariff by 13%. ASEAN countries could produce the competitive products with cost effectiveness and quality. Most important keep the low profile developing country especially Malaysia GDP per capital only higher $ 1000+. Why fighting ? attract all the currency investment to balance the development without white elephant as pet and reduce jobless claim.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
Posted by IDQWE001 > 2023-04-05 15:08 | Report Abuse
The People’s Bank of China reports that the combined domestic debt of corporations, households and the public sector increased last year to a level equivalent to 280 % of GDP (285 trillion yuan or 36 trillion euros), up from 255 % of GDP in 2019. When China’s foreign debt (which the PBoC estimates to be 14.5 % of GDP at the end of June) is included, total debt rises to about 295 % of GDP. Due to the covid crisis and related measures, the debt-to-GDP ratios of many countries increased significantly last year. Figures from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) for over 40 countries suggest China’s the increase in debt-to-GDP ratio from the start of 2020 to end of June was quite ordinary compared to the other countries. China’s debt-to-GDP ratio, nevertheless, is distinctly higher than in other emerging economies and on par with US and euro area, which have more developed financial markets. China’s piling on of debt has long raised concerns among observers of the Chinese economy because rapid descents into indebtedness in other countries have typically led to major economic collapse or severe banking crises. Moreover, China was already engaged in efforts to bail out small and medium-sized banks before covid-19 struck, with so at least 500 billion yuan (BOFIT Weekly 40/2020) in public funds already expended. The lion’s share of Chinese debt exists in the form of bank loans taken by the corporate sector. During the covid pandemic, certain branches experienced significant declines in the ability of firms to service their debts. Stress tests released by PBoC in November showed that 10 of 30 banks were would fail even under the mildest stress scenario, which only assumed that GDP growth would be 1.6 % in 2020 and 7.8 % in 2021. The stress tests comprised all of China’s systemically critical banks.