Thursday, February 12, 2009

Construction, not export triggered China's crisis - Arthur Kroeber

arthurkArthur Kroeber by Fons1 via Flickr

The declining export figures have not the influence on China's economy that is commonly believed, says economic analyst Arthur Kroeber in The Globe and Mail. Not the export, but failing real estate and declining demand for the construction industry set off the current economic problems in China, he says.
The managing director of the Beijing-based research firm Dragonomics:

"China is more of a construction-driven economy than an export-driven economy." China's troubles began when a housing price bubble burst, which reduced demand for housing materials, he said, adding that the downturn only later spread to exports.
With the Chinese government investing so much in stimulus, construction should pick up later in the year, Mr. Kroeber said. "They should be able to weather what will be a really bad year in exports."

Commercial
Arthur Kroeber is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. When you are interested in having him to share his insights, please get in touch.




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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sure, China's economy is more dependent upon the spending from investment than for export in gross, but the vast majority of money for investment is going into roads, bridges, and hard infrastructure.

If memory serves, real estate investment is 1/3 of the total investment.

So, I have a hard time buying this line of thought. the downturn from the real estate sector has surely hit the consumer sentiment, but the biggest shocks have come from the jobs/ income lost from the manufacturing sector.

4:54 PM  

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